Posted on 01/12/2007 4:41:35 PM PST by wagglebee
On Thursday, January 11, the new Democratic Congress followed through on its ambitious agenda to promote embryonic stem-cell research. As it moves forward, President George W. Bush will be grabbing his veto pen. As he does, we will hear charges that the president is anti-science, and that faith has once again trumped reason.
This allegation will not be restricted to the pages of The New York Times. I recently read an article by a right-leaning British observer who took issue with President Bushs anti-scientific perception that stem-cell research should be deterred. The author considered whether this alleged unsophisticated attitude was the product of a very un-European willingness by Americans to believe in supernatural forces.
This unflattering view of not only the American president but millions of like-minded citizens is hardly uncommon. It also requires some explanation:
First, a crucial distinction: George W. Bush, like many Americans, opposes federal funding of embryonic stem-cell research. No one opposes research on adult stem cells or stem cells acquired through umbilical cord blood or bone marrowthe debate is over stem cells acquired through the killing of an embryo. Bush is against the use of taxpayer dollars to fund the creation of human embryos for the sole purpose of scientific research.
For the record, Bush, like many Americans, indeed invokes his faith in explaining his position. He maintains that all human life is a precious gift granted by a loving God, a creation, not a commodity, and therefore should be protected at all stages of development.
Importantly, there is an equally significant non-religious component to his position. For example, on July 19, 2006, Bush exercised the first veto of his presidencyon embryonic stem-cell research. Holding a press conference surrounded by 18 families with children who had once been frozen embryos, Bush said that if the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act had become law, for the first time in our history we would have been forced to fund the deliberate destruction of human embryos, and Im not going to allow it . [W]e all began our lives as a small collection of cells. Bush said that Americans must never abandon our fundamental moral principles in our zeal for new treatments and cures.
Four years earlier, on April 10, 2002, Bush offered added insight into his thinking: Advances in biomedical technology must never come at the expense of human conscience . [E]ven the most noble ends do not justify any means. He warned against pursuing medical research without an ethical compass into a world we could live to regret.
The president, like many Americans, is appalled at the prospect of embryo farms or parts farmsthe start of a slippery slope into a Brave New World in which certain human beings may one day be raised merely for their parts; parts exploited by those lucky enough to have been born and not harvested for their parts.
Here, however, is the crucial point, missed by the aforementioned British observer and those who agree with him: One need not be a religious believer to oppose embryonic stem-cell research.
In fact, secular-minded liberalsthe vast majority of which support embryonic researchought to see the obvious unfairness in creating and then terminating undeveloped human life simply for the benefit of the living; at the very least, this literally unprecedented technological leap should give pause. Any religious-left liberal, such as Hillary Rodham Clinton or John F. Kerry, both staunch backers of embryonic research, who invoke social justice to advance economic-class goals, should see the inherent injustice in this technology. The late Pennsylvania Governor Robert Casey, a pro-life Democrat, could not fathom how his fellow liberals, who preached the rights of the underdog, were so unwilling to protect unborn human life. And Casey did not need his local parish priest to convince him.
Of course, religious reasoning can turn a supporter of embryonic research into an opponent. I have seen pro-choice Catholics change their positions on abortion after reading encyclicals like Humanae Vitae and Evangelium Vitae. The latter was written by the previous Pope, who appealed to the two wings of faith and reason in his pro-life thinking. The embarrassingly misinformed notionby people who pride themselves for their self-perceived intellectual superioritythat faith and reason are incompatible violates some 800 years of religious teaching dating back to Thomas Aquinas.
Yet, the point is that one need not believe in supernatural forces to oppose taxpayer funding of embryonic stem-cell research. Scientific understanding, backed by common sense and compassion, can easily move any rational person in that direction.
Personally, I find it difficult to fathom how anyone cannot see the unfairness in destroying human embryos strictly for our own needs. What is it about the embryo that denies it the most fundamental right of life: its size, its lack of consciousness? To the contrary, one might conclude that such vulnerabilitiessuch defenselessnessmeans that an innocent embryo merits our special protection. Sadly, supporters of embryonic research have concluded that our personal health needs justify this essential denial of life to other members of the human family. That is not rightregardless of your faith.
Amen.
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Base on existing research there is NO POTENTIAL IN EMBRYONIC STEM CELLS for curing ANYTHING!
If there were ANY potential, there would be NO NEED FOR FEDERAL FUNDING!
That is why ADULT STEM CELL research doesn't need Federal funding. It has already shown great promise in dozens of areas.
The passion for Embryonic Stem Cell research is to PRETEND that some benefit is possible from abortion.
I agree with you on every point and have expressed the same thing many times.
The sheeple can't seem to note this distinction, let alone understand it. And it's interesting that the champions of "science" have to resort to lying about Bush's position and appealing to the ignorance of people in order to make their point.
The democrats are opposed to common sense facts- they can accuse the right of being against science all they like- the FACT is that the President has funded stem cell research and science has found out that not only is there little potential, the embrionic cells cause tumors in every single case- incredibly though- the common sense deficient dolts on the left argue that because amniotic stem cells don't cause tumors, then they must not be 'as good' as embrionic cells. H...U...H...???????????????
The following link does not relate to this thread http://sacredscoop.com
Bush really needs to go on prime-time and announce his veto of this bill (if the Senate actually passes it) and say something to the effect of, "I support all forms of stem cell research, AS LONG AS IT DOESN'T INVOLVE KILLING HUMANS."
Science says embryos belong to the same species as their parents.
Human embryos are human. If not, what species are they?
Destroying embryos is therefore murder.
That would be great. It would really open a huge debate over what is human life and what is not. But that debate is needed.
They are aided and abetted in this by the Dems and the media, who favor destroying embryos PRECISELY BECAUSE Bush is against it. There is no other reason, other than sheer unconscious murder madness, since embryonic stem cells have not been shown to help heal anyone of anything. The public has been cleverly deluded. This is what Bush should say. Emphasize it.
Sanctity of Human Life Sunday, January 21
Human embryos are HUMAN ORGANISMS, not organs or sub units of organs but ORGANISMS. Killing them for their body parts is cannibalism. If embryos were not organisms, then taking their body parts would be akin to donating blood or afterbirth or a kidney. But embryos ARE whole organisms so taking them apart to get their subunits is killing a human organism, in other words it is cannibalism.
Pro-life - read later
Bump for life.
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