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Science

China Ahead in Stem-Cell Research 457

Andrew writes: "New Scientist is reporting (for free) on the WSJ's China clones human embryos story: "Chinese scientists are claiming a great leap forward in human cloning - the creation of dozens of cloned embryos advanced enough to harvest embryonic stem cells."" The lengthy Wall Street Journal story is also on MSNBC.
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China Ahead in Stem-Cell Research

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  • by Tebriel ( 192168 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:26PM (#3121039)
    But where are they going to put all these extra people?
  • When a Communist nation allows scientists greater freedom than a Democracy? Just saying...
    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:35PM (#3121110)
      The Nazi doctors were allowed a great deal of freedom with their expirements. Just saying . . .


      • Because the USA is filled with Facism as well, perhaps we arent as bad as Germany, Russia, China, but we arent as good as some other places in Europe, or NZ either.

        As far as freedom goes, Communism does have its benifits, one of them is science benifits greatly from it because scientists have complete freedom.

        The only problem China faces is the fact that they have too many people and not enough jobs for them all, their government is out of order, right now we are entering the information age, resources and man power will matter less, information will matter more, and in this situation, the bigger population shall have more producers of information.

        China and Communism benifits from this greatly, however because of their stupidity they are restricting information through censorship, if they ever allow their people to actually access the information then we'd be left in the dust.

        Then again we have problems like that here (Copyright is a form of Censorship)
    • by mqduck ( 232646 ) <mqduck@mqduc[ ]et ['k.n' in gap]> on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:44PM (#3121183)
      A nation allows more "freedom" to its corporations than its dissenting individuals? It's called Capitalism.
    • It says that one respects human life and the other doesn't.


      • We have legalized abortion yet we respect human life all of the sudden? Come on. Be serious.

        If Abortion is legal, Stem Cell research should also be legal. Its the same thing, the only diffrence is you are actually making use of the embryols for a purpose which can actually save lives.
    • by enjo13 ( 444114 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:57PM (#3121271) Homepage
      Ok troll, i'll play.

      Democracy != absolute freedom.

      A democratic nation can certainly limit freedoms, and any fruitful democracy does. In this case the democracy has thus far decided (although not clearly in one direction or the other) that the moral cost of stem cell research is not worth the scientific gain. Arriving at this decision is complex and cumbersome process.. that is the wonder of democracy. The people have effectively put controls on this research themselves.

      A communist nation (or dictatorship) has another method of arriving at decisions. In this case a single ruler (or single party) gets to make the decisions about what freedoms to limit. Traditionally China has placed great limits on the freedom of its people, but in this case the ruler has chosen to let stem cell research continue. This shouldn't really be surprising, it is certainly easier to convince a communist leader with limited responsibility to the wants of the people to pursue a potentially controversial policy.

      This mirrors what we saw in the Soviet Union. They accelerated their space program because the leadership had limited responsibility for the lives of the people involved. They didn't have to care what the people thought.
      • In this case the democracy has thus far decided (although not clearly in one direction or the other) that the moral cost of stem cell research is not worth the scientific gain.

        And in doing so, they have provided incentive for obtaining stem cells from elsewhere [smh.com.au]. Using adult stem cells [newscientist.com] harvested from the same person who will receive them has obvious advantage, not the least of which is the immune system factor. Score one for democracy.

    • Actually, I would wonder about the freedom part. Studies on sociology and economics say that communism has to participate in capitalism on a global scale. My guess is that it is profit that is their motive, not the greater good of humans or any sort of step towards freedom. Besides, wasn't it one of the Asian countries that William Gibson portrayed as a place where you could get *ANYTHING* you could ever want if the price was right? Maybe someone over there liked Gibson.


    • As if the USA is a democracy? First we arent a democracy we are a republic.

      Second communism allows far greater freedom than capitalism IF the government is not corrupt.

      Since 99 percent of all governments are corrupt including ours, a corrupt communist government is one the people cannot control. Our government is controlled by the top 10% of rich Capitalists not us, so how are we in any diffrent of a situation than the Chinese?

      SSSCA, The Patriot Act, DMCA, These laws arent democractic at all, we didnt vote to have these laws in place, if we were allowed to vote the majority would vote against these laws, hey but some rich guys in suits and some representatives who are actually representing the rich guys in suits, they make the law.

      A corrupt government is a corrupt government, Communism isnt bad on paper, its bad only because humans make it bad, and our government is bad only because we allow it to be.

