romney%20katie2.jpgA month ago I wrote a post stating Fred Thompson had disqualified as one of my presidential primary picks for opposing a human life amendment or federal intervention if need be of disabled killing.
Now Mitt Romney has disqualified himself for supporting human embryonic stem cell research.
I’m so disappointed, because I was trying hard to give this pro-life convert the benefit of the doubt. Turns out he’s not completely converted. A December 5 interview with Katie Couric on CBS News went like this….

Couric: So are you opposed to stem cell research?
Romney: No, I’m very much in favor of stem cell research, but in a way which I believe is moral and ethical. And creating new embryos through embryo farming or through cloning, I find to be unethical and I would not pursue that course of stem cell research.
Couric: So what kind of embryos – embryos that are created for procreation and then would be discarded? Are those the ones that you feel are perfectly fine from which to cull cells for stem cell research?
Romney: Yes, those embryos that are referred to commonly as surplus embryos from in-vitro fertilization. Those embryos, I hope, could be available for adoption for people who would like to adopt embryos. But if a parent decides they would want to donate one of those embryos for purposes of research, in my view, that’s acceptable. It should not be made against the law. I wouldn’t finance that with government money because it represents a moral challenge for a lot of people and I think we’re better investing in places where the prospects are much better. And I think that’s something like something known as alter-nuclear transfer where you create new embryo, like, entities, but they’re not human embryos. And you can take stem cells from those.

No. A parent cannot authorize killing a child. A parent cannot donate his/her living child for scientific experimentation.
Romney understood this when discussing abortion earlier in the interview. He just needed to apply that logic to human embryo experimentation:

Couric: What’s the biggest mistake you’ve ever made? How did you recognize it and what did you do to change course?
Romney: Well, I think from the political perspective, the biggest mistake I made was believing that my personal disagreement with abortion and my view that abortion was wrong, that somehow I could accommodate my personal view that abortion was wrong with a public view that other people should be able to make up their own mind, and the government wouldn’t play a role. That, in my view, was a mistake….
Couric: You said you have personal views toward abortion but felt that in the public arena, another position could exist. What is wrong with that? What’s wrong with having a personal view and feeling that it’s the right of individuals to make these difficult choices?
Romney: Well, what I recognized is that in a civilized society that there has to be a respect for the sanctity of life – that if you put that aside, if you say, “We’re gonna start creating life and then destroying it,” you’re, in effect, playing God. And I think a civilized society has certain rules of conduct that it live by and one of those is to respect the sanctity of life.

I don’t get Romney’s disconnect, but he has disconnected. And he has disqualified himself.
That leaves pretty much leaves Mike Huckabee. I really like Duncan Hunter, but he’s not getting any traction.
[HT: Lifenews.com]

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...