Posted on 07/20/2015 7:38:47 PM PDT by Morgana
President Bill Clinton was a supporter of fetal tissue research.
A 1994 scholarly article entitled, Issues of Property, Ethics and Consent in the Transplantation of Fetal Reproductive Tissue authored by Heather J. Meeker gives some background:
1. The Federal Moratorium The federal government currently controls the extent of fetal tissue transplantation solely through its allocation of research funding. Federal law explicitly defers regulation of the use of fetal tissue to the states. However, in 1988, the Reagan administration injected its anti-abortion political philosophy into the field of science funding by taking a stand against fetal tissue implantation. In that year, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) began a voluntary moratorium, banning the use of tissue from elective abortions in fetal tissue research. It did so with the explicit intention of delaying further research pending discussion of the legal and ethical issues involved. In September of the same year, an NIH Advisory Committee voted unanimously to recommend that the moratorium be lifted. However, the moratorium remained in place, despite the Advisory Committees recommendation.60 President Bush never lifted the ban while he was in office. Although the Reagan/Bush moratorium was a lightning rod for controversy, it did not halt all fetal tissue research. Because the moratorium only applied to federally funded research, private research could-and did-continue during the moratorium. In addition, an exception to the moratorium that permitted funding for fundamental scientific research allowed the NIH to spend $45 million on fetal tissue research while the moratorium was in place. Also, the moratorium did not affect research in Europe and Britain-where Gosdens team developed its new procedure.
In January 1993, on his second day in office, President Clinton lifted the moratorium on federally funded fetal tissue research.
Listen to his speech on the here.
Congressional hearings on the regulation of fetal tissue research soon followed.In March 1993, Congress passed the National Institutes of Health Revitalization Act. This Act amended the Public Health Service Act to authorize research on human fetal tissue transplantation without regard to whether the tissue is obtained from a spontaneous or induced abortion. It is unlikely that the debate concerning federal funding of fetal tissue transplants is over. The current administration has merely sidestepped the issue by lifting the NIH moratorium. States are still free to legislate against the use of fetal tissue, and, as demonstrated by the federal moratorium, NIH funding of fetal tissue research may be only as healthy as the tenure of the current administration. The influence of politics on federal funding of research addressing human reproduction was underscored quite recently. On December 3, 1994, in the wake of a resounding Democratic electoral defeat, President Clinton ruled out using federal money to support work on human embryos specifically created for research purposes. The President, citing profound ethical and moral questions associated with the subject, refused to follow the contrary recommendation of a National Institutes of Health panel.69 Nevertheless, the Presidents order did not specifically bar federal support for research carried out on left-over embryos from IVF clinics.
Bill Clinton was the most radically pro-abortion president at the time he served his two terms in office.
Listen to his speech here. **ON LINK**
In fact one of his first acts as President was to lift several bans on abortion through executive order on the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, which legalized abortion on demand in the United States.
Bill Clinton vetoed pro-life measures like a ban on the horrific partial birth abortion procedure which allows an abortionist to partially deliver the unborn child before stabbing the baby in the neck and sucking out their brains:
Bill Clinton approved the abortion drug: RU486:
And did even more to open the flood gates of abortion:
Read more. ****OLD NEWSPAPER IMAGES ON LINK****
Thats Mrs Hillary CLinton’s Husband Isn’t it?.....
Some guy who was in the White House once. All he did was chase interns around. I read all about it once in a book called “The Ken Starr Report”. Why people read “Fifty Shades of Grey” is beyond me, that book had way more sex!
Oh Yes his WIfe had some sort of an arrangement with a man named VInce Foster as I remember it?
Too bad that Virginia Dell Cassidy Blythe Clinton Kelley made the wrong “choice”.... ......
President Clinton lifted the moratorium on federally [emphasis added] funded fetal tissue research."
FR: Never Accept the Premise of Your Opponents Argument
The states have never delegated to the feds, expressly via the Constitution, the specific power to tax and spend in the name of fetal tissue research. So both the legislative and executive branches wrongly ignored the federal governments constitutionally limited powers in order to provide vote-winning funding for such a purpose.
After doing some scratching, it seems like Clinton lifted moratorium on federally funded fetal tissue research by means of executive orders as opposed to signing a bill. Corrections welcome.
But it remains that since only the House has the constitutional authority to initiate revenue-raising bills (1.7.1) that Congress should share the blame for making tax dollars available for such a purpose.
Also, if the ill-conceived 17th Amendment had never been ratified then the Senate would have possibly killed House appropriations bills that made tax dollars available for such a purpose.
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