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Speech to the IHEU Appignani Humanist Center for Bioethics at the UN

By Kathryn Hinsch: Founder of the Women’s Bioethics Project 
 
Friday, April 22, 2005 
 
First I’d like to take a moment to congratulate Louis Appignani for having the vision to fund the Humanist Center for Bioethics at the UN Plaza, and to thank Dr. Ana Lita for inviting me to speak today. It’s an honor to be on the conference agenda with so many luminaries in field of bioethics, especially Glenn McGee, who helped move the dialogue forward with his pioneering bioethics blog. I’m a big fan of his. I’d also like to welcome the many friends of mine who are here today to support the work of the Women’s Bioethics Project.
 
My talk will describe the state of bioethics public policy today and the role that extremely conservative and religious right forces are playing. I’m not going to take you through bioethical policy minutia; instead, I want to spend some time putting the efforts of the extremely conservative and religious right in a bigger picture context, raising your awareness to the key players, and describing their underlying philosophical approach. I will also highlight the opportunities for offering an alternative vision, and present the Women’s Bioethics Project view.
 
When I left my corporate job five years ago to study bioethics at Harvard, I had a hard time describing to my family and friends what “bioethics public policy” was and why it was important to devote my life to helping society work through these issues. What was then an obscure concept is now in headlines worldwide. Why the change? First, the post-election analysis that highlighted the importance that “moral values” held to voters has become part of the general consciousness, and Americans are primed to think in these terms. By bringing moral values to the forefront, the 2004 election has opened a window of opportunity to bring more complex, reasoned reflection to bioethical issues.
 
Second, the highly politicized embryonic stem-cell research issue and the recent Terry Shiavo case have heightened public awareness of bioethics. The media is heavily covering these topics and the general public is beginning to understand that bioethical issues are real and relevant to their lives.
 
Lastly, technological visions that were once dismissed as science fiction are becoming a reality. Already the ways in which biotechnology will affect our lives is being determined by policy makers, judges and juries, and voters.

I founded the Women’s Bioethics Project because bioethics public policy is in flux. The issues to consider are enormous and cover a broad spectrum, from “designer babies” to physician assisted suicide. The institutions on which we have traditionally relied for guidance on difficult moral issues—whether church, government, or the academy—have failed to keep pace with the science or societal implications underlying the issues. Political alliances are blurred, and there are few unbiased acknowledged leaders or spokespeople to whom the public can turn.

Additionally, the media is having a difficult time figuring out how to cover bioethical issues. When the lines between health, technology, religion, business, and politics are blurred finding the right editor, reporter, expert or columnist is tricky.

Because of this disarray, the opportunity to widely impact the direction of public opinion is up for grabs, yet so far only the extremely conservative and overtly religious groups have seen this opportunity and are actively driving the bioethics agenda on a national and international level.

From Leon Kass’ efforts captured by the March 7th Washington Post article “Conservatives Draft a 'Bioethics Agenda' for President,” to the right’s high-profile involvement in the Terri Shiavo legal battle, to the new Pope’s recent pronouncement that bioethical issues are on the top of his list, there can no longer be any doubt that the conservatives are weighing in on these issues.

Let’s step back for a moment and look at the broad political climate. Based on the work of Rob Stein of the Democracy Alliance and others, it is well documented that the conservative movement in this country has spent the last thirty years building an intellectual infrastructure that consists of interlocking and cooperating elements that include conservative media, foundations, and think tanks.

Every day this conglomerate of conservative forces drives public opinion, advances legislation, emboldens conservative judges, and frames electoral politics to advance its agenda and to secure its power. It controls the executive, legislative, and judicial branches of government and it is this that we need to hold in our minds as we look closer at the struggle to define the bioethics agenda.

So who are some of the key players? I’m sure you are familiar with many of them: the National Catholics Bioethics Center, the Center for Bioethics and Culture, the Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity, and the American Bioethics Advisory Commission, who’s parent organization is the American Life League. These are just a few of the many organizations funded solely to promote and drive a conservative, overtly religious bioethics agenda.

It is important to understand that these organizations are not operating in a sphere outside of the conservative movement that I just described. Here’s a direct example: In Oct 2003 the Center for Bioethics and Culture posted an article on its website entitled “Who will be the next Joe Coors of Bioethics?” Joe Coors, of the Coors Brewing Company, was the businessman who provided the initial seed money for the one of the first conservative think tank founded in 1973, the very influential Heritage Foundation. The article was a plea for conservatives to step up funding of bioethical political initiatives.

Fast forward two years to a March, 2005 article posted on the American Journal of Bioethics Editor’s Blog to find out how well this plea for funding worked. The article, by bioethicist Art Kaplan, was titled “Have Conservatives Bought Bioethics?” and details how a group called the Philanthropy Round Table had funneled hundreds of thousands of dollars to bankroll the courtroom effort on behalf of Terri Shiavo’s parents. Kaplan reveals that The Philanthropy Round Table is actually a consortium of foundations (which includes the Coors family foundation) that funds conservative causes.

