President-elect Obama’s announcement last week that he will
reverse Bill Clinton’s “Don’t ask, don’t tell” policy early in
his tenure is clearly meant to appease those angry about Pastor
Rick Warren’s inauguration invocation. So, Obama’s initial
inclusive gesture to social conservatives was quickly canceled
out by actual policy changes more in line with his leftist
campaign rhetoric.
Reports swirl around Washington that conservatives are being
“wooed” by Obama’s charisma. As air kisses distract, we may
expect impending leftward policy reversals through the recision
of executive orders and federal regulation “adjustments.” With
the March for Life fast on the heels of the inauguration, I’m
betting President Obama will not use that opportunity to govern
from the center. Rather, we should expect another hard left near
the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, January 22.
The most likely move, one which he probably hopes can be done
quietly, might be the reversal of the Bush limits on the use of
federal funding for research using new embryonic stem cell lines.
This cynical move will be designed to warm pro-abortion forces
gathered in Washington to celebrate their favorite Constitutional
overreach, while sending a chill down the spines of hundreds of
thousands gathered to march for life.
It’s not just the prospect of embryo farming that should concern
conservatives. The redirection of research monies into embryonic
stem cell research will impede progress into truly important stem
cell therapies. The dirty little secret liberals don’t want you
to know is that stem cell science has moved beyond the use of
embryonic stem cells. George Bush, as Charles Krauthammer has
pointed out, was right. There was a better way.
The really exciting stem cell research in the last year or so has
centered on the transformation of adult cells into induced
pluripotent stem (iPS) cells. Right now, researchers can take
adult skin or blood cells and turn them into iPS cells as
powerful as embryonic SCs. These cells have the potential to
reverse heart disease, diabetes, paralysis and a host of other
diseases. The benefit to individuals and our economy will be
enormous.
The respect-for-life issues aside, it probably isn’t a good sign
that this new administration is falling back on antiquated
policies and approaches to embryonic stem cell research. It
surely will keep President-elect Obama’s constituencey, the
abortionists, happy, but it isn’t good that tax dollars will be
wasted on research that is now obsolete.