It is 9: 00 in the morning at the Bank of America. Fred, a banker, has worked there for more than seven years. The place is crowded with customers just like any other Saturday mornings. Unexpectedly, two armed men arrive and demand bank tellers to give them money. In the process of robbing the bank, Fred is murdered. Fred’s body is rushed to a hospital.
The next of kin gives his permission for organs to be removed from Fred’s body. Doctors operate and extract eye corneas, lungs, the heart, and other parts of the body. These are later supplied to other doctors who transplant them into many ill people for restoring sight, replacing a diseased heart, transplanting a kidney, and some of these organs might be used for research. Fred’s tragedy is somewhat alleviated by the knowledge that many peoples’ lives have been saved or improved.
Stem cell research works on equivalent grounds, except that embryos are still alive when researchers use them to obtain stem cells, not dead like Fred was. In stem cell research, embryos are involuntarily used to derive stem cell. Believing embryos are humans involves not using them as a means for achieving medical purposes. Technological progress is indeed one of the most fundamental growth that increasing better standards of living for the world; however, it is not always good. Many scientists use progress as an excuse for stem cell research.
They have asserted that the world is changing at a rapid rate and we, as people, must keep up with the pace. One must realize that even though progress is important, but people’ lives are still the most important. No progress should come close to people to the extent that humans’ lives are at risks. Stem cell research helps people at the expense of other people’ lives. Not only does stem cell research exploits people, but it also kills embryos. Killing is immoral, and it applies to all class of people, including embryos.
We should restricted stem cell research from using embryos to derive stem cells because it is unethical. Besides, there are severe consequences to stem cell research, including failure rate and possibly a black market for embryos. If one believes embryos are humans, then killing surplus embryos and the continuing of stem cell research is nonetheless a continuous trend that is akin to Nazi medical experimentation on human beings, which we all know was cruel and brutal. Pro-life advocates demonstrate the need for both progress and ethic principles to coexist.