Human Exceptionalism

Center on Human Exceptionalism

I Am Finally Scared of a White House administration

I was not intimidated during J. Edgar Hoover's FBI hunt for reporters like me who criticized him. I railed against the Bush-Cheney war on the Bill of Rights without blinking. But now I am finally scared of a White House administration. President Obama's desired health care reform intends that a federal board (similar to the British model) — as in the Center for Health Outcomes Research and Evaluation in a current Democratic bill — decides whether your quality of life, regardless of your political party, merits government-controlled funds to keep you alive. Watch for that life-decider in the final bill. It's already in the stimulus bill signed into law. Read More ›

Rationing and Rationality

This article, published in National Review, mentions Discovery Institute Senior Fellow Wesley Smith: … Baleful trends among bioethicists should heighten those concerns. The view that medical care should be withheld from people based not merely on the likelihood of success or the cost but on judgments about the quality of their lives is no longer held only by a fringe. Read More ›

Much Ado About Something: The Battle Over Obamacare

Americans are engaged in a healthy democratic donnybrook over “Obamacare,” the generic term for health care reform legislation that would remake the current American medical system. What a spectacle — citizens yelling at their elective representatives; the Speaker of the House of Representatives testily calling democratic organizing and agitation “un American,” the President of the United States forced by political Read More ›

Seniors Oppose Obamacare

This article, published by Ethics and Religion, quotes Discovery Institute Senior Fellow Wesley J. Smith: Scare tactics? Not according to Dr. Wesley Smith, who leads bioethics and human rights for the Discovery Institute. The House-passed bill does set up “proper care protocols” for cost savings. “The fear is that they would be rationing boards, rather than entities which stick to saying, Read More ›

New types of medicines need new regulatory approaches

As physicians, we are excited by new medical advances undreamed of only a few decades ago. Scientists are now creating advanced and truly individualized medicines that work with a person’s unique set of bodily components, such as DNA. Many of these new medicines – “biologic” drugs – are much more complicated than previous generations of medicines. Biologics are large, complex Read More ›

Collins Heads NIH

President Barack Obama made headlines earlier this year when he named physician and medical researcher Dr. Francis S. Collins—best known for heading the Human Genome Project—to head the National Institutes of Health. Why the fuss? Collins is an enthusiastic evangelical Christian who forcefully witnesses to his faith in the public square. Ignoring the U.S. Constitution’s prohibition of a religious test for Read More ›

So Three Cows Walk into Court…

Imagine you are a cattle rancher looking for liability insurance. You meet with your broker, who, as expected, asks a series of questions to gauge your suitability for coverage: Have you ever been sued by your cattle? If the answer is yes, what was the outcome of that suit? Have you received any correspondence or other communication from your herd’s Read More ›

Push to Grant Animal Rights in Congress

Congress is considering a ban on “invasive research” on chimpanzees and a few other intelligent primates in a move that represents the first step toward a ban on all experiments using animals. According to Discovery Institute Bioethicist Wesley J. Smith, this is just the tip of the iceberg as animal rights extremists look forward to the confirmation of law professor Read More ›

Avvenire Interviews Wesley J. Smith

This article, published by Avvenire, contains an interview with Discovery Institute Senior Fellow Wesley J. Smith: Wesley J. Smith is the author of numerous books, most notably “Culture of Death: The Assault on Medical Ethics in America”. Mr. Smith, a member of the Task Force on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide and also an advocate for Terri Schiavo and her family, Read More ›

First Things Now Hosts DI Sr. Fellow Wesley J. Smith’s Blog

Secondhand Smoke, the popular bioethics blog of Discovery Institute Senior Fellow Wesley J. Smith, is now being hosted by First Things, the distinguished journal of religion and culture. Secondhand Smoke, described by Smith as “Your 24/7 seminar on bioethics and the importance of being human,” was named a “Top Health Blog” by Wellsphere, and “One of the Fifty Best Business Read More ›