Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $17,929
22%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 22%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: wesleyjsmith

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • Adult Stem Cell Research More Effective Than Embryonic Cells

    05/16/2004 5:37:05 PM PDT · by wagglebee · 38 replies · 2,394+ views
    Lifenews.com ^ | May, 2004 | Wesley Smith
    LifeNews Note: Wesley J. Smith is a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute and a special consultant to the Center for Bioethics and Culture. His next book, to be published in the fall, is Consumer's Guide to a Brave New World.Once again the media are trumpeting the call among many in Congress, pushed by millions in Big Biotech lobbying money, for President Bush to reverse his decision to limit federal funding of embryonic-stem-cell research (ESCR) to those lines already in existence on August 9, 2001. Fronted this time by the grief-stricken Nancy Reagan, and boosted by Hollywood celebrities such as...
  • The “Wrong” Cure

    09/09/2004 8:56:50 PM PDT · by neverdem · 12 replies · 1,172+ views
    NRO ^ | September 09, 2004 | Wesley J. Smith
    E-mail Author Author Archive Send to a Friend <% printurl = Request.ServerVariables("URL")%> Print Version September 09, 2004, 8:35 a.m. The "Wrong" CureAdult stem cells get the shaft. By Wesley J. Smith Members of the liberal media elite have become rather choosy when it comes to advocating stem-cell cures for degenerative medical conditions. To these commentators, cures using adult stem cells just aren't the "right" cures. For stem-cell therapy to really count, it has to come from embryos. Indeed, even the most astonishing research advances using adult cells are ignored by these arbiters of public policy as if they never...
  • Adult Stem Cell Research Treats Spinal Cord Injury Patient

    09/28/2005 7:51:08 PM PDT · by Coleus · 10 replies · 785+ views
    Life News ^ | 09.26.05 | Wesley Smith, Esq.
    Adult Stem Cell Research Treats Spinal Cord Injury Patient   LifeNews.com Note: Award winning author Wesley J. Smith is a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute and a special consultant to the Center for Bioethics and Culture. An attorney, Smith's new book Consumer's Guide to a Brave New World was published last year. I have known about this for some time, but because I didn't want to be guilty of the same hyping that is so often engaged in by some therapeutic cloning proponents, I waited until it was published in a peer reviewed journal.Now it has been and the...
  • Paraplegic breakthrough using adult stem cells

    09/28/2005 8:30:45 PM PDT · by pending · 30 replies · 2,466+ views
    WorldNetDaily.com ^ | September 28, 2005
    Paraplegic breakthrough using adult stem cells Apparent major breakthrough with patient paralyzed 19 years Posted: September 28, 2005 1:00 a.m. Eastern © 2005 WorldNetDaily.com In an apparent major breakthrough, scientists in Korea report using umbilical cord blood stem cells to restore feeling and mobility to a spinal-cord injury patient. The research, published in the peer-reviewed journal Cythotherapy, centered on a woman who had been a paraplegic 19 years due to an accident. After an infusion of umbilical cord blood stem cells, stunning results were recorded: "The patient could move her hips and feel her hip skin on day 15 after...
  • "We never say no."

    05/04/2006 9:47:25 PM PDT · by Coleus · 19 replies · 387+ views
    CERC ^ | 04.27.06 | Wesley J. Smith, Esq.
    The right-to-die movement abandons pretense.   There is a pretense in contemporary assisted suicide advocacy that goes something like this: "Aid in dying" (as it is euphemistically called) is merely to be a safety valve, a last resort only available to imminently dying patients for whom nothing else can be done to alleviate      suffering.   Meanwhile, in the real world, the founder of the Swiss suicide facilitating organization Dignitas is just about done with pretense. The Sunday Times Magazine (London) reported that Dignitas' founder, Ludwig Minelli, plans to create sort of a Starbucks for suicide: a chain of death centers "to end...
  • Killing Babies, Compassionately

    03/26/2006 9:38:44 PM PST · by Unam Sanctam · 23 replies · 673+ views
    Weekly Standard ^ | 3/27/06 | Wesley J. Smith
    AT LAST A HIGH GOVERNMENT OFFICIAL in Europe got up the nerve to chastise the Dutch government for preparing to legalize infant euthanasia. Italy's Parliamentary Affairs minister, Carlo Giovanardi, said during a radio debate: "Nazi legislation and Hitler's ideas are reemerging in Europe via Dutch euthanasia laws and the debate on how to kill ill children." Unsurprisingly, the Dutch, ever prickly about international criticism of their peculiar institution, were outraged. Giovanardi's critique cut so deeply that even Dutch Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende felt the need to respond, sniffing, "This [Giovanardi's assertion] is scandalous and unacceptable. This is not the...
  • Harm Done: Codifying the decline of the medical profession ( The Hippocratic Oath is dead)