  • by ZnoOne ( 562478 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:29PM (#3121055)
    China also ahead in cloning copy right CDs
    • Yeah, and their big-screen to DVD process is much faster than it is here in the US. I thought it was amazing back when Batman came out on VHS as fast as it did. Now you can get the DVD a day after the movie premieres in the theater. China must have this efficiency thing down to a recipe!
    • The chinese government is already complaining about too many people in that country. What's the value of making even more??

      I guess they haven't quite gotten the capitalist concept that when there's a glut in your market, the last thing you need is more production.

  • by sharkey ( 16670 )
    <Southern Senator>
    "Yew must be dem clones I been a-hearing 'bout. Y'all look the same ta me."
    </Southern Senator>
  • by gwernol ( 167574 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:30PM (#3121063)
    It will be interesting to see what effect this competition will have on the US government's policy on stem-cell research. At the moment they are allowing extremely limited research. Perhaps when they see that another country's more permissive laws start to reap benefits they will allow scientists to properly pursue this promising line of medical research. The same argument applies to the EU and other countries, of course.

    I just hope we don't see a return to the paranoid "yellow peril" [nationalist.org] nonsense that has plauged US views of China in the past. I can already see certain right-wing idiots spouting on about seas of cloned Chinese flooding the US. Sigh.
    • by Exmet Paff Daxx ( 535601 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:38PM (#3121141) Homepage Journal
      Chinese Human cloning? Far from being the "Attack of the Clones", nothing is more misunderstood than medicinal human cloning. Please, don't confuse the goals of The Human Cloning Foundation [humancloning.org], the federation of misanthropes bent on finding a country willing to host their young Frankenstein adventures, with Medicinal Human Cloning.

      The Chinese are pursuing MHC.

      The idea behind Medicinal Human Cloning (MHC) is to clone human cells at the cellular level, before cell differentiation [visembryo.com]. Cell differentiation occurs 2 weeks into the life of an embryo, when all the cells in the embryo stop being homogenous and, all at once, establish their own identities. Some become hand cells, some feet cells, some brain cells, some blood cells. This "magic" event is the point at which human life begins. MHC is the process of cloning human cells before this event.

      The point of being able to harvest unlimited quantities of undifferentiated human cells is that these cells can become any cell in the body; they are "undecided", yet genetically matched to the recipient. The applications here are as numerous as you can imagine: tissue replacement, skin replacement for burn victims, manufactured organs custom-matched to the recipient. This is the promise we are debating; the lives of millions who could be saved by this procedure [advancedcell.com], from burn victims to heart attack victims.

      This advance promises to revolutionize medicine. Not just technically, but from a societal perspective as well. If we understand anything about MHC, it is that it will be prohibitively expensive to apply to an entire population. An order of magnitude costlier than even heart transplantation, we are dealing with sums of millions of dollars per regenerated organ. And unlike transplantation, this technique will be able to prolong the life of anyone, indefinitely. As a society, we will soon be in the position of deciding the lifespan(s) of each of our citizens. Not because we control death; not euthenasia, but because we control life.

      We've already seen this paradigm emerge with the "list" for heart transplants. The pathetic attempt at a "meritocracy" for deciding who receives a new heart has been a total failure, as evidenced by the case of David Crosby [advancedcell.com]. The system is weighted in favor of the rich, against the poor. Will this paradigm dominate the field of Medicinal Human Cloning? Will only the rich live forever? Will money become the force of life? Not if we can help it. We will need to act decisively as events are set in motion.

      We must establish a true meritocracy for the Immortality Revolution ushered in by advances in Medicinal Human Cloning. Like the Slashdot Moderation system, we could create a system of random "Moderators", if you will, who are picked secretly and randomly and given the ability to tag their fellow citizens as deserving or undeserving of the scarce asset of Organ Regeneration, financed by the state. You could rate your neighbor (-1 Stupid) for abusing his spouse, or your coworker (+1 Insightful) for fixing your printer connection. Those with the highest scores would receive the greatest medical benefit: Immortality.

      Imagine a world where we never lost an Einstein, never killed a Bohr. Where great leaders like George Bush could advise us forever; where people like Noam Chomsky were but a temporary nuisance. This is the promise of cloning: not reproducing the husks of people but giving the gift of life to the greatest among us.

      We must act swiftly when the time comes.

