The Genius of George W. Bushgreenspun.com : LUSENET : Poole's Roost II : One Thread |
LOLOLOL at the Bush Detractors.http://www.nytimes.com/2001/08/18/opinion/18RICH.html?todaysheadlines
OP-ED The Genius of George W. Bush By FRANK RICH George W. Bush seized on the stem cell debate to transform his image into that of our philosopher king.
AUG 18, 2001
The Genius of George W. Bush
By FRANK RICH
fter months of deriding the president as an idiot, Democrats have to face the fact that he is at the very least an idiot savant and just possibly a genius.
The final proof is The Great Stem Cell Compromise. "This is way beyond politics," said George W. Bush while pondering his verdict. What's more, he told the nation, he had found a solution to please everyone. His plan will at once "lead to breakthrough therapies and cures" and do so "without crossing a fundamental moral line."
In fact, everything Mr. Bush said is false. His decision was completely about politics. It will slow the progress to breakthrough therapies and cures. It did force the pro-life movement he ostensibly endorses to cross a fundamental moral line. And yet the politics were so brilliantly handled and exquisitely timed, for the August dog days that few vacationing Americans bothered to examine the fine print, which didn't arrive until the final seconds of an 11- minute speech. Few have noticed, at least not yet, that the only certain beneficiary of this compromise is George W. Bush.
Denigrated as a lightweight and a slacker, he seized on the stem cell debate to transform his image into that of our philosopher king grappling mightily with the science and ethics of an issue he and his handlers hyped as "one of the most profound of our time" even as he induced religious-right political leaders to sell out their principles and sent Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and juvenile diabetes patients to the back of the medical research bus. As an act of self-serving political Houdinism, this is a feat worthy of Mr. Bush's predecessor, another master at buying time when caught in a political corner with no apparent way out.
If you spend a week talking to scientists actively involved with stem cells, which I did, the most enthusiasm you can find for Mr. Bush's compromise is lukewarm. "It could have been better, it could have been worse," as Sloan Kettering's Harold Varmus, the former head of the National Institutes of Health, puts it. Jerome Groopman, a Harvard Medical School professor who has worked on bone marrow stem cells, calls the president's decision "unprecedented" in the way "it ignores the fundamental needs and process of experimental medicine" by "holding research hostage to private companies" that own many of the 60 stem cell lines that Mr. Bush has approved for federal study. "No company has the kind of resources that can match the N.I.H. for the kind of free scientific inquiry that might bear fruit," says Dr. Groopman. Besides, he adds: "There isn't a soul alive who can testify that these 60 lines can give us what we need. The success of science depends on a string of failures, and no one can work at a laboratory bench with his hands shackled behind him."
"Where are those lines? Are they any good? Are they available?" asks Doug Melton, a leading stem cell scientist who had a 45-minute meeting with the president, Karl Rove and other political operatives in July. It's not enough, Dr. Melton says, "to say there are cells at Singapore at this phone number and go get them." Since there has been no firsthand scientific investigation of the quality of these far-flung lines, some of them could prove stale, unstable or insufficiently varied for research purposes.
But even if by some miracle they're all just what the doctors ordered, Dr. Melton fears delays of many months for all the lawyering required to sort out the intellectual property rights of the Bush-blessed cells before their private owners ("who have now been given a mini- monopoly") will transfer them to academic researchers. It was only four days after Mr. Bush's speech that the Wisconsin Alumni Research Foundation, allied with the pioneering stem cell scientist James Thomson, sued its biotech partner, the Geron Corporation
, over who controls which commercial rights. Evan Snyder, another prominent stem cell researcher at Harvard, fears that some owners of Bush-approved stem cells could restrict their intellectual property as zealously as "Coca-Cola and its secret formula or a computer company that won't give out the secrets of its latest chip." Dr. Snyder also points out that the administration is "scientifically naοve," since some of its approved cells may have been extracted by already outdated mid- 1990's technology. "We can now get stem cell lines that are more efficacious and heartier," he says. "Would we fight new infections only with penicillin and sulfa and not the new antibiotics?" He also worries about a potential brain drain beyond the well-publicized decision by Dr. Roger Pedersen of the University of California to decamp to Cambridge University in pursuit of scientific freedom. It's possible that "new intellects and talents we'd like to see jump into the game" will go into other fields, given the roadblocks to stem cell work.
As if these barriers to the expeditious pursuit of life-and-death research weren't enough, the Bush administration has also yet to appoint its new director of the N.I.H. the person needed to run all the bureaucratic and legal gantlets separating researchers from the approved stem cell lines. Will that appointee have to pass an ideological litmus test, and if so, will there be a lengthy Senate confirmation fight?
The president's new council on stem cells, headed by the bioethicist Leon Kass, may add further confusion and delays. No one seems to know its precise role, including the White House, which has yet to delineate any of its specific stem cell duties. If the panel's point is to rule on the ethical questions, didn't the president already do that? If it's to add another layer of guidelines as to how the research can proceed, "it could add another year to the process," says Harold Varmus.
Yet if scientists not to mention patients desperately hoping for stem-cell therapies got at best a half-loaf out of the Bush compromise, the anti-abortion absolutists got snookered.
The pro-life cause (and the Republican platform that parrots it) has staked its moral rectitude on the belief that life begins at conception. As Douglas Johnson of the National Right to Life Committee said in July, "We're opposed to federal funding of research if it kills embryos, whether the killing took place yesterday or today."
