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Feature
April 3 , 2000/Volume 5, Number 28
Is Bioethics Ethical?
by Wesley J. Smith

The case of James H. Armstrong, M.D. v. The State of Montana should have been
merely a skirmish in the never-ending national struggle over abortion. Instead,
relying on the reasoning of certain “experts” in the moral choices surrounding
health care, the Montana Supreme Court issued in October 1999 a sweeping
decision that could make huge changes in the way Montanans live—and the way
they die.

What happened in Montana is happening across the country, usually less
dramatically but nonetheless steadily. The United States has a bad case of
“expertitis,” and for many years we have been ceding to experts control over
our public decisions. Now the most important questions about health care have
been added to the list. Decision making has been quietly co-opted by
“bioethics,” a genre of philosophical discourse practiced by an elite group of
academics, philosophers, lawyers, and physicians, many of whom are openly
hostile to the sanctity of life and the Hippocratic traditions that most people
still take for granted.

Bioethicists spend much of their time arguing with one another, beneath—or,
more accurately, above—the public radar, in arcane academic journals, books,
university symposia, and government-appointed commissions. This is no empty
intellectual enterprise, but a project aimed at changing America. In the course
of their arguments, bioethicists are arriving at a consensus about the course
of our medical future, and they are slowly succeeding at transforming the laws
of public health and the ethics of clinical medicine in their own image.

At issue in the Montana case was a state law requiring that doctors (as opposed
to physician-assistants) perform all abortions. This the court unanimously
overturned; but it didn't stop there. Writing for a 6-2 majority, Justice James
C. Nelson went on to impose a radical philosophical imperative on the people of
Montana, unwarranted by the facts of the case and unnecessary to its prudent
adjudication. Indeed, Nelson's audacious opinion will be grist for litigation
in Montana for many years to come.

Its essential holding is this: “The Montana Constitution broadly guarantees
each individual the right to make medical judgments affecting her or his bodily
integrity and health in partnership with a chosen health care provider free
from government interference.” As the two justices who objected to the scope of
the ruling, Karla M. Gray and Chief Justice J.A. Turnage, warned, “the Court's
opinion sweeps so broadly as to encompass and decide such issues as the right
to physician-assisted suicide and other important health and medical-related
issues which simply were not litigated in this case.”

Gray and Turnage's trepidation is abundantly warranted. If the ruling means
that virtually anything goes medically in Montana so long as a patient requests
it and a health care professional is willing to provide it, then patients can
ask doctors to kill them for organ-donation purposes, parents or guardians can
secure the killing of disabled infants, and people can volunteer to be
experimented on in dangerous ways that are currently illegal—all this as a
result not of a considered decision by the people of Montana but of a little-
noticed ruling by the state supreme court.

As it happens, the Montana constitutional convention that created the state
right to privacy in 1972 explicitly refused to include abortion and other
medical issues in the privacy guarantee. So, to justify its ruling, the court
looked to precedents like Roe v. Wade, the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court decision
that legalized abortion nationwide. Even more than on case law, however, the
Montana court relied on philosophical treatises. In particular, the authority
it cited most frequently is the book Life's Dominion: An Argument About
Abortion, Euthanasia, and Individual Freedom (1993), by the attorney and
bioethicist Ronald Dworkin.

Dworkin's thesis is that true adherence to a modern understanding of the
sanctity-of-life ethic requires that all of us be permitted to “decide for
ourselves” about abortion and euthanasia and that our decisions be accepted by
society and tolerated by those who disagree. Otherwise society is
“totalitarian.” The majority opinion in Armstrong cites Life's Dominion so many
times and applies its reasoning so enthusiastically that Ronald Dworkin's
philosophy may now be considered the court-mandated health care creed of the
state of Montana.

Dworkin's triumph in Armstrong v. Montana illustrates the growing influence of
bioethics. To become a bioethicist isn't hard. No tests have to be passed;
practitioners are not licensed, like attorneys, physicians, real estate agents,
and hairdressers; and, while more than 30 universities offer degrees in
bioethics, there are no standards of excellence that generally apply. A
Catholic priest may be a bioethicist, as may an atheist college professor.
Health care professionals such as nurses and community ombudsmen may get
appointed to hospital ethics committees, take a few training courses, and call
themselves bioethicists. Indeed, I could say that I am a bioethicist, having
written and lectured extensively on the ethics of assisted suicide and the
withholding of medical treatment from dying and disabled people.
The mere designation, however, does not give one influence within the bioethics
movement. That is to say, there is a very big difference between being a
bioethicist and subscribing to the ideology of mainstream bioethics. It is the
adherents of the ideology who matter and who hold a steadily increasing sway
over the laws of public health, the application of medical ethics, and the
protocols that govern hospital care.