      • Chinese Human cloning? Far from being the "Attack of the Clones", nothing is more misunderstood than medicinal human cloning. Please, don't confuse the goals of The Human Cloning Foundation [humancloning.org], the federation of misanthropes bent on finding a country willing to host their young Frankenstein adventures, with Medicinal Human Cloning.

        The Chinese are pursuing MHC.


        Just to set the record straight, my post that this is a reply to was very carefully worded. I know that the Chinese are not talking about cloning people. I know they are pursuing medical cloning technology. My second paragraph was saying that I hope that we don't see this sort of misunderstanding. Please read posts a little more carefully before replying to them.
      • Isn't the last paragraph a modified quote from 7th day?

        Either way, this will not allow immortality. Only aid from common diseases, not curing virii, not curing freak decapitations caused by flying cows, and certainly not from the dangers of other men.
      • if you implement such a "moderation" system, we'll keep loosing Bohr's and Einsteins left and right - what you will get is a world full of immortal Britney Spear's and Bob Hope's (OK, immortal Bob might not be too bad). At the very least you would definatley get an immortal Cowboy Neal.

        I don't have a good answer to this myself, but think the "moderation" system is incorrect. In a way this reminds me a lot of the "Red Mars" series of books by Kim Stanley Robinson, where they solve the longevity problem... ideas discussed in there are probably relevant to such a development.
      • by Isldeur ( 125133 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @07:36PM (#3121915)
        Cell differentiation occurs 2 weeks into the life of an embryo, when all the cells in the embryo stop being homogenous and, all at once, establish their own identities. Some become hand cells, some feet cells, some brain cells, some blood cells. This "magic" event is the point at which human life begins. MHC is the process of cloning human cells before this event.

        Sorry sport, this is some really backwards thinking. Let's think this through...

        A. There is no magic to the differentiation. Also, when do you decide when cells differentiate? Undifferentiated cells are all precursors of endoderm, ectoderm, and mesoderm, the three initial ebryological types. But before the cells differentiate per se they have the potential to differentiate.

        Same with life. That unicellular zygote is potential for life fulfilled. If left by itself with the relevant nutrients and in the proper protective conditions, it *will* develop gradually into a human. The potential which was (sperm and egg separately) is fulfilled. Sperm and egg left alone and prevented from fusing won't become anything; they'll die.

        If some dude is studying to be a programmer or doctor or whatever, he has that potential. Left with the proper nutrients and conditions, he/she will become one of those (ruling out conscious changes of direction, etc.) Is he/she a programmer yet? who is to say, but given time that (or an equivalent) will happen.
      • by BlackGriffen ( 521856 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @07:54PM (#3122016)
        You vision for the future is so full of holes it's sad, and so dystopic it's scary. Let's examine the holes first.

        First of all, there is a genetic link to aging. The clone of dolly the sheep is aging rapidly because the genetic material of the original dolly "remembers" how old dolly is. This could theoretically be circumvented by getting cells from the reproductive organs, but that is easier said than done. We're talking an invasive surgery here. This isn't a problem if you want to make replacement organs that won't last longer than the person was genetically "intended" to.

        Second, is that the brain cannot truly be repaired. They can inject stem cells to replace dying brain cells, but these cells won't be able to retrieve whatever memories and skills were lost when a brain cell dies. Thus, if you define a person by how they act, what they know/remember, basically, by their mind, then the person is going to die, just a lot more slowly.

        Third, is Murphey's Law. Shit happens, and you can at best lengthen the life span to the point that accidents don't shorten it.

        Fourth, the cell's natural mechanisms for fighting cancer actually promote aging. Though you may prevent this from being problematic in the body by replacing it, the brain will eventually get cancer, and it will eventually enter the blood stream.

        Now that we've dealt with some of the technical issues (I'm sure there are more, I just don't know them/can't think of them right now), let's move on to moral/philosophical issues. If you're right wing, and believe in God, then you'd also believe that we weren't meant to live forever. If the soul goes on forever, then there is no point in making the body permanent. You'll get protest on that front, whether or not it's right/true.

        Now, for the idea of a meritocracy. The problem with that is that people will start "running for immortality" like the run for office. Thus demagoguery will spiral out of control. There will also be people made immortal who don't deserve it. Would the Scientologists have permitted their leader to die? Did that con-artist deserve immortality? And that is all assuming that your system works right! People will try to rig the selection of "moderators." There will be a black market where the rich can get their hands on the procedure, even if they've been moderated "-5 million, die now fcker!" The technology will eventually get cheaper, so that everyone will insist on receiving immortality, and it will be possible. The problem with that path is that it leads to stasis and stagnation.

