Medievalizing Biotech Regulation
Francis Fukuyama wants to control your reproductive  decisions. 
_Ronald  Bailey_ (http://www.reason.com/staff/show/133.html)  | March 9, 2007 
"We are proposing a new regulatory institution in Washington,  DC," said 
Francis Fukuyama, professor of political economy at the Johns Hopkins  
University 
School of Advanced International Studies and author of Our Posthuman  Future. 
"It's been a long time since anyone has done that." 

What needs  regulating? Human biotechnology. Fukuyama unveiled his plan for a 
new agency at  a conference held at the Rayburn House Office building on 
Capitol Hill. The  blueprint for the new biotech regulatory agency being 
proposed 
by Fukuyama and  Swiss technology consultant Franco Furger is laid out in a 
400 page book, _Beyond Bioethics: A Proposal for Modernizing  the Regulation of 
Human Biotechnologies_ (http://www.biotechgov.org/) .

Why do we need a new  biotech regulatory agency? Because bad things have 
happened? Not at all. In  fact, Fukuyama wants to put his proposal in play now 
so 
that the denizens of  Capitol Hill can simply pull it off the shelf and enact 
it into law when some  sort of biotech scandal erupts. The proposed agency is 
explicitly modeled after  the British Human Fertilisation and Embryology 
Authority (HEFA). Fukuyama's new  agency would not just regulate the safety and 
efficacy of new biotechnologies,  but also rule on their ethical propriety. 
According to Fukuyama, biotechnology  is "galloping ahead" and it's time to 
move 
from ethical discussions to  regulation and "social control."

Furger discussed some recent  developments to illustrate how biotech is 
galloping ahead. For example, a Texas  fertility clinic is now offering 
_embryos 
for sale_ (http://www.reason.com/news/show/36844.html) ;  researchers have 
manufactured _mouse  sperm_ 
(http://www.newscientist.com/channel/sex/stem-cells/mg19125604.200-stem-cells-turned-into-sperm.html)
  from stem cells; and others 
have inserted human cell nuclei into _rabbit  eggs_ 
(http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article787775.ece)  to try to produce 
stem cells. Furger said 
that he was listing these  activities, "not to say that they are reproachable. 
Some may be acceptable and  some not." He asked, "But how do we make that 
determination?"

Fukuyama  explained that the new agency would regulate anything having to do 
with assisted  reproduction techniques (ART). This would include IVF, _ooplasm 
transfer_ (http://www.sbivf.com/ivf_cyto.htm) , sex selection  either by 
pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) or _sperm sorting_ 
(http://www.reason.com/news/show/34895.html) . The agency  would also regulate 
research involving 
human reproductive tissues including all  embryonic stem cell research and 
anything dealing with human developmental  biology.

"Biotech has reached point where existing regulators, the Food  and Drug 
Administration and the National Institutes of Health, can't handle it,"  
declared 
Fukuyama.The agency would be guided by a set of ranked ethical  principles. 
Its first concern would be the well-being and health of children.  Second, 
ensuring equal access to ART for infertile couples. Third, protecting  the 
well-being of and health of women. Fourth, promoting therapeutic uses of ART  
over 
enhancement uses. Fifth, making sure that patients and research subjects  give 
their free informed consent to procedures. And finally, advocating for  
regulations to limit the commercialization of human eggs, sperm and embryos.  

Fukuyama would completely ban human reproductive cloning, the creation  of 
human animal chimeras for the purpose of reproduction, germline genetic  
modifications, any procedure that would alter the genetic relationship of  
parents to 
children, and the patenting of human embryos.

The new agency  would regulate research cloning, PGD, sex selection of 
embryos, and the  commercialization of certain elements of human reproduction 
such 
as the sale of  eggs, sperm and embryos. It would consist of a set of 
commissioners, appointed  by the president and advised by a board consisting of 
various 
stakeholder groups  such as patients, ART practitioners, scientific community 
and the biotech  industry. Fukuyama also introduced a novel set of mechanisms 
for consulting with  the wider public including deliberative panels and a 
consultative college of  consisting of randomly selected members of the public 
who convene to consider  regulatory issues over the internet.

Instead of inhibiting research and  the development of new treatments, the 
new agency could spur them on, suggested  Fukuyama. For example, he asserted 
that Britain is ahead of the United States in  human embryonic stem cell 
research 
because of the HFEA's regulations. Fukuyama  is just plain wrong about that. 
The Guardian _reported_ 
(http://www.scenta.co.uk/scenta/features.cfm?cit_id=1568805&FAArea1=widgets.content_view_1)
   last week, "Excessive bureaucracy 
imposed by the Human Fertilisation and  Embryology Authority [is] prohibiting 
development in stem cell research and  threatening Britain's position as a 
world 
leader in the field." The  Guardian quoted stem cell researcher Alison Murdoch, 
director of the  Newcastle Centre for Life fertility clinic, as saying, "The 
way the government  has handled the work we do is to regulate it to the point 
that it looks like  it's got barbed wire around it."

But what about the larger question: Do we really want a federal agency  
making and imposing ethical decisions about human reproduction? Consider the  
wretched history of federal and state regulation in this area. In 1873, 
Congress  
passed the Comstock Laws that _outlawed_ 
(http://advocatesforpregnantwomen.org/main/publications/articles_and_reports/the_war_on_drugs_and_the_war_on_abortion
_some_initial_thoughts_on_the_connections_intersections_and_the_effects.php)  
 "every obscene, lewd, or lascivious, and every filthy book, pamphlet, 
picture,  paper, letter, writing, print, or other publication of an indecent 
character,  and every article or thing designed, adapted, or intended for 
preventing  
conception or producing abortion." The Comstock Laws authorized the U.S. Post 
 Office to confiscate any publications providing advice on contraception and  
condoms shipped through the mail. The first eugenics law was passed in 
Indiana  in 1907 and eventually laws allowing the forced sterilization of 
"unfit" 
people  were _adopted by 30  states_ 
(http://www.commondreams.org/headlines/021500-02.htm) . Infamously, the U.S. 
Supreme Court upheld forced sterilization in 
 the case of _Buck v. Bell_ 
(http://www.law.du.edu/russell/lh/alh/docs/buckvbell.html)   in 1927. By the 
1960s, some 66,000 Americans had been forcibly  
neutered.

In the last half of the 20th century, the U.S.  Supreme Court finally stepped 
in to overrule state interference in the  reproductive decisions of 
Americans. In 1965, the Court found unconstitutional  the Connecticut law 
prohibiting 
use of birth control by married couples in _Griswold  v. Connecticut_ 
(http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/conlaw/griswold.html) . In 
1967, the 
Court ruled in _Loving v. Virginia_ (http://www.ameasite.org/loving.asp)  that 
the laws  in 16 states banning interracial marriage were unconstitutional. In 
1972, the  Court struck down in the case of _Eisenstadt  v. Baird_ 
(http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/scripts/getcase.pl?navby=CASE&court=US&vol=405&page=438)
  
a Massachusetts law prohibiting the sale of contraceptives to  unmarried 
people. And of course, the Supreme Court found prohibitions on  abortion 
unconstitutional in 1973 in _Roe v. Wade_ (http://www.tourolaw.edu/patch/Roe/) .

The HFEA, the  model for Fukuyama's new biotech regulatory agency, has 
similarly interfered  with the reproductive decisions of British people. The 
HFEA 
has told couples  that they could _not select the  sex_ 
(http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/10.02/biotech.html)  of embryos to be 
implanted. Even now the 
parents wanting to use PGD to  insure that their children will not be burdened 
with an inherited genetic  disease must _apply  for permission_ 
(http://www.cambridgenetwork.co.uk/POOLED/ARTICLES/BF_NEWSART/VIEW.ASP?Q=BF_NEWSART_185290)
  
from the HFEA. And the HFEA has _banned_ 
(http://www.hfea.gov.uk/cps/rde/xchg/SID-3F57D79B-F047022A/hfea/hs.xsl/1491.html)
   paying women for providing eggs 
to be used in research.

Fukuyama's agency  would rule not only on safety and efficacy but on moral 
questions surrounding  human reproduction. Some possible techniques are 
objectionable and should be  banned, e.g., any attempt to create a half-human 
half-chimp baby. On the other  hand, Fukuyama wants to ban ever allowing 
parents to 
safely choose genes that  would tend to give their children healthier immune 
systems, stronger bodies and  cleverer brains.

It turns out that the proposed agency is largely just a  vehicle for Fukuyama 
to impose his moral choices on other people. What Fukuyama  is proposing is a 
step backward to the bad old days in which strangers get to  vote on what 
kind of children their fellow citizens will be allowed to bring  into the 
world. 
A government bureaucracy, rather than parents, would get to make  eugenic 
decisions. As the sorry history of attempts to regulate human  reproduction 
shows, 
the truly moral thing to do is fiercely resist this  proposal.

_Ronald Bailey_ (mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED])  is  Reason's science 
correspondent. His book _Liberation Biology: The Scientific and Moral  Case for 
the 
Biotech Revolution_ (http://www.reason.com/lb/)  is now available from 
Prometheus  
Books.
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