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AUSTIN, Texas -- As a longtime fan of both George Bushes' eccentric grasp of English,
I naturally enjoyed this gem from W.: "See, in my line of work, you got to
keep repeating things over and over and over again for the truth to sink in, to
kind of catapult the propaganda." (Bush in Greece, N.Y., May 24, once more
explaining his Social Security plan to a town hall meeting of perfectly average
citizens -- except they had all been pre-screened to allow only those who agree
with him into the hall.)
"Catapulting the propaganda" would explain his performance at the press
opportunity that same day at which he appeared surrounded by babies born from
frozen embryos. He used the phrase "culture of life" at least 27 dozen
times (I think I exaggerate, but maybe not). "The use of federal dollars
to destroy life is something I simply do not support," he said to the press
the following day.
Meanwhile, back in Baghdad, federal dollars are being used to destroy life
at pretty good clip because Bush decided to wage an entirely elective war against
a country that presented little or no threat to us. And according to the Downing
Street memo, he damn well knew it, too.
The destruction of life in Iraq is more dramatic than taking a blastocyst smaller
than a pinpoint out of a petri dish. The 1,600 American dead so far -- not much
culture of life there. The 15,000 wounded, many of them irreparably -- not so
good there, either. Estimates of Iraqi civilian deaths are all over the lot:
a British medical journal claimed 100,000 last year, the Iraq Body Count website
says between 21,000 and 25,000. The U.S./U.N. sanctions are widely believed
to have killed hundreds of thousands, most of them babies, even after the Oil
for Food Program was instituted.
The New York Times reports that the doctors in Iraq are now being threatened
by insurgents and so are fleeing what was a showcase system under Saddam. I
think we'd all have to agree, so far there's no progress on bringing a culture
of life to Iraq.
What I don't get is the disconnect in Bush's mind. One must assume he figures
in Iraq, "You gotta break eggs to make an omelette," or something
akin. He said at the photo-op with the adorable children who had been produced
from frozen embryos and adopted by other parents, "The children here today
remind us that there is no such thing as a spare embryo."
Nonsense. Fertility treatments that help couples to have children leave far
too many excess embryos for all of them to be adopted. They are simply discarded
by the laboratories, thrown out. What in the world is he talking about?
Seems to me the anti-abortion people are getting as nutty as the gun lobby,
which lets cop-killer bullets on the street, wants to allow .50 caliber rifles
that can bring down airplanes, and stops efforts to close loopholes that let
dealers sell to terrorists and criminals. Plus a bunch of other nutcase stuff
that is not only harmful to society, but opposed by the great majority of the
American people. Anti-abortion people are even going after the process of judicial
bypass for girls who cannot fulfill the parental consent restriction.
Look, 60 percent of the American people are in favor of funding stem cell research.
Do we have a First Amendment issue here? Is this the case of a few people imposing
their religious views on everybody else? I don't know enough about stem cell
research to tell you that it will produce miracle cures for Alzheimer's, Parkinson's
and other diseases, as some scientists claim. But it's not only worth a shot,
it would be criminal not to do it. The people who are ill are here, now, human
beings in terrible suffering.
Bush is prepared to use his first-ever veto. Didn't stop the bankruptcy bill,
didn't stop all those tax cuts for the very rich, didn't stop that gross agriculture
bill -- but this he will veto. He says we will "cross a critical ethical
line by creating new incentives for the ongoing destruction of emerging human
life." And he doesn't think starting an unnecessary war was crossing a
critical ethical line?
It's the old slippery slope argument. Look, all of law is a process of drawing
lines on slippery slopes. The difference between misdemeanor theft and felony
theft is one penny. The difference between misdemeanor and felony drug possession
is one gram. For that matter, the difference between a pig and a hog is one
pound. We're always drawing distinctions, and it is necessary to do so -- hunting
rifles, OK; .50 caliber rifles, don't be a fool.
This is a don't-be-a-fool argument. "Culture of life"? Whose life?