        Did you ever consider that death is a good thing? Single celled organisms, like bacteria and amoeba, don't die naturally; they only die when the environment becomes too hostile (whether it's chemically, thermally, or full of predators). Primitive life has immortality, or at least, are as close to it as physically possible. Why did life abandon immortality if it is such a worthwhile goal? The reason that the single-celled life forms don't have death is because they don't need it. Any change in the genetic structure is expressed by the organism in, at worst, an hour or two. With multi-cellular organisms, it is impossible for all of the genetic code in all of the cells to change in a coordinated fashion while the animal is still alive. Even with genetic therapy, there is no guarantee that all the cells have been properly altered. In fact, nothing short of transporter technology would do for creating the rapid changes in genotype and phenotype throughout an organism. The ability of the individual to die is the ability of the whole society of individuals to change, and thus to adapt to change. The death of the individual is as necessary as the death of skin cells, or the atrophy of neural synapses that go unused. In short, if people would stop for a second to look past their inbreed, and healthy, fear of death, they'd realize that it isn't a bug, it's a feature.

        You post reflects one facet of a coming problem that I've been considering for a while now. Fear, death, pain, pleasure, happiness, love... These are all constructs, mental fantasies that are useful in impelling unthinking beasts to survival. With advances in biology, specifically neuroscience, a time will come when we will have mastered all of these. What will we do with that mastery, I wonder? Are we destined to become like the rat with an electrode in the pleasure center of it's brain that electrocuted itself to death, but with more advanced methods, will we be an immortal rat? What will we do with this new independence from the evolved constraints on our behavior? Will we permit random variation to continue? Will there be a new dictatorship/utopia where people's thoughts are literally controlled? I wish I could answer these questions, because the consequences of the wrong choice on humanity's part will have dire consequences for the species. My hope is that society will literally grow up, like the transition from childhood to adulthood is supposed to work. To quote Hackers, "When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child, but when I became a man I put away childish things. (pause) What... It's Corinthians I, Chapter 13, verse 11, no duh. Come on." Interesting that a pantheist like myself still finds some wisdom in the Bible.

        Here's hoping we grow up before we kill ourselves. Avoiding nuclear war is only round one.

        BlackGriffen
    • The U.S. government did not ban stem cell research. It simply decided not to use public funds for such research. Given that a large number of members of this democratic republic object to tax money (which they paid in the first place) being used to fund research they disagree with, how can we possibly find fault with the government for respecting the wishes of its citizens?

      Researchers who want to study stem cells can still do so. They just have to find their own money for it.

      • by gwernol ( 167574 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @06:01PM (#3121302)
        The U.S. government did not ban stem cell research.

        I didn't claim that they did. I said they allow "limited research".

        It simply decided not to use public funds for such research.

        Not quite true. They are in fact allowing federal dollars to be spent on limited stem-cell research. See, for example this article [cnn.com].

        Given that a large number of members of this democratic republic object to tax money (which they paid in the first place) being used to fund research they disagree with, how can we possibly find fault with the government for respecting the wishes of its citizens?

        Firstly because the few opinion polls on this matter indicate that substantially more people support funding of stem-cell research than oppose it (see, for example: this poll [go.com] there are others).

        Secondly because the US like most Western countries is not a "pure" democracy where every issue is decided by popular opinion. All decisions are made by politicians who weigh many different factors including but not limited to public opinion in making their decisions. No sane person would want a pure democracy.
      • Researchers who want to study stem cells can still do so. They just have to find their own money for it.

        To someone who doesn't work in a lab, this sounds like a sensible statement, but it doesn't take into account the way things really work in a biological research lab. Most labs have many people working on multiple projects that have multiple sources of funding, and if they want to publish stem cell work, they have to prove that they didn't use ANY government funds for the stem cell work, even accidentally. The problem is that everything within a lab is intertwined. When I use a centrifuge, PCR machine, or a bottle of some reagent, I don't know which grant paid for it. While these restrictions allow for the theoretical possibility of limited stem cell work to go on in the US, they generate a huge amount of red tape and make everything a huge pain in the ass for the people doing the work. The result is that scientists in the US who want to do serious stem cell work will simply go to other countries, and the top scientists from other countries won't come here any more. Australia, Israel, and a few others are already ahead of us in stem cell research, and apparently China is now too. If this situation continues for a few years, the US will no longer be the world's leader in development of new medical technologies. Funding of stem cell research is in the best economic interests of our nation, and that's the reason why the current legislation against stem cell work here will not last long, regardless of what the public thinks. Besides, it will only take the development of one successful therapy and a few TV ads to convince 99% of American citizens that stem cell research is worth funding.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:31PM (#3121070)
    We are already behind the rest of the world in lots of things. Remember when the Soviets launched Sputnik in the 50s, it got a LOT of people interested in bringing science to the forefront in our schools. These days conservative politicians and theologians are treating science like it's dirty. They want to ban all stem cells, ban evolution, etc. Well fine, but in 20 years when the PRC is leaps and bounds ahead of us technologically we will know who to blame.

