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Contributors
Sharon
Hughes- Contributor
A researcher,
writer and public speaker Sharon is the President and Executive
Director of The Center for Changing Worldviews, a non-profit
corporation founded for the purpose of increasing the conservative,
pro-family voice in a predominantly liberal society. Sharon
produces and hosts Changing Worldviews TALK Radio which is
the media outreach of The Center, and is heard Monday, Wednesday
and Friday on KDIA AM1640 San Francisco/Vallejo and online
daily at Oneplace.com. Sharon has worked to promote civic
responsibility on the grassroots level since 1992 through
various organizations such as Eagle Forum, so that America
will continue to be a land of liberty, respect for human
dignity and family integrity, as well as public and private
virtue. For further information on Sharon and The Center
go to www.changingworldviews.com or
contact her at sharon@changingworldviews.com. Hughes
Blog [go to Hughes index]
Stem-Cell
Wars & the Presidency
4,000 Scientists Sign Anti-Bush Statement…
[Sharon Hughes] 8/17/04
The Associated
Press reports that over 4,000
scientists, which includes 48
Nobel Prize winners, have signed a statement "opposing
the Bush administration's use of scientific advice." Why?
Because of the President's limits on embryonic stem-cell research.
This comes
on the tail of the 48 Nobel Prize winning scientists endorsing
John
Kerry for President and criticizing President
Bush in a letter which was released by Kerry's campaign in June,
stating, "The Bush administration has ignored unbiased scientific
advice in the policy-making that is so important to our collective
welfare. John Kerry will change all this."
So, what's this really all about? Timing and agenda, of course.
The statement by the 4,000 scientists, the letter of endorsement
by the 48 Nobel Prize winners, and the public endorsement of
lifting the limit on stem cell research by Ron Reagan at the
DNC convention are designed to defeat President Bush in the election.
It is safe to say that Kerry and Bush are on opposite sides
of this issue. So, what do the Bush limits comprise?
Basically, the Bush stem-cell policy limited federal funding
for research to $100 million, and research itself to embryos
that already existed in laboratories. It should be noted that
the Bush administration has provided much more generous funding
for research on adult stem cell research which shows great promise.
It's interesting to note that in New Jersey, in addition to
being the one place in the United States where it is legal to
create, implant and gestate a human clone for the purpose of
obtaining their embryonic stem cells - as long as you kill it
at birth or soon after, also allows the obtaining of human adult
stem cells from cloned or normal embryos. But these cells don't
develop for several weeks and since the science to grow an embryo
outside of a woman's womb to this stage does not yet exist, normal
or cloned embryos would have to be implanted into a woman's uterus
and then later aborted.
It must also
be noted that written into this same New Jersey law passed
in 2004 is
provision to market embryonic and fetal
body parts by allowing "reasonable payment" for "removal,
processing, disposal, preservation, quality control, storage,
transplantation, or implantation of embryonic or cadaveric fetal
tissue."
As pointed
out by White House Press Secretary Scott McClellan, “The
President does not believe we should be creating life for the
purpose of destroying it.”
Those who
oppose embryonic stem-cell research argue that under current
conditions "harvesting" the
cells destroys the embryos of humans. There is a growing national
debate over
whether human embryos should be protected as human individual
lives from the moment of gestation through the eighth week.
On August
9th, the three year anniversary of President Bush's placing
limits on
embryonic stem-cell work, John
Edwards and Laura Bush both addressed the issue. As reported by the Dallas
Online Baptist Standard, Edwards said his running mate, John
Kerry, would lift restrictions on funding, and that August 9th
is "a sad anniversary." The Kerry-campaign also criticizes
the Bush policy as "ideologically driven."
The Economist.com says Laura Bush criticized
stem-cell advocates correctly, for
giving the impression that stem cell cures are
imminent. According to the Washington Post the First Lady said, “I
hope that stem-cell research will yield cures (but) we don't
even know that stem-cell research will provide cures for anything,
much less that it's very close.”
Former First
Lady, Nancy
Reagan offered her support for President George
W. Bush's
re-election. She said after their meeting, "I
repeated my full support of his re-election and my hope that
everyone will join in supporting his campaign.'' This is significant
given that she had lobbied his administration to loosen the limit
on stem cell research.
My own state, California, will decide in November whether to
approve the largest government funded embryonic stem cell research
program in the country, with $3 billion over the next 10 years,
contrasted to New Jersey's $6.5 million this year.
Movie
suggestion? Check out Gattica. It's about two brothers, one a "love child" the other genetically ordered. Is
this 1997 film, about genetic engineering to overcome predispositions
to disease, "prophetic" like some say "1984" was? CRO
© Sharon
Hughes 2004 - Used with permission
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