Well, that was yesterday. By the time the president gave his go-ahead for federal funds to underwrite research on previously killed embryos, the White House had smartly romanced the National Right to Life Committee to the point where it declared itself "delighted" with the news. A few spoilsports who disagreed with this retreat such as the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops were drowned out and marginalized by pro-life politicos like James Dobson of Focus on the Family and Jerry Falwell, who also enthusiastically endorsed the Bush speech. Pat Robertson went so far as to dismiss "ethical dilemmas" as secondary to the "practical reality" of a "very useful science."
Pro-choicers should welcome all these former pro-lifers into the fold. Their position that it's O.K. to sacrifice embryos to the greater good of potentially ending the suffering of living juvenile diabetes and Alzheimer's patients is at one with the pro-choice view that in pregnancy embryos sometimes must be sacrificed for the health of the mother.
What gives the scientists I spoke with some guarded hope despite the strictures placed on their work by the president's policy is that Mr. Bush moved just enough to convince them that the policy isn't permanent. Though Mr. Bush said he wouldn't change his mind, they predict that if the 60 stem cell lines aren't accessible or scientifically useful, the political pressure from patients' advocacy groups and Congress will force inevitable concessions from the White House. And now they have the added boon that not just pro-life senators like Orrin Hatch and Bill Frist but also the nation's loudest pro-life leaders will be in the president's pocket when he next capitulates.
Thanks to the sudden national fixation on stem cells, the entire country now knows that there are between 100,000 and 200,000 frozen embryos currently in storage at fertilization clinics, most of them slated to be killed anyway, most of them with greater potential for saving lives than becoming lives. As Christopher Reeve has noted, long before anyone had heard of stem cells there was never any "outrage that these unwanted fertilized embryos are being thrown in the garbage." When Mr. Bush inevitably finds another ingenious "compromise" to make more of them available to medical research, there won't be outrage either only votes.
-- Anonymous, August 18, 2001
IN SHORT, HE "ACED" ONE AGAINST ALL THE DEMS and their own idiot SERVANTS not savants.
-- Anonymous, August 18, 2001
CPR:Hard to say at this point since these things can take on a life of their own. I haven't seen the details of the policy decision and neither has good ol'Frank. I am on a list-serve at NIH and they send me this stuff when it becomes available [it can fill up the mail box in no time]. It will probably be in my mail box when I get home. From what I have heard, the actual policy statement will include regulations which could be a disaster. But as I say, I will wait to read it. Won't know until then.
Best Wishes,,,,
Z
-- Anonymous, August 18, 2001
The bad news was for the Scientists. GWB won the politics but didn't go far enough for the American Scientists.
-- Anonymous, August 18, 2001
Charles, What makes you think that this was anything he came up with? His keepers have some very good people who know how to write stuff for him. If all of it was his idea, why did he have to stare at a prompter and concentrate so hard to understand what he was suspposed to say?
-- Anonymous, August 18, 2001
My experience is that the public statement by the admistration is just a general explanation of the philosophy behind the policy. I am not saying that they lie or are trying to cover-up anything. The details come later. Could be a 200 to 300 page policy statement which defines the terms [been my experience]. When we know the details, then we will know the impact. Do you realize how many terms weren't defined in the public statement or even considered by the press?Since I have oversight responsibility in the area [for my little part of the world], I always get the full dressed policy.
Best Wishes,,,,
Z
-- Anonymous, August 19, 2001
This "major decision" is but a compromise and not a very good one. It is in fact, probably the only practical one that can be done now. Ten years from now, nobody will even remember it. It may however signal that GWB knows that he can go no further with the Far Right and that is a very good thing but I would be happier if he removed Ashcroft ASAP. We have come a long way from the days of Teddy Roosevelt and Harry Truman who made decisions often unaided by their insider confidants and with Truman, total disregard for the polls or experts about the political impact. Truman KNEW when he ordered the desegregation of the Armed Services that he would lose votes big time in the South which he would have been able to sweep in 1948 if he did nothing over the issue. Yet he chose to do the truly right thing which was justified by one thing, the blood of black and othe minorities that had been shed in World War II. When he pulled Taft Hartley on the assorted unions striking for higher wages, he knew he would lose votes in the 100% Democratic labor unions, yet he did it. He also risked war over the Berlin Airlift yet that was ordered. Since 1952, acts of raw political courage have been few and far between. Even the Nixon/Kissinger opening of relations with China were not as brave as the GOP sales pitch insisted. They were in fact, a matter of political flow. It was going to happen sooner or later, so Nixon did it and expedited it because it was easier for a Republican to do it than if a Left Democrat were to try given the hatreds that grew out of the Viet war. Ever since Ike and then JFK/LBJ/RMN we have had the thrill of witnessing "government by political committee and polls" much as depicted on West Wing. Sadly, the decisions of that President based on some internal moral guidelines are hardly the order of the day and have not been since Jimmy Carter and Gerald Ford. From Reagan to Bush to Clintstone to Bush II we have this "consensus" built on expectation of either most votes gained or least votes lost.In a most strange way, Clintstone seems to have been the only one who practiced what he preached. He flat out told people he was a politician and lived to please as many people as possible and not irritate any more than necessary. It was all simply "business as usual" and he even would state that "I can't be concerned with such things (no matter what the scandal was) nor can I be bothered wasting time when I must take care of the business the American People elected me for. ....". So in that single regard, he was far less of a hypocrite than all the stage acting and prancing and emoting about "this is the right thing to do for the American people" in the statements issued after every single last poll and study has measured what the effect of any decision any of the Presidents since Truman have made (Carter and Ford excepted).
-- Anonymous, August 23, 2001
Charlie,That was well-reasoned and well-said.
-- Anonymous, August 23, 2001
SMP,You left out the "....as usual".
-- Anonymous, August 24, 2001