    All of the high-tech weapons that our military has didn't invent themselves. And I can guarantee you that they weren't invented using the Bible as a tech manual. Wake up anti-science conservatives, if you want the Chinese and the EU to pass us in every way, just keep on the course you're on.
    • We are already behind the rest of the world in lots of things. Remember when the Soviets launched Sputnik in the 50s, it got a LOT of people interested in bringing science to the forefront in our schools. These days conservative politicians and theologians are treating science like it's dirty. They want to ban all stem cells, ban evolution, etc. Well fine, but in 20 years when the PRC is leaps and bounds ahead of us technologically we will know who to blame.

      Yeah, I'm always reading that here. But, picking up the first issue of Nature that came to hand (August 16, 2001) I see papers from institutions in the following countries:

      • France, US, France
      • US, US
      • US
      • Germany
      • US, US, US
      • France, France, France
      • US, US
      • US
      • Germany, US
      • Australia, Australia
      • US, US, UK
      • UK
      • Netherlands, Germany, Germany
      Mind you, this is in a British journal. I think if you look in any non-specialist journal you'll see the same thing (except that Japan had a really poor showing in the issue I looked at, and France did unusually well.

      Finally I'll point out that 1) the notion that evolution isn't taught in US schools is 99.999% wrong and 2) stem cell research is legal in the US, just not necessarily funded by the government.

      Now, this is where the Scandinavians always jump in to brag about how they all have cell phones. ;-)

  • isn't the problem with using clones for cell harvesting is that you are skewing results and getting a degradaded(sp?) sample? no clone is a perfect copy of the origional, plus what about genetic defects of the host? wouldn't using a wide range of natural donors produce higher quality results?
  • Evil (Score:2, Funny)

    The nice part about evil, soulless facist governments is that they play by no rules, with no rules, with no consideration of the negative potential for science I agree that stem cells hold tremendous potential for good, but without pondering the Brave New World/Gattaca/(insert cliche book here) consequences, the future might turn out an ugly place. It is dangerous to wave flags and say we should follow in their footsteps. One cannot use the dark side of the force/The One Ring/etc. without becoming Darth Vader/Sauron/CowboyNeal.
    • Re:Evil (Score:4, Interesting)

      by jonbrewer ( 11894 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:42PM (#3121170) Homepage
      the future might turn out an ugly place.

      I believe the present is an ugly place. Read a newspaper. Look at some pictures of dead Palestinians, and think how complacent the US is in their deaths.

      And as for "evil, soulless facist governments," are you implying that the US is any better? We only ban this research because of the religious right. Get religion out of government and we'd be doing this, no question.
    • Re:Evil (Score:2, Interesting)

      by detect ( 227148 )
      So let me get this right: Stem cells hold the potential for good but without pondering the cliche consequences, the future might become an ugly place? Ok.

      Which Governments actually do shows signs of fascism? What countries impose bans on scientific research and raise tariffs on imported goods all while preaching on Democracy and Free Trade?

  • I'd hate to be GWB. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by IPFreely ( 47576 ) <mark@mwiley.org> on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:32PM (#3121081) Homepage Journal
    ... But then I hate GWB.

    The poor boy is now solidly stuck between his Oh So Rightous right wing religious supporters and the need to keep the United States up with the rest of the world in genetic research. It looks like science suffers at the hands of the Morality police.

    Hasn't this happened before?... (Galileo, Darwin, ...)

  • by cperciva ( 102828 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:32PM (#3121085) Homepage
    Ok... so if you want to use someone else's organs, you hop on a plane to India... if you want to have pig organs grown for you, you hop on a plane to the UK... if you want to have stem cells cloned and grown into organs for you, you hop on a plane to China...

