The Elite’s Moral Gadfly

The American Spectator By George Neumayr Published 5/24/2005 12:08:57 AM

For columnist Michael Kinsley human embryos are at once valuable and valueless. Their parts contain a possible cure for his Parkinson’s disease, yet they are “biologically more primitive than a mosquito,” he wrote last Sunday in the Los Angeles Times. Kinsley is very enamored with this mosquito-embryo comparison. He’s used it before in previous columns to drive home the point that disposing of human embryos should generate even less thought than swatting a mosquito. For good measure in this column Kinsley also calls human embryos “tiny clumps of cells” lest we fail to grasp how silly it is to consider them worthy of respect.

Historians of ideas should clip Kinsley’s columns on this subject as a straightforward example of the American elite’s rancid and heedless moral philosophy circa 2000. They reveal that as the age of cloning advances, the elite, demanding longevity at all moral costs, consoles itself with the thought that the class of lab humans they hope to form are “more primitive” than insects. The human embryo is the one endangered species they won’t protect and will use as their utopian science’s slave.

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