    03/09/2006 9:33:05 AM PST · by Coleus · 18 replies · 597+ views
    NRO ^ | 03.09.06 | Wesley J. Smith, Esq.
    Harm DoneCodifying the decline of the medical profession. In 2000, The New England Journal of Medicine reported that patients being euthanized in the Netherlands sometimes experienced significant side effects (apart from death, that is), such as nausea, convulsions, or coma. This belied the assertion oft made by euthanasia proponents that being killed by a doctor necessarily provides the euphemistic “gentle landing” of euthanasia lore.  Responding to the Netherlands report, the NEJM published an editorial authored by Dr. Sherwin Nuland, author of the bestselling book How We Die and an internationally prominent physician and bioethicist from Yale University. Nuland, a...
  • Danger Zone - (Haleigh Poutre)

    02/01/2006 7:29:10 AM PST · by Ohioan from Florida · 1,505 replies · 13,389+ views
    National Review ^ | February 01, 2006 | Wesley J, Smith
    In the court (and courts) of life and death, a little 11-year-old Massachusetts girl named Haleigh Poutre could be the next Terri Schiavo. For those who have not heard the tragic story, Haleigh was beaten nearly to death last September, allegedly by her adoptive mother and stepfather. The beating left her unconscious and barely clinging to life. Within a week or so of the beating, her doctors had written her off. They apparently told Haleigh's court-appointed guardian, Harry Spence, that she was "virtually brain dead." Even though he had never visited her, Spence quickly went to court seeking permission to...
  • Have You Heard the Good News . . .

    10/03/2005 12:14:16 AM PDT · by Hunden · 23 replies · 1,118+ views
    The Weekly Standard ^ | September 29, 2005 | Wesley J. Smith
    . . . about adult and umbilical cord blood stem cells? Probably not.WE HAVE HEARD IT STATED SO OFTEN it has become a media mantra: Embryonic stem cells (ESCs) offer the greatest hope for cures; adult and umbilical cord blood stem cells have far less potential; the Bush administration's embryonic stem cell funding restrictions have caused America to fall behind in the great international race to develop effective ESC treatments. Baloney, baloney, and pure baloney: The problems with harnessing embryonic stem cells as treatments appear to be growing, not shrinking. For example, ESC boosters used to claim that these cells are "immortal,"...
  • A "Painless" Death? (Terri Schiavo)(Distinction between disabled person vs. terminally ill)

    03/22/2005 12:25:22 PM PST · by QQQQQ · 19 replies · 917+ views
    Catholic Education.com ^ | March 2005 | WESLEY J. SMITH
    Many who support Terri Schiavo's threatened dehydration assert that removing a feeding tube from a profoundly cognitively disabled person results in a painless and gentle ending. But is this really true? After all, it would be agonizing if you or I were locked in a room for two weeks and deprived of all food and water. ======= So, why should we believe that cognitively disabled patients experience the deprivation differently simply because they receive nourishment through a feeding tube instead of by mouth? An accurate discussion of this sensitive issue requires the making of proper and nuanced distinctions about the...
  • The Radical Depth and Scope of the Cloning Agenda

    02/04/2004 10:17:54 PM PST · by Coleus · 17 replies · 562+ views
    National Right to Life ^ | January, 2004 | Wesley J. Smith, Esq.
    PRO-LIFE CHALLENGEBiomedical Ethics The Radical Depth and Scope of the Cloning Agenda By Wesley J. Smith Ever since embryonic stem cells were first extracted from human embryos in 1998, biotechnologists, abetted by a compliant media, have promised they would soon lead to miraculous medical cures for degenerative diseases such as Parkinson's and Alzheimer's. First, we were told, all that would be needed were stem cell lines extracted from "surplus" embryos "left over" from in vitro fertilization procedures, a procedure that destroys the embryo. Then, when fears were raised about auto-immune tissue rejection, we were told that what we really...
  • CALIFORNIA’S PROP 71 PROMISES CURES, BUT AT WHAT PRICE?

    12/17/2004 8:24:14 PM PST · by bruinbirdman · 248+ views
    NCPA Daily Policy Digest ^ | Dec. 17, 2004 | Wesley J. Smith
    California’s Proposition 71, a $3 billion initiative to fund stem cell research, is a bad idea for a state currently in a budget crisis, says Wesley J. Smith of the Weekly Standard. Additionally, the initiative is fuzzy with few checks and balances. For one thing, the $3 billion would have to be borrowed, adding another $3 billion in interest onto its price tag. Moreover, the bill is simply vague and controversial, says Smith: Prop 71 is not merely a law to permit stem cell research, but a constitutional right to human cloning, meaning any changes to its terms and conditions...
  • Harsh Medicine

    05/05/2005 12:01:28 PM PDT · by kjvail · 80 replies · 1,057+ views
    The New Pantagruel ^ | April 2005 | Wesley J. Smith
    y mother’s doctor is refusing to give her antibiotics,” the caller told me in an urgent voice. I asked why. “He says that she’s ninety-two and an infection will kill her sooner or later, so it might as well be this infection.” As disturbing as this call was, as outrageous the doctor’s behavior, I wasn’t particularly surprised. I have been receiving such desperate calls with increasing frequency for the last several years. Not every day. Not every week. But with sufficient regularity to know that something very frightening is happening to American medical ethics.
  • The New Grim Reapers - Practitioners of bioethics say who should live -- and who should die

