Moral arguments against human cloning
The battle to stop human cloning will be a most important opportunity
to turn the tide against the Culture of Death. Here are some talking
points to help you discuss the topic of cloning with elected officials and
fellow citizens.
- Cloning will destroy the unity of marriage and parenthood.
Divorce, extramarital sex, contraception and in vitro fertilization
all disrupt the unity of marriage and parenthood. Cloning is yet another
blow to the unity which should exist in Christian marriage.
- Cloning turns people into commodities.
Cloning subjects a human person to being treated as a thing. Cloning
a child is an expensive technological project, prone to "quality
control." Treating persons as things has become commonplace in our
society, but the practice is always destructive and immoral.
- Cloning is an assault on human life.
The first argument against human cloning is straightforward and
widely shared: it is dangerous. The report of the one successfully
cloned sheep in Scotland was preceded by 276 failures. Cloned human
embryos have already been killed in research laboratories. In addition,
genetic screening will be used with cloned human embryos and any embryo
who does not pass will be killed.
- Cloning assaults the dignity of human procreation.
Human procreation involves a man and a woman coming together as one,
open to new life-the fruit of their union. Assisted reproductive
technologies are, without a doubt, affronts to human dignity. And
cloning leaves no trace of the dignity of human procreation, as it is
completely artificial reproductive technology.
- Cloning assaults the dignity of the conjugal union.
Normally, a child is the living expression of the parent's mutual
love. To be sure, there are children whose parents do not love each
other, as there are married couples who love each other and do not have
children. Still, the existence of children is a persistent sign of
parents' mutual love. The potent and universal sign of God's gift of
life is lost when the child's life begins in a laboratory.
- Cloning is unprecedented human arrogance
If making people in your laboratory isn't "playing God," the phrase
has no meaning.
Recommended reading:
Donum
Vitae, Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith , 1987.
Recommended action:
There are several federal and state initiatives described as human
cloning bans. However, one must be very careful to determine what is an
authentic ban because some initiatives will still allow cloning for
research, which is another way of saying "clone and kill." Information on
legislative initiatives can be found in our electronic bulletin, Communiqué,
which is sent to subscribers and posted on our web site.
|