This phenomenon is relatively new. It began about 30 years ago as an
intellectual exchange among medical ethicists, philosophers, and theologians
with widely varying views about how to resolve the dilemmas presented by the
growth of technological medicine. In the early years, there was a robust
contest for the heart and soul of the movement. Adherents of human equality and
the sanctity of life, such as the late Paul Ramsey, were pitted against
utilitarians who emphasize the quality of life, such as the late Joseph
Fletcher, the patriarch of modern bioethics. Over the years, the Ramsey school
made crucial contributions—most notably, helping promote the right to refuse
unwanted medical treatment—but steadily lost influence. Today, mainstream
bioethics is substantially homogeneous in outlook, and the primary differences
among bioethicists concern the proper ways to apply generally agreed-upon
values to health care policy and individual medical decisions. It is in this
sense that bioethics has become an ideology, albeit one that not every
bioethicist shares.

In order to have clout within the bioethics movement and seriously affect the
discourse that is its hallmark, one must subscribe to its intellectual
underpinnings. Pro-lifers have no influence, by definition, and those whose
advocacy is rooted in religion are usually ignored. Mainstream bioethics
reached a consensus long ago that religious values are divisive in a
pluralistic society and thus have little place in the formulation of public
policy. Those who believe in abortion rights but also hold that all born humans
are equally endowed with moral worth, along with those who subscribe to the “do
no harm” ethos of the Hippocratic oath, have little impact, since mainstream
bioethics rejects Hippocratic medicine as paternalistic and shrugs off equal
human moral worth as a relic of the West's religious past.

In mainstream bioethics, human beings per se have no special rights or moral
value. The movement as a whole no longer thinks in that idiom. Instead, it
overwhelmingly embraces a quality-of-life ethic that requires individual humans
to earn their moral and legal rights by displaying certain cognitive
capacities. This is usually described as achieving the status of a “person.” As
we shall see, the criteria for personhood are still a matter of debate among
bioethicists. But the notion that personhood rather than humanness is what
counts in determining moral worth and legal rights is nearly universally
accepted within the mainstream movement and has been taught in American
universities and colleges to a whole generation of students. Bioethics ideology
rejects person status for newborns, people with severe brain damage, and those
with dementia, all of whom it regards as beings of lesser worth than those with
more developed frontal lobes. There is serious debate within bioethics,
however, whether to extend personhood to some animals (“nonhuman animals,” in
bioethics parlance), even as it is being stripped from some humans.

Part of what makes this alarming is that the values and presumptions of
bioethics ideology are not shared generally throughout society. Unlike
adherents to this ideology, most people believe that being human in and of
itself confers a special moral status. Most people view a newborn infant as
having the same moral worth as all other humans and want their doctors to
subscribe to the Hippocratic oath. This means that, as the government, the law,
and organized medicine rely increasingly on “expert” bioethicists to supply the
answers to public policy dilemmas in areas such as cloning, stem cell research,
health care rationing, and organ procurement for transplantation, those answers
are likely to be based on beliefs not generally shared by the people affected.
More and more, public policies and medical protocols are likely to conflict
with, rather than reflect, the values of the citizenry.

If bioethics ideology is out of step with mainstream American thinking,
however, it is entirely consistent with the mindset of the elite. As Daniel
Callahan, one of the movement's pioneers, wrote in the Hastings Center Report
in 1993, the “final factor of great importance” in bioethics' success was the
“emergence ideologically of a form of bioethics that dovetailed nicely with the
reigning political liberalism of the educated classes in America.”

It is not surprising, then, that movement bioethicists have become among
society's most powerful members or that their work affects American culture
from top to bottom: They serve on federal and state public policy commissions.
They write health legislation. They teach the next generation of doctors,
lawyers, business executives, and government policy makers in our institutions
of higher learning. They are paid by HMOs to consult on issues such as when
desired medical treatment can be withheld or withdrawn unilaterally. They
direct hospital and nursing-home ethics committees that make or influence
decisions ranging from whether to withhold treatment from premature infants to
whether to pull feeding tubes from stroke patients who are not dying. They
testify as expert witnesses in court cases and submit friend of the court
briefs in legal cases of major significance, thereby affecting the evolution of
law. They serve on institutional review boards that oversee the ethics of
medical experiments using human subjects. They help write protocols governing
organ procurement. Occasionally, their work leads to startling lurches in the
law, as in Montana. More typically, their advocacy erodes ethical standards and
values slowly, as waves transform shorelines, through a succession of subtle
changes in public policy and medical ethics—a process known within the movement
as “policy creep.”

What makes this especially worrisome is that once a policy is formally adopted
or embedded in law, it has the power to modify the beliefs of the people it
affects. Thus, the patriarch, Joseph Fletcher, viewed the field expansively, as
determining how “we are to live and act,” a “wisdom” he deemed “specially
appropriate to the medical sciences and medical arts.” Some bioethicists see
themselves as the creators of a new moral paradigm that will replace the
archaic Judeo-Christian order as the philosophical underpinning of society.

To appreciate fully the mindset of bioethics and the consequences that will
flow from its growing influence on public policy, one need only look to the
journals in which its leading thinkers communicate with one another and with
their colleagues in the trenches of American medicine—in physicians' offices,
on hospital ethics committees, at consultancies advising nursing homes—where
bioethics values affect everyday decisions. Two of the most prominent journals
devoted exclusively to bioethics are the Hastings Center Report, a bimonthly
published by the bioethics think tank the Hastings Center, of Garrison, New
York, and the Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, a quarterly published by
Georgetown University. Although not every article in these publications
embraces bioethics ideology, the vast majority do. These journals channel the
discussion in a definite direction.

The December 1999 issue of the Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal is a case in
point. It concentrates on the continuing debate over personhood. A person, the
journal's introduction says, is “someone morally considerable who is the
subject of moral rights and merits moral protection.” Most people would say
that all human beings qualify. The authors of several articles disagree.
The lead author, John Harris, the Sir David Alliance professor of bioethics at
the University of Manchester, in England, claims that it is necessary to
establish the criteria for personhood so as to “identify those sorts of
individuals who have the ëhighest' moral value or importance.” It is not life
per se that is dispositive, but life of such quality as to “bring [individuals]
into the same moral categories as ourselves.” Being human alone does not do the
trick: Personhood theory creates castes of “us” and “them,” in an explicit
hierarchy of human worth.

Harris makes a rather astonishing assertion, considering the brouhaha over
abortion. He baldly states that human life begins at conception. This, of
course, does not mean he opposes abortion—to the contrary. Remember, it is not
human life that matters in personhood theory; human beings do not deserve
special status merely because of their species. Harris blandly denigrates
unborn human life: “The human embryo and fetus,” he writes, “in all stages of
its development from conception to birth is no more interesting or complex than
the embryos of other creatures and indeed no more interesting than the adult
forms of other creatures, for example cats and canaries.”

Harris next opines that the exploration of who is a person must include
animals, because the exclusion of fauna from personhood deliberations would be
arbitrary and an act of “speciesism”—a claim of superiority based on species,
which Harris considers as “disreputable” as an assertion of superiority based
on “race, gender, nationality, religion, or any other nonmoral characteristic.”
So, who (or what) should duly be deemed a person? To Harris, a person is “a
being that can value existence.” This means “persons might, in principle, be
members of any species, or indeed machines.” He explicitly states that fetuses
and newborn infants are not persons, nor are people with significant cognitive
disability or dementia.

The ultimate purpose of personhood analysis is to determine whom we can kill
and still get a good night's sleep. Harris writes, “Persons who want to live
are wronged by being killed…Nonpersons or potential persons cannot be wronged
in this way because death does not deprive them of something they value. If
they cannot wish to live, they cannot have that wish frustrated by being
killed.” So much for the moral wrongness of murdering newborns and throwing
them into trash dumpsters.

In the same issue of the Kennedy Institute of Ethics Journal, Georgetown's Tom
L. Beauchamp, co-author with James F. Childress of one of the most influential
bioethics textbooks, Principles of Biomedical Ethics, also writes about
personhood, taking a different route to essentially the same destination as
Harris. Beauchamp asserts that the key to determining personhood is analyzing
whether a being enjoys “moral personhood,” which he calls both a “cognitive and
moral-capacity criterion” for possession of moral rights. He writes, “It is
safe to assume that a creature is a moral person if (1) it is capable of making
moral judgments about the rightness and wrongness of actions and (2) it has
motives that can be judged morally.”

Beauchamp, like Harris, asserts that under his theory, “unprotected persons
would presumably include fetuses, newborns, psychopaths, severely brain-damaged
patients, and various demented patients.” Beauchamp does not believe that moral
personhood should be the sole basis for moral rights or that animals can be
moral persons, but he does assert that humans who are not moral persons may be
treated with the same levels of respect or exploitation as animals are now;
some humans are “equal or inferior in moral standing to some nonhumans.” “If
this conclusion is defensible,” he writes, “we will need to rethink our
traditional view that these unlucky humans cannot be treated in the ways we
treat relevantly similar nonhumans. For example, they might be aggressively
used as human research subjects and sources of organs.” In other words,
Beauchamp holds out the prospect that we may someday exploit living infants and
cognitively disabled human beings as if they were mere natural resources.

The November-December 1999 Hastings Center Report focuses on the ethics of
expanding organ procurement from “non-heart-beating cadaver donors,” that is,
people who have died from cardiac arrest instead of “brain death.” Much of the
discussion has to do with how long doctors should have to wait after a heart
stops beating before judging the donor dead for purposes of organ procurement
and still be in compliance with the “dead donor rule,” which requires that
donors of vital and non-paired organs be dead before having their organs
procured. (Many bioethicists want to discard the dead donor rule, to increase
organ availability, but that argument is not made here.) Some organ centers
currently wait only two minutes after the cessation of the heartbeat to procure
organs; a recent bioethics panel recommended five minutes. The arguments are
important, but arcane, and would take too long to explain here.

That said, the ultimately utilitarian approach of mainstream bioethics is much
in evidence. John A. Robertson, holder of the Vinson & Elkins chair at the
University of Texas Law School, where he teaches criminal law, constitutional
law, and bioethics, makes an audacious proposal. He notes that until and unless
law and medical ethics discard the dead donor rule, as many bioethicists urge,
it will be impossible to use such people as anencephalic infants (babies born
with most of their brains missing) or unconscious people as vital-organ donors.
Even with the dead donor rule in place, however, Robertson suggests that single
kidneys and some other body tissues could be harvested from such people, who
“would not be directly harmed by such use.” Again, the proposal is to use
cognitively disabled people as mere natural resources. One wonders whether the
New Mexico woman who recently woke up after being unconscious for 16 years
would have objected had she awakened to learn that one of her kidneys and her
corneas had been taken from her on the theory that the loss of them could not
harm her.

Like ruminating cows, bioethicists earnestly chew and rechew their ideas until
they have explored every nuance, considered every implication, and the movers
and shakers of the movement have achieved consensus about a particular
approach. When that point comes, public policy often changes fast: Notice the
speed with which removing feeding tubes from unconscious, cognitively disabled
people became ethical and legal throughout the country once bioethicists agreed
it was no different morally from withdrawing antibiotics.

If mainstream bioethicists tread gingerly in pushing their agenda into policy,
it is for fear of a public backlash, provoked by what bioethicists jokingly
call “the yuck factor.” For those of us who believe that bioethics is directing
us down immoral and dangerous paths, this fear of the light offers the best
hope of an antidote. Since it is almost surely too late to transform the
movement's utilitarian assumptions from within, keeping the movement contained
inside the academy appears to be the most promising strategy to prevent our
society from being remade in bioethics' image. To do this will require
heightened media scrutiny and public awareness of what ideological bioethics
is, what it stands for, why it matters, and what consequences will befall us
all if the “new medicine” becomes our future.

That is easier said than done, of course. But there are ways. The ideology
could be engaged vigorously, from the grass roots to the academy to the halls
of Congress. Philanthropists could be persuaded to endow academic chairs
dedicated to exploring human equality as the basis for health care law and
policy, much as bioethics chairs are used to promote the quality-of-life
agenda. Politicians, devoted to their constituents' welfare, could resist the
bioethics tide. Nonprofit groups could be formed to follow the bioethics
movement, publish journals, engage the proponents in public debate, and alert
the media to particularly noxious developments. The popular media, especially
television and radio talk shows, could recognize the urgency of covering
bioethics as seriously as they cover politics. After all, are not issues like
personhood and the harvesting of organs from living people as compelling as tax
policy and welfare reform?

Beyond the media, a counter-bioethics movement could be created by those who
believe that the only truly moral way to resolve the dilemmas with which
bioethics grapples is by strict adherence to universal human equality. Perhaps
this new, ethical bioethics could be called “human-rights bioethics.” It would
boldly promote the proposition that there is no “them and us”—only us. Surely,
an abundance of academics, physicians, lawyers, disability rights activists,
patient advocates, theologians, and just plain people would be willing to stand
up proudly for the equal moral worth of all living people. For now, their
rallying cry could be: No more Montanas.
by Wesley J. Smith

© COPYRIGHT 1999, NEWS CORPORATION, WEEKLYSTANDARD, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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