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dajoki Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-01-07 12:05 PM
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Why Science Can't Save the GOP
Commentary
Why Science Can't Save the GOP
Thursday, Nov. 29, 2007 By MICHAEL KINSLEY
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1689196,00.html?imw=Y

<<snip>>

The stem-cell announcement also brought happiness to many politicians, especially Republicans. It filled them with the hope that the whole messy issue could go away. If stem cells, or something like them, can be obtained without the use of embryos, that eliminates the supposed ethical problem that led President George W. Bush to ban almost all federal financing of embryonic-stem-cell research in 2001. The result has been a severe reduction in embryonic-stem-cell research. The issue has been agony for many Republicans, torn between the majority of voters, eager for the benefits of this scientific advance, and the small but intense minority who believe that a clump of a few dozen cells floating in a petri dish has the same human rights as you or I.

But any Republicans who think the stem-cell breakthrough gets them off the hook are going to end up very unhappy. This issue will not go away.

First, even the scientists who achieved the latest success believe strongly that embryonic-stem-cell research should continue. No one knows for sure whether the new method of producing pluripotent cells will pan out or where the next big developments will come from. We are still many thresholds away from anything that can be of practical value to me and others. Scientifically, it makes no sense to abandon any promising avenue just because another has opened up.

Second, even if this were a true turning point in stem-cell research, people like me are not going to quickly forget those six lost years. I am 56. Last year I had a kind of brain surgery that dramatically reduces the symptoms of Parkinson's. It received government approval only five years ago. Every year that goes by, science opens new doors, and every year, as you get older and your symptoms perhaps get worse, doors get shut. Six years of delay in a field moving as fast as stem-cell research means a lot of people for whom doors may not open until it is time for them to shut.

Third, although the political dilemma that stem cells pose for politicians is real enough, the moral dilemma is not and never was. The embryos used in stem-cell research come from fertility clinics, which otherwise would discard them. This has been a powerful argument in favor of such research. Why let these embryos go to waste? But a more important point is, What about fertility clinics themselves? In vitro fertilization ("test-tube babies") involves the purposeful creation of multiple embryos, knowing and intending that most of them either will die after implantation in the womb or, if not implanted, will be discarded or frozen indefinitely. Even if all embryonic-stem-cell research stopped tomorrow, this far larger mass slaughter of embryos would continue. There is no political effort to stop it. Bush even praised in vitro fertilization in his 2001 speech about the horrors of stem-cell research. In vitro has become too popular for politicians to take on. But their failure to do so makes a mockery of their alleged agony over embryonic stem cells.

Finally, the position a politician takes on an issue tells you something about his or her character, values and intellect. And that understanding doesn't disappear even if the issue itself does. Over the past six years, Bush and most Republicans in Congress have done their best to stop medical research that could cure many diseases, including one that I have. They claimed that morality and ethics required no less, yet they demonstrated by their indifference toward in vitro fertilization that they couldn't possibly be serious about this. Now they hope that science will spring them from the trap they walked into with full knowledge. Bush Administration apologists even say the President deserves credit because he directed research away from embryonic stem cells and encouraged scientists to look for more acceptable alternatives. In fact, the new research would not have been possible without the kind involving embryonic stem cells, which Bush believes is immoral.
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Fovea Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-01-07 12:11 PM
Response to Original message
1. If I agreed with you any more
We'd both be wearing the same shoes.
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dajoki Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-02-07 02:42 PM
Response to Reply #1
4. Size 12?
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opihimoimoi Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sat Dec-01-07 12:29 PM
Response to Original message
2. As I near the dreaded 70's...I too am appalled at the GOP / Bush re this Stem Cell Issue
Their twisted logic leaves me perplexed.

Might as well imprison all those "masterbaiters" who spew those seeds upon the rocks"
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dajoki Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-02-07 08:32 AM
Response to Reply #2
3. Yes, they may as well n/t
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