The politicians may have cast their votes on the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill, but is the conscience of the nation at ease with itself? Far from settling the issues until the next Bill comes along, this week’s extraordinary debates have in fact woken us all up to the reality of what is being done in our name.
Many people are left deeply uneasy and perplexed, profoundly worried about the direction we are now taking.
And yet, for me it has been one of the most significant debates that the House of Commons has had in recent times, undertaken with a sober recognition that it was dealing with fundamental questions which transcend party politics. Although I would have much preferred other outcomes on all four of the debates, including the issue of fatherhood, I was glad at the sincerity and thoughtfulness of the discussion.
Read it all.
Cardinal Cormac Murphy-O'Connor: The abortion debate is only just beginning
The politicians may have cast their votes on the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill, but is the conscience of the nation at ease with itself? Far from settling the issues until the next Bill comes along, this week’s extraordinary debates have in fact woken us all up to the reality of what is being done in our name.
Many people are left deeply uneasy and perplexed, profoundly worried about the direction we are now taking.
And yet, for me it has been one of the most significant debates that the House of Commons has had in recent times, undertaken with a sober recognition that it was dealing with fundamental questions which transcend party politics. Although I would have much preferred other outcomes on all four of the debates, including the issue of fatherhood, I was glad at the sincerity and thoughtfulness of the discussion.
Read it all.