Posted on 11/01/2006 9:54:51 PM PST by Coleus
JEFFERSON CITY, MO. Michael J. Fox hopes that research on human embryos will help him overcome Parkinsons disease, but new scientific findings may give him pause. As controversy raged over the actors TV ads promoting Senate candidates who back the embryo-killing research, scientists came out with new findings research using human embryonic stem cells to treat Parkinsons disease produce tumors in research animals.
Dr. Steven Goldman and a University of Rochester Medical Center team, in a study released Oct. 22, showed that symptoms of the disease decreased, but tumors grew in the animals brains, according to the report in Nature Medicine. That news came amid increasing political pressure by biotechnology interests for federal funding, and for loosened restrictions on human embryonic stem-cell research. Pressure is strong in Missouri, where voters will decide Nov. 7 on Amendment 2, a proposal that would have the state support embryonic stem-cell research and human cloning. The states bishops and others have criticized the proposal as deceptively worded.
The amendment would take away state and local governments authority to regulate and ban human cloning. Embryos would be cloned so they could be killed within days and used for medical experiments.
Microbiology and embryology show that a human embryo is, from the moment of conception, a boy or a girl with his or her own unique DNA and normal human life expectancy. The Church teaches that from the first moment of his existence, a human being must be recognized as having the rights of a person among which is the inviolable right of every innocent being to life (Catechism No. 2270). Killing is killing, no matter how young or old the victim, the bishops said in a Sept. 30 pastoral letter.
Others accused Michael J. Fox of misleading advertising against pro-life candidates in Missouri and other states. Fox, who was diagnosed with Parkinsons in 1991, first appeared in an Oct. 22 commercial during the World Series voicing support for pro-human embryonic stem-cell research candidate Claire McCaskill, who is challenging Jim Talent for his U.S. Senate seat. Fox went on to portray candidates who oppose the unethical procedure as being against all stem-cell research, even the ethical and effective adult stem-cell methods. The secular media compound the problem by failing to explain how the two kinds of research differ, according to Deacon Larry Weber, executive director of the Missouri Catholic Conference.
We repeatedly see reporters gloss over the differences, Weber said in an interview. I dont know whether they just dont dig enough or whether the research community doesnt want this to be clear. Money is definitely a factor, as they are seeking federal funding.
Its ironic that a celebrity like Fox would push for research that produces tumors, Richard Doerflinger, interim executive director of the Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, said in an interview. The reason theres such a fierce effort for public funding of embryonic stem-cell research is that private investors look at research results and say this is a very uncertain investment. In California, the major biotechnology companies and their allies spent $34 million on a successful campaign to pass the initiative requiring the state to borrow $3 billion to fund this research.
Actress Patricia Heaton, in a Missouri television ad refuting the Michael J. Fox ad, noted another objection to the proposed state clone-and-kill amendment: Poor women would be exploited, as fertility clinics could pay them to extract their eggs. In addition to Heaton, star of the comedy series, Everybody Loves Raymond, the ad featured actor Jim Caviezel of The Passion of the Christ, Jeff Suppan, a Catholic who pitched for the St. Louis Cardinals in Game 4 of the World Series, Kansas City Royals slugger Mike Sweeney and Super Bowl MVP Kurt Warner. Produced by Missourians Against Human Cloning, it first aired during the Oct. 25 World Series game.
Ends and Means
Missouris bishops predicted that the outcome of the Nov. 7 vote will have national implications. They said the proposal would divert money from more promising and ethical research involving stem cells from bone marrow or other body tissue or umbilical-cord blood, which can be obtained without destroying the donor. Goldman, spokesman for the University of Rochester team, which also included Cornell University researchers, said in an interview that the reason embryonic stem-cell research is being pursued is that adult stem cells have not proven useful as yet in treating degenerative neurological diseases like Parkinsons.
The adult stem cells are more differentiated and thus less flexible than embryonic ones. However, the embryonic ones are unstable and appear to grow uncontrollably. Goldman said he does not see using embryonic stem cells as morally wrong. I look at the moral imperative of being able to treat folks with this disease. I would worry more about this than about the loss of a relatively few number of embryos, he said.
However, Father Tadeusz Pacholczyk, director of education at the National Catholic Bioethics Center, points out in his brochure Stem Cell Research, Cloning and Human Embryos that the well-known moral principle that good ends do not justify immoral means applies here. His brochure presents these issues in clear and simple terms, and relates stories of people including a Parkinsons patient who have been helped with adult stem cells. The brochure is available from the Family Research Council, as is a six-minute DVD called Stem Cells: Beyond Hype, Real Hope.
Doerflinger also took issue with Goldmans claim that adult stem cells are unsuitable for treating neurological conditions. They have been used in promising clinical trials, even in humans, he said, noting that two websites stemcellresearch.org (Do No Harm: the Coalition of Americans for Research Ethics) and cloninginformation.org (Americans to Ban Cloning) have a wealth of information. Patenting is an important factor, Doerflinger said. In adult stem-cell treatment, there is nothing to patent and sell if you use the patients own cells. Some say embryonic stem cells would be easier to patent. There will be future efforts to change the laws to patent human embryos.
If you can make a tailored stem-cell line, you can patent that and make everyone else who does the research pay you to use them, he added. For example, what if you created the Ronald Reagan embryo, cloned from his cells, to be used in Alzheimers research?
Embryonic Stem Cells cause rapid growth of tissues in the brain forming teratomas--tumors consisting of bone, skin and hair.
British scientists grow human liver in a laboratory
This promising research is from newborn umbilical cord blood tissue.
#3. That was discussed recently on our local paper forum, and some posters cited that nasty little complication; I don't know if I could find the forum or not or if it is still in the archives.
Bwahahaha! Revenge of the Innocents. Serves the ghoulish bastards right...
According to polls, the majority of Missouri voters have been duped by this bill.
Anybody have a Missouri ping list?
Anybody here from Missouri willing to write a letter to the editor and/or call a talk show?
ping
Relevant ping!
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