    Is it just me, or does it seem that medical treatment is moving in the direction of taking a very large number of plane flights?
  • by xSterbenx ( 549640 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:33PM (#3121094)
    I always thought that it was interesting how the United States can allow abortion (the killing of an unborn embryo) but not embryo cloning/harvesting (the killing of an unborn embryo), especially since embryo cloning can bring some good. While I remain pro-life myself, I could never quite understand this hypocrisy.

    I find it also interesting how the one main country with whom the United States has mixed in civil rights with trade agreements is the country that may end up further along in this line of research. Of course, one could say that Hitler had learned a lot through research as well. How far can we allow our morality to stretch to further the advancement of the human race?

    • The difference, of course, is the mother. The Roe v. Wade decision said nothing about the "rights" of the foetus, it was about the woman's right to control over her own body.

      Perhaps unfortunately, there exists no equivalent decision supporting the rights of scientific research, cloning, or medical advances.
    • First off, I am decidedly pro-choice.

      Now: I believe the difference lies in intent. Cloning/harvesting is making a baby with no intent on making a person. Abortions (should) occur only when a couple has no intention of making a baby, but *oops*. US law states that embyroes in very early stages can be killed, as it cannot live outside of the mother (without assistance) and is thus 'part of the mother' and she has the right to do whatever things to herself she wants as long as she does not endanger herself, or anyone else. (the debate is wether she can further endanger someone who cannot live outside her)

      Personally I believe that abortion should be allowed, and is the worst, last option in birth control, but still far better than having a child that cannot be loved and supported as one should.
      • As if theres a diffrence? Women have an abortion to save themselves time and money, they dont want to give birth and they dont want to raise a baby, they could have birth and do adoption but they choose not to.

        Abortion is worse, because who gets helped from Abortion? No one but the woman who had the Abortion, this means Abortion is selfish.

        Stem Cell research could help any one of us. When you fall and break your spine, you'll change your mind about stem cell research, hell if a woman fell and broke her spine would it be ok for her to use the stem cells to fix her back?

        You have a right to your opinion, but i see it as hypocritical.
        • Abortions should not be done by women save themselves time and money. It should save the would be child the problems and emotional problems of being raised in a broken home, without proper parentage.

          Adoption does not solve these problems. Or at least current adoption does not. In an ideal world where people adopted all the children put up for adoption, it might.


          • Please, most children are raised in a broken home, thats the stupidest excuse i've ever heard.

            I was raised without a father around, Am I going to wish i were aborted? hell no! And i dont think anyone else raised in a "broken" home wishes they were aborted either unless they have some serious mental problems.

            If you are in a foster home, or a broken home, it does not mean you'll grow up to be a bad person.

            Please stop talking about emotional problems and proper parantage as if its somehow normal in this day and age to have that knowing that almost half the kids growinng up or who have grown up these days grew up in a broken home. Alot of kids were abused mentally, sexually, etc, and have had it worse than me, and this was by their real parents, honestly this is beyond your control, but even if i grew up like that, i still wouldnt wish i was aborted.

            Its not right for you to judge for some other lifeform if it should live or die, its up to that life form to decide for itself, that is my opinion.
    • Who's morality? Mine says abortion is OK and that embryonic stem cell research is totally OK. I don't know what you mean by "How far can we allow our morality..."


      This is a reason that religion does absolutely NOT belong in government in any way shape or form. Science is science and marches to its own drum.

  • When I went to look at the comments for this page, the fortune quote at the bottom read:
    The entire CHINESE WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL TEAM all share ONE personality -- and have since BIRTH!!
    Spooky!
  • Inevitable (Score:5, Insightful)

    by legLess ( 127550 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:35PM (#3121118) Journal
    Briefly (I'm at work) this is exactly why the U.S. shouldn't ban this research. It's bloody inevitable. Our government is caving to a few screaming fundamentalists over one of the most important medical advances in history.

    Who's going to pursue this more ethically? The Chinese, who've been alleged to use prisons as organ factories, or us?
    • Quite right. We shall cling to our non-capitalist luddite principles on a subject, and be overtaken by someone who does not.

      This in no way reflects my views on capitalism, ludditism, ethics of human cloning, pro-life, or anything else. All I wish to say is: If your morality prevents innovation, and it lies in a gray area (pay attention to gray areas throughout history - mathematics could be considered one of those in the middle ages), those who do invent it will have an "advantage". (ie. the Ottomans.)

      -B
    • Don't worry, Superman has stepped in...er, wheeled in, to save the day. He's testifying before congress about the use of genetic research