1. SAFETY
CONCERNS
The most
frequently stated argument against cloning is based
on safety concerns. After the news of Dolly, President
Clinton convened the National Bioethics Advisory Commission
(NBAC) to review the legal and ethical issues of the
potential cloning of a human. The NBAC heard testimony
and read opinions on the multitude of complex issues
surrounding human cloning, but in the end, the NBAC
based its recommendation for a three to five year moratorium
on human cloning in the United States on safety concerns.
At this point
in the process of experimenting with cloning, safety
is an important concern. The production of Dolly required
at least 276 failed attempts. No one knows why these
attempts failed and why one succeeded. Cloning presents
different obstacles in every species, as embryo implantation,
development, and gestation differ among different species.
Human cloning therefore could not become a reality without
extensive human experimentation. Though 276 "failed"
lambs may be acceptable losses, the ethical implications
of failed or partially successful human experiments
are unacceptable.
Inhibitions
concerning human experimentation would seem to be an
impassable ethical and practical barrier to human cloning,
but there may come a time when scientists feel they
have enough knowledge from animal experiments to proceed
with human trials. Even if questions of safety could
be eliminated, which is highly unlikely, or if public
opinion and scientific hubris were to reach the point
where the risks associated with human experimentation
seemed less egregious, human cloning should still be
prohibited for several reasons.
2. COMMODIFICATION
Cloning would
encourage the commodification of humans. Though industrialized
societies commodify human labor and human lives, the
biological commodification involved in human cloning
would be of a vastly different order. Cloning would
turn procreation into a manufacturing process, where
human characteristics become added options and children,
objects of deliberate design. This process of commodification
needs to be actively opposed. It produces no benefits
and it undermines the very basis of our established
notions of human individuality and dignity.
3. HUMAN
DIVERSITY
Cloning would
also disrespect human diversity in ethnicity and ability.
Though it is not possible to produce exact copies of
animals or people, inherent in cloning is the desire
to do so. The process of cloning would necessarily increase
conformity, and eradicate genetic variety. A society
that supported cloning as an acceptable procreative
technique, would imply that variety is not important.
Especially in a multicultural nation like the United
States, where diversity and difference are of the essence,
any procedure that reduced our acceptance of differences
would be dangerous. It is clear from the tensions that
exist in our society that we should be embracing processes
that increase our appreciation for the diversity of
individuals, not working to remove differences.
4. PERMANENT
CHANGES TO THE GENE POOL
The process
of cloning would inevitably invite the use of other
genetic technologies, specifically genetic manipulation
of cloned embryos, and this could result in permanent,
heritable changes to the human gene pool. Some scientists
pretend that they can predict which genes humans would
be better off without. However, there is no way to acquire
the requisite genetic knowledge to make such a prediction
without experimental genetic manipulation, which would
have implications for subsequent generations. Such experiments
must not be done, since both the errors and supposed
successes of genetic manipulation would be with humanity
forever. Although the potential applications of human
genetic engineering may appeal to some, the experimental
nature of the technique, and the permanence of the results,
would make it a highly dangerous innovation.
5. THREAT
OF EUGENICS
Cloning would
allow for genetic manipulation that sets the stage for
increased efforts at eugenics. Eugenics is the attempt
to improve human beings, not by improving their economic,
social, and educational opportunities, but by altering
the genes with which they are born. Cloning would allow
scientists to begin with a known human prototype (the
person to be cloned) and then "improve" it
by modifying specific traits. People who wanted to be
cloned could have themselves cloned only to be taller,
blonder, smarter. The threat of eugenics is inherent
in technologies that allow individuals to try to modify
inherited characteristics so as to give preference to
specific ones. It would be impossible to embark on human
cloning without opening the door to eugenics. After
all, cloning in animals by "improving" their
inherited characteristics is a deliberate form of animal
eugenics.
6. NATURAL
PROCREATION AND EVOLUTION
Ordinary
procreation, whether it results in twins or singletons,
is an open-ended process that depends on the random
coming together of an egg and sperm cell. Each new individual
has a unique configuration of genes which leads to an
amazing range of human variability. Cloning forecloses
the opportunity for genetic surprise and growth among
cloned humans, limiting such future people to genetic
configurations that have been expressed before.
COLNING IS
NOT A REPRODUCTIVE ANSWER
The discussion
above provides a strong basis to support a prohibition
on human cloning. Cloning developed in the context of
animal commodification and the techniques intent
and purposes are not applicable in humans. Even setting
aside the fact that cloning cannot produce exact copies,
and that it cannot go forward without much prior human
experiment, the above arguments weigh heavily against
ever allowing the cloning of humans.
In addition,
there are no clear, defensible arguments in favor of offering
cloning as an option for producing offspring. Cloning
is endorsed by some as a procreative technique that provides
a cure to infertility or an option for people who have
genes they do not want to pass on and the chance to have
genetically related offspring for gay and lesbian couples
or people without partners. Such arguments are not convincing.
Their flaws
stem from the fallacy of their premise and their neglect
of the availability of other, less questionable, options.
First, if cloning were in fact a "cure" for
infertility, then infertility would no longer exist. Newborns,
elderly people, women who have had complete hysterectomies,
and people born without ovaries or testes would all be
able to bear offspring. In reality, cloning does nothing
to alleviate the underlying environmental or social causes
of infertility. Labeling cloning as a cure for infertility
implies the acceptance of entirely new definitions of
fertility and infertility, and is therefore misleading.
Technically, cloning is replication of that which already
exists. It is not a "cure" for anything.
Current reproductive
technologies offer couples who have genes they dont
want to pass on, or gays, lesbians, and people without
partners an array of alternatives to cloning. People can
choose genetic testing to avoid transmitting certain genes
to their offspring. Lesbians, gays, and unpartnered people
can acquire sperm, eggs, embryos and gestational ("surrogate")
mothers. Adoption is another option.
Problems associated
with rising rates of infertility will not be solved through
the development of high-tech, invasive and expensive interventions.
Even now, rather than answering the needs of people unable
to reproduce, many of the new technologies used in assisted
reproduction actually create needs and make it increasingly
difficult for people to accept other, less complex and
invasive solutions. The psychological problems associated
with infertility are created by societal as well as by
personal pressures, and should be understood and dealt
with at that level.
Some proponents
of human cloning who recognize the weakness of their arguments,
continue to support the development of human cloning under
the banner of freedom freedom of reproductive choice
and freedom of scientific inquiry. They argue that people
should have the choice to produce offspring in this way,
and scientists should have the option to explore human
cloning without outside interference. With these arguments,
proponents of human cloning are able to side-step the
lack of clear benefits of this technology by raising a
banner to "freedom" and "choice."
The ill-defined
boundaries of a persons right to procreative autonomy
makes some people cautious about prohibiting cloning.
The NBAC report noted that a prohibition on cloning would
be in tension with the fundamental right to procreate.
The right to privacy and some level of autonomy in decision-
making about procreation can be traced through a series
of Supreme Court decisions. Generally speaking, this line
of cases supports the notion that the decision whether
to bear or not to bear a child is one which is of the
most personal and private nature and should therefore
be made without governmental interference. Some cloning
proponents have extended this right to mean that the government
has an obligation to support the development of all techniques
that may help citizens reproduce.
This is an
improper expansion of the right to be free from governmental
interference in reproductive decision-making. A prohibition
on cloning does not interfere with that right because
the government does not have the obligation to ensure
that each citizen who wants a child has a child. The right
covers only the right of individuals, who can reproduce,
to reproduce (or not) without government interference.
Providing and safe-guarding the option to clone, in the
face of the numerous negative implications of the technology,
is not an acceptable justification to support the technique.
Another argument
used to counter a prohibition on cloning is that it would
stifle scientific inquiry. But, science is not an unbiased,
objective field of study, and not all scientific possibilities
need be accepted by society. Scientific research is conducted
by people with personal and professional interests in
the outcome and continuation of their work. It is often
motivated by a quest for profits and power. A prohibition
on human cloning may indeed make it more difficult for
scientists to study some inherited genetic diseases, though
that is far from clear. However, allowing cloning in order
to meet this hypothetical need would radically alter our
current concepts of humanity and of procreation. Not all
scientific inquiry has equal priority and the question
should be who gets to set the priorities; scientists,
their funders, or the public. Like other publicly supported
activities, science must serve the public interest and
the public should have the power to influence decisions
about which paths are worth exploring.
CLONING
The cloning
debate, like the debates surrounding the introduction
of many of the new genetic technologies, often reflects
the proposition that if science can do something, it should
be done. Scientists introduce new technologies with inflated
promises of potentially solving the worlds problems--genetically
engineered crops to end world hunger, or mapping the human
genome so as to end disease. Researchers and their investors
promote these technologies without proof of actual benefit
or lack of harm. In reality, many of these "miracle"
inventions could cause harm, and to date few of the promised
benefits have been realized.
Human cloning
represents another one of these false "miracles."
It would cure no disease while it would markedly alter
our relationships to each other and the natural world.
Human cloning cannot proceed without crossing numerous
ethical boundaries. With no identifiable benefit to the
technique, existing social and legal arguments against
it should not be set aside, and human cloning should therefore
be permanently banned.