While it is interesting is that there are a few bioethics centers trying to push a conservative agenda, and that conservative foundations have decided to fund a few high profile cases, what the Women’s Bioethics Project finds even more compelling and, frankly, frightening, is that well-established conservative think tanks that have traditionally focused on broad economic, social, and foreign policy issues have recently added “bioethics” to their political agendas.

A few examples of conservative think tanks now focused on bioethics are the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research in Washington, D.C., where Leon Kass is a fellow (2002 revenue: $17 million); the Ethics and Public Policy Center in Washington, D.C. (2003 revenue: $1.8 million); the Federalist Society for Law and Public Policy Studies in Washington, D.C. (2003 revenue: $4 million); the Discovery Institute in Seattle, Washington (2003 revenue: $4 million); the Family Research Council in Washington, D.C. and Holland, Michigan (2003 revenue: $9 million); and James Dobson’s Focus on the Family in Colorado Springs, Colorado, (2003 revenue: $127 million).

Why are these conservative think tanks now fervently working to shape bioethics policy? They see bioethics as a way to extend their conservative agenda. Their constituents are looking to them to provide education and counsel on these issues, and they believe, and does the Women’s Bioethics Project, that bioethical debate will be the battlefield for defining the kind of society we want to create.

The approaches these think-tanks take to bioethics differ because of their target audiences. For instance, The Discovery Institute underwrites promotional book tours for conservative bioethicists, Focus on the Family issues a series of mini white papers on “How would God want us to respond” to bioethical issues, and the American Enterprise Institute recently held a lecture for its membership on “How to think about Bioethics and the constitution.”

Regardless of the approach, what all these think tanks and centers have in common is that they are not focused on single issues; they cover an amazing breath including end of life, euthanasia, physician assisted suicide, abortion, stem cell research, reproductive technologies, and genetics to name a few. They are incredibly adept at tying these issues together in a unified conservative framework based on a concept of “human dignity.” This defines their position on any given issue and resonates with their audience.

In light of this well-funded, well-coordinated effort with large constituencies primed for political action on bioethical issues, is there still time to effectively promote an alternative progressive bioethics agenda? The Women’s Bioethics Project believes the answer is a resounding yes.

One opportunity is the signs of cracks in the conservative’s armor. For instance in the Shiavo case, the majority of Americans - regardless of their position on the issue - felt it was not appropriate for the President and Congress to be intervening in what was seen as a private, family decision that was a matter for state court at most.

Another opportunity is the fact that conservatives are beginning to fight amongst themselves about how best to push their agenda, which is temporarily undermining the coalition.

As an organization that advocates for women, we have an opportunity to reach out to women who are concerned about protecting their reproductive freedom and are suspicious of groups who talk more about the moral status of the fetus than the realities of these women’s lives.

But our biggest opportunity may be the fact that technology continues to evolve. Many new technologies such as genetic testing, human germline modification, and neuro-biology are still in their infancy and the debates have not yet been framed by extreme conservative and religious right propaganda. We still have time to frame those issues and ensure that the debate is not reduced to simplistic notions and partisan polarizing.

Challenging the conservative stronghold won’t be easy. We are unlikely to match their megaphone, and we won’t be effective by merely dismissing legitimate concerns as scientifically ignorant or faith-based nonsense. We need to do more than just say “yes” where the conservatives say “no.”

We have the power to shape a compelling alternative vision based on a different worldview and values. How do we do that? Here is how the Women’s Bioethics Project is approaching the problem:

We must be willing to move beyond our historical ways of thinking about issues. Technology will change the nature of the facts and force us to reexamine the tenets of our underlying belief systems whether we identify as pro-choice, pro-environment or pro-science. For example, when one partner wants a frozen embryo donated to research and the other wants it implanted in another women’s womb, what is the pro-choice position? We may want to see scientific progress continue but are there circumstances where it can do more harm than good? Our willingness to engage in a broad rethinking of the issues will help us map out powerful and compelling positions.

We must spend more time thinking about what kind of world we want to live in, and then build a philosophical framework around this vision rather than just weighing in issue by issue. We need to talk less about technology and more about values. We have a responsibility to not cede all things moral to the religious right.

We must embrace strange political bedfellows, as bioethics does not necessarily follow a party line. Look at the Schiavo case—when else in history have Jesse Jackson, Ralph Nader, and Rush Limbaugh all agreed on a major issue? This is just the beginning. We must look at this as an opportunity; a strategic way to get reach out to groups that would not ordinarily align together and show them what values we have in common.

We must work on issues that are really relevant to people’s lives, not just the sexy ones that get all the headlines. Broad issues that don’t seem frightening or hot enough to engage national media attention still deserve our focus, such as access to health care, poverty, and caring for children and the elderly.

And finally, we must think globally from the beginning; the issues we face do not have borders and affect all of humankind.

This is an exciting time to be involved in bioethics. We have the historic opportunity to define the issues, shape policies and make a difference. We must step up and work together to create the kind of world we all want to live in.
 
   
 
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