    03/29/2005 7:58:13 PM PST · by Iam1ru1-2 · 34 replies · 649+ views
    Wesley J. Smith ^ | Wesley J. Smith
    The new grim reapers Practitioners of bioethics say who should live -- and who should die by Wesley J. Smith Sunday, June 9, 2002 ©2002 San Francisco Chronicle. Is all human cloning wrong? Should doctors be allowed to kill people in permanent comas and harvest their organs? Would it be moral to deny expensive medical procedures to the seriously ill and disabled in order to provide health coverage for the uninsured? Do elderly people have a duty to die to spare their families and communities the financial and emotional costs of their care? These and even more provocative questions are...
  • “Human Non-Person” (Terri Schiavo Is Not A Person-Bioethicist Bill Allen)

    03/29/2005 7:20:51 AM PST · by MisterRepublican · 193 replies · 3,238+ views
    National Review Online ^ | March 29, 2005 | Wesley J. Smith
    My debate about Terri Schiavo’s case with Florida bioethicist Bill Allen on Court TV Online eventually got down to the nitty-gritty: Wesley Smith: "Bill, do you think Terri is a person?" Bill Allen: "No, I do not. I think having awareness is an essential criterion for personhood. Even minimal awareness would support some criterion of personhood, but I don't think complete absence of awareness does." If you want to know how it became acceptable to remove tube-supplied food and water from people with profound cognitive disabilities, this exchange brings you to the nub of the Schiavo case — the “first...
  • Ian Wilmut: Human Cloner, Creator of Dolly the sheep led to human reproductive cloning

    02/22/2005 9:48:55 PM PST · by Coleus · 8 replies · 354+ views
    The Daily Standard via Lifesitenews ^ | 02.16.05 | Wesley J. Smith, Esq.
    Ian Wilmut: Human ClonerHow the man who created Dolly the sheep slid down the slippery slope to human reproductive cloning.by Wesley J. Smith IAN WILMUT, the co-creator of Dolly the Sheep, now intends to clone human life. This is quite a shift for Wilmut. When he and Keith Campbell entered the science pantheon with their announcement of the birth of Dolly, they forced the world to grapple with the question of whether it is moral to clone human life. But Wilmut claimed not to be interested in cloning humans. As described in his book, The Second Creation: Dolly and...
  • Stealth Cloning

    02/15/2005 11:31:09 AM PST · by tbird5 · 18 replies · 524+ views
    national review online ^ | February 15, 2005, | Wesley J. Smith
    Let's call it "stealth human-cloning legalization." It's easy to do: First, write a proposed law that you claim outlaws human cloning. But then, engage in a little slight of hand here, some redefining of a few crucial terms there, and voila! — your supposed cloning ban actually authorizes human cloning, implantation, and gestation through the ninth month. That is what New Jersey legislators did when they passed and then Governor James McGreevey signed S-1909 last year, a law that was sold to the public as outlawing human cloning but which actually permits the creation of cloned human life, and its...
  • Blinded by Science

    06/02/2003 1:46:54 PM PDT · by Heartlander · 983 replies · 1,332+ views
    Discovery Institute ^ | 6/2/03 | Wesley J. Smith
    Blinded by Science Wesley J. SmithNational ReviewJune 16, 2003 Nature via Nurture: Genes, Experience, & What Makes Us Human, by Matt Ridley HarperCollins, 336 pp., $25.95) This is a very strange book, and I am not quite sure what the author is attempting to achieve. At the very least it appears that he wants to shore up genetic determinism as the key factor in understanding human nature and individual behavior. Genetic determinism is rational materialism's substitute for the religious notion of predestination; taking the place of God as puppet master are the genes, whose actions and interactions control who...
  • Suing for the Right to Live

    03/13/2004 12:53:54 PM PST · by neverdem · 40 replies · 619+ views
    The Weekly Standard ^ | 03/11/2004 | Wesley J. Smith
    Two cases of European doctors refusing to treat their patients are cause for concern: Futile Care Theory may be coming to America. A LITTLE NOTICED LITIGATION in the United Kingdom could be a harbinger of medical woes to come here in the United States. Leslie Burke, age 44, is suing for the right to stay alive. Yes, you read right: Burke, who has a terminal neurological disease, is deathly afraid that doctors will refuse to provide him wanted food and water when his condition deteriorates to the point that has to receive nourishment through a feeding tube. Burke' fears are,...
  • Beyond Terri's Law

    01/10/2004 1:57:09 PM PST · by RWR8189 · 17 replies · 567+ views
    The Weekly Standard ^ | January 19, 2004 | Wesley J. Smith
    IT IS THE CALM before the storm in the Terri Schiavo case. The Florida woman, who was in the throes of a court-ordered death by dehydration last October when Florida's legislature and Governor Jeb Bush intervened, continues to receive tube-supplied food and water. But this good news may not last. In December, as her family and many supporters celebrated her 40th birthday, their joy was tempered by the knowledge that powerful cultural forces are adamant that Terri Schiavo not live to see age 41. The Schiavo case was one of the most important stories of 2003. The big news wasn't...