Posted on 08/25/2006 6:22:33 AM PDT by Aussie Dasher
I'm confused. They talk about stopping murder. You don't.
Thanks for explaining about fragmented embryos. I thought you might have been saying that the "fragmented" embryos were "destroyed."
I needed the clarification for myself, and so I looked it up.
Source please!
Embryonic Stem Cell Research Has Failed to Produce Any Cures or Treatments
After nearly a decade of research on human embryonic stems cells, 25 years of research on animal embryonic stem cells, and over $500 million in federal funding, embryonic stem cell research has yet to deliver any cures or treatments. After 25 years of research, there are zero human clinical trials or proven therapies using embryonic stem cells.
Ethical Alternatives to Embryonic Stem Cells Exist
Embryos are not the only source of stem cells. Every one holds an unknown amount of stem cells that can be derived without harm or injury. These adult stem cells are capable of transforming into countless cell and tissues types have been located throughout the human body, including in the brain, muscles, blood, placentas and even in fat. Recently germ? line stem cells from testes have been successfully reprogrammed into pluripotent adult stem cells with the same potential of embryonic stem cells.
Stem Cells from Ethical Sources Are Now Treating Over 70 Diseases and Afflictions
Every useful stem-cell therapy developed to date has not required the destruction of human embryos. According to a June 2004 report prepared by the National Institutes of Health (NIH), adult stem cells and stem cells from cord blood are currently being utilized to treat 72 diseases and the NIH is funding another 330 human clinical trials using these cells. Adult stem cell research has revealed potential treatment and cures for afflictions such as Buergers disease, bladder disease, lupus, heart failure, stroke, liver failure, nerve regeneration, genetic metabolic disease, and respiratory conditions such as emphysema and pulmonary fibrosis. Other studies have shown that adult stem cells hold great potential to treat Parkinson's and diabetes. When asked at a June 2006 Senate hearing about the best avenues of research that could be pursued, Dr. James Battey, the director of the NIH Stem Cell Task Force responded, to me, the very most interesting thing is
this frontier area of nuclear reprogramming, where you take a mature adult cell type and you effectively de-differentiate it back to the a pluripotent state.
Ethical Alternatives Should Be Pursued Rather Than Seeking to Save Life By Destroying Life
We all desperately want to find cures for the diseases that afflict our friends, families and neighbors. Yet in our quest to find these cures, we must not ignore or rationalize the tremendous moral questions posed by destroying living embryos, which is undeniably human life in its earliest stages. We are fortunate that ethical alternatives to destructive embryonic stem cell research exist and it is imperative that we first pursue these ethical alternatives before even considering investing in research that requires destroying life to save life.
Embryonic Stem Cell Research Diverts Funding Away From More Promising Research
Over the past five years, Congress has increased funding for ESCR every year and increased annual funding almost four-fold, despite zero results. This bill seeks to increase federal ESCR funding even more, despite the lack of results and the existence of ethical alternatives that has a multitude of proven results and offers countless benefits from future research. Every dollar spent on research that does not yield results is one less dollar that could have been invested in research on ethical alternatives that are already yielding cures. Again, 25 years of embryonic stem cell research has produced zero cures.
Embryonic Stem Cells Have Dangerous Side Effects That May Require Other Unethical Practices to Remedy
In experiment after experiment, embryonic stem cells have demonstrated that they may be too taratogenic for therapeutic purposes. It is not uncommon in experiments on mammals for the animals to be killed by tumors. Uncontrollable growth of cells is one of the main reasons embryonic stem cells can not be tested in human subjects. As a consequence, cloning embryos and then destroying them to extract their stem cells or allowing embryos to develop into fetuses so that their organs can be cultivated may be the next step, but both techniques pose additional scientific, moral and ethical dilemmas.
Adult Stem Cells Have Consistently Outperformed Embryonic Stem Cells for Therapeutic Purposes
Virtually every breakthrough announced using embryonic stem cells in animal models has been preceded by a similar feat with often greater results using adult stem cells.
Very Few Surplus Embryos Are Available for Research
Proponents of destructive embryonic stem cell research claim that surplus embryos are going to be discarded anyway. A RAND study has found that to the contrary, very few embryos are expected to be discarded. The vast majority88.2% are designated for family building and another 2.3% are being donated to other families for adoption. According to the RAND study, embryos available for research do not have high development potential and very embryonic stem cell lines could be created from the embryos available for research. This means that embryos would have to be created specifically for destruction is additional stem cell lines were to be created for research.
Patients Need Cures Not False Hopes
Leading proponents of research on embryonic stem cells are themselves lowering expectations that dramatic cures to diseases such as Alzheimers. The Guardian newspaper recently reported that Lord Winston, the most prominent embryonic-stem-cell researcher in the United Kingdom, said that hopes for cures had been distorted by arrogance and spin. I view the current wave of optimism about embryonic stem cells with growing suspicion, Winston told the British Association for the Advancement of Science. A leading embryonic stem cell researcher in South Korea who hailed some of the most promising advances in the field has admitted to falsifying his research. Exaggerated predications and expectations used to promote embryonic stem cell research exploit patients and families desperately seeking cures.
Wasted Treasure indeed! God has provided a system whereby the newly conceived build an organ for survival in the water world of the womb and this entire organ, complete with astonishingly plastic stem cells is most often discarded upon birth into the air world. Truly, a wasted treasure now that Science has learned how to save lives with this amazing organ and its stem cells.
If studying embryonic stem cells holds such promise, why is there not a broad range and numerous research being done with higher mammals not in the human species? And since there are many, why do the research on human embryos at this stage especially?... There is an agenda connected to this exploitation of embryo aged humans, and it is directly related to the democrat program of defending the evil of abortion for so long ... the more early human life is exploited, the more likely that society will forget about the evil democrats have pushed as their empowerment scheme.
Embryonic stem cell research is basically just a way to promote abortions, making people think they are somehow therapeutic and for the good of all. The only stem cells that have worked so far have been adult stem cells, but nobody wants to spend money on that research because it has no ideological objective.
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There is quite a bit of ESC research being done on animals, but it is being somewhat inhibited by the lack of funding for human embryonic stem cell research. Scientists have careers to build, and often become highly specialized fairly early in their careers. No doubt many are steering away from ESC research of any kind, due to concern about long-term prospects for funding, and also the wider availability of near-term funding for both animal and human ASC research.
Personally, I think all biomedical research should be privately funded, except that which is clearly related to truly public health matters (e.g. bioterrorism threats, highly communicable diseases like flu -- not AIDS, which is easily avoidable). But I strongly object to public funding of some types of non-public health research, to the exclusion of other types. Decisions about where to allocate research money should be made by scientists and their for-profit sources of capital, not by politicians and lobbying groups. That will ensure that money goes to the most promising areas of research, and at the right times. There are plenty of other areas of biomedical research that have also been horribly skewed by the politics of public funding, most notably the huge amounts of money spent on AIDS.
Google "preimplantation genetic diagnosis".
We banked the cord blood of our second and third children and regret no looking into it earlier. Viacell and many other cord blood companies are already doing what you suggest. I have asked my cord blood company if people don't want to bank their blood (read can't afford) they could donate it to their company. That do not do that, but it would be so easy to do.
Yes, but sadly, misguided celebs and disingenuous pols will push it as merciful and paint prolifers opposed to it as in league with the devil.
I'm busily looking for the link, but when I took a developmental psych course a few years ago, we learned of the horribly failed attempt to treat Parkinson's patients (advanced stage volunteers) - the results were frightening and they were unable to reverse them. Even the leftie prof was appalled.
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