J
Jeanne_S
Guest
All of this is in conflict with Natural Law.While I don’t agree with the ‘three person baby’ on the point of principle that at some point we have to draw a line and say to some people, “Sorry, but this isn’t natural, it’s very sad but you’re just going to have to live with it or adopt”, I can also see the point of view that using the mitochondria from another person could just as easily be thought of like one thinks of an organ transplant, which nobody seems to have any objection to.
In which case, so long as there’s an absolutely reliable guarantee that no pre-existing embryo is ever destroyed for the purpose of creating this new ‘three person’ embryo - i.e. the mitochondria are replaced before the egg itself is fertilised - then there is less objection in my mind. I’m still not keen though, and as there are two ways in which this procedure can take place, the other one being the replacement of a nucleus of a fertilised egg with the nucleus of the egg with the mitochondrial fault, and there doesn’t seem to be any exclusion of this effectively abortion-reliant route in the permissions given. That I could not countenance in any form, and I was very disappointed not to hear any arguments from the politicians along that line - at least none that were publicised.