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Eric Cohen

27 articles 1996–2018

A Crisis of Liberalism?

Eric Cohen · March 9, 2018

Since the birth of the modern age, conservatives of various stripes have lamented—often with good reason—the cultural decline of post-Enlightenment society. Such critiques have emphasized different defects: the shrinking of human beings to mere seekers of comfort; the loss of reverence for…

Eternal Capital

Eric Cohen · December 15, 2017

In a March 2016 speech before the American Israel Public Affairs Committee policy conference, Donald Trump declared that if he became president, he would “move the American embassy to the eternal capital of the Jewish people, Jerusalem.” His choice of phrase—“eternal capital”—perhaps bears some…

Stem the Tide

William Kristol · July 24, 2006

This week, the Senate will take up legislation already passed by the House (H.R. 810) to authorize federal funding for research on embryonic stem cells harvested by de stroying human embryos left over in fertility clinics. Since August 2001, under a policy established by President Bush, federally…

The Many Faces of Technology

Eric Cohen · February 3, 2006

TECHNOLOGY IN ITS MANY GUISES was a central theme of President Bush's State of the Union address--from Iran's pursuit of nuclear weapons to the production of revolutionary energy technologies to the need to ban the creation of human-animal hybrids. In other words: Technology as mortal threat.…

Frist's Stem Cell Capitulation

William Kristol · August 8, 2005

With his Friday speech on the Senate floor announcing his support for federal funding of new embryonic stem cell research, Senate majority leader Bill Frist did the wrong thing at the wrong time.

Go Forth and Replicate

Eric Cohen · May 30, 2005

CONSCIENCE IS A SLIPPERY THING. In 2001, during the first few months of the Bush presidency, America engaged in a debate about the ethics of embryo research. The policy question was narrow: Should the federal government use public funds to support stem cell research that involves embryo…

What Living Wills Won't Do

Eric Cohen · April 18, 2005

IN THE AFTERMATH OF THE Terri Schiavo case, it seems clear that most Americans are uncomfortable at the prospect of politicians' intervening in family decisions about life and death. This is not only understandable, but usually wise. Americans understand that eventually they will have to make…

How Liberalism Failed Terri Schiavo

Eric Cohen · April 4, 2005

THE STORY OF TERRI SCHIAVO is both peculiar in its details and paradigmatic in its meaning. The legal twists, political turns, and central characters are so odd that one hesitates to draw any broader conclusions. But the Schiavo case is also a tragic example of the moral and legal confusions that…

The Party of Cloning

Eric Cohen · August 30, 2004

JOHN KERRY'S recent assertions about stem cell research are so obviously untrue and so easily refuted that he must on some level actually believe them--as only an ideologue can. He claims repeatedly that President Bush has "enacted a far-reaching ban on stem cell research"; in fact, the Bush…

Kerry's Zealotry

Eric Cohen · July 5, 2004

IT IS INCREASINGLY CLEAR that John Kerry and the Democrats plan to make embryonic stem cell research a campaign issue. In a speech in Denver last week, Sen. Kerry attacked the Bush administration for letting "ideology and fear stand in the way" of medical progress. In a June 12 radio address, he…

The Politics of Bioethics

William Kristol · May 10, 2004

"NOTHING ILLUSTRATES this administration's anti-science attitude better than George Bush's cynical decision to limit research on embryonic stem cells," declared John Kerry in a December 2003 campaign speech. He was referring to the president's August 9, 2001, decision to permit federal funding for…

A Clone by any Other Name

William Kristol · December 23, 2002

[img_assist|nid=|title=|desc=|link=none|align=right|width=|height=] TRUTH, famously the first casualty of war, is now falling victim to the latest skirmish in the biotech wars. Euphemism and doublespeak are the order of the day, and not because of timid politicians or shameless propagandists, but,…

Biotech Loses Its Innocence

Eric Cohen · June 24, 2002

IN A RECENT REPORT for investors in the biotech industry, the relationship between biotechnology and terrorism is described as follows: "Ugly as bioterrorism is, bringing biotech back into the headlines in the capacity of a savior has done much to stimulate the sector since its mid-September 2001…

New Genetics, Old Quandaries

Eric Cohen · April 22, 2002

IN JANUARY, the President's Council on Bioethics began its first meeting with a reading of Nathaniel Hawthorne's story "The Birthmark," a parable of a scientist's obsessive effort to remove a "crimson stain" from his wife's cheek. It is about the mad quest for perfection--the revolt against "sin,…

Dr. West and Mr. bin Laden

William Kristol · December 17, 2001

IN TESTIMONY before the Senate last July, Dr. Michael West, president of Advanced Cell Technology and lead scientist on the team that recently cloned the first human embryos, quoted Scripture: As the Apostle Paul said: "When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a…

Cloning, Stem Cells, and Beyond

William Kristol · August 13, 2001

LAST WEEK’S VOTE in the House to ban human cloning is something to celebrate. It may even be something momentous. The House passed, by 265 to 162, a bill sponsored by representative Dave Weldon of Florida that would ban the creation of all human clones. It rejected an alternative sponsored by…

Keeping Up with the Joneses

Eric Cohen · July 30, 2001

THERE HAVE BEEN TWO PROMINENT RESPONSES to the news that the Jones Institute in Virginia is creating human embryos simply to harvest their stem cells: concern and outrage. Mark Warner, the Democratic candidate for governor in Virginia, is concerned. Asked in the governor’s debate last week if he…

Of Missile Defense and Stem Cells

Eric Cohen · July 16, 2001

AMONG THE ISSUES in American politics that inspire the most ideological fervor these days, stem cells and missile defense are at the top of the list. Missile defense has a long history: To conservative Republicans, it is a fixture of the Reagan legacy, of American strength, independence, and…

Knock Off the Cloning

Eric Cohen · June 18, 2001

AFTER A FAILED EFFORT to ban human cloning in 1998, Congress has taken up the issue once again. There have been hearings in both the House and the Senate, testimony from fertility doctors and cult leaders who want to clone human beings, and heavy rhetoric about the coming of a Brave New World. In…

Race and the Republicans

Eric Cohen · April 30, 2001

Last February, a few days after a man from Indiana had fired several shots at the White House, I found myself driving a group of black fourth and fifth graders to the U.S. Capitol for a private tour. George W. Bush had just been inaugurated, so I asked the kids what they thought about their new…

Race and the Republicans

Eric Cohen · April 30, 2001

Last February, a few days after a man from Indiana had fired several shots at the White House, I found myself driving a group of black fourth and fifth graders to the U.S. Capitol for a private tour. George W. Bush had just been inaugurated, so I asked the kids what they thought about their new…

Bush the Bold?

Eric Cohen · February 12, 2001

At the luncheon after George W. Bush's inauguration, senator Mitch McConnell toasted the new president as an American "Joshua," whose ability to bring people together would lead the nation to the promised land. It was a religion-filled day -- with President Bush appealing to saints and angels in…

Small Politics, Big Issues

Eric Cohen · November 6, 2000

In a recent interview, Daniel Patrick Moynihan compared the United States of 2000 to Rome in its golden age, mere decades before its fall. "Enjoy what joy we have," said Moynihan, "and expect things to be worse." The comparison to Rome is apt: America, like Rome, is enjoying a festival of wealth;…

United We Surf

Eric Cohen · February 28, 2000

Outside an August 1998 trade show in Santa Clara, Calif., a coalition of left-wing Bay Area groups denounced Silicon Valley for failing to share its wealth with minority consumers and employees. "Intel, Intel you're no good, / bring computers to the 'hood," the protesters chanted. An Intel…

The Drug Court Revolution

Eric Cohen · December 27, 1999

At the most recent Washington, D.C., Drug Court "graduation" -- a monthly event for drug defendants who have successfully stayed in treatment -- Mark Williams stole the show. Williams, a transvestite dressed in checkered hot pants with matching pocketbook, gave spirited testimony. "I want to thank…

FALLING DOWN ON THE JOB

Eric Cohen · August 12, 1996

AT THE POTOMAC JOB CORPS CENTER in Washington, D.C., disadvantaged youths aged 16 to 24 live in dorms, work on reading, and learn trades. Some study to become house painters, others to become bricklayers, carpenters -- even cosmetologists. And all of them study American history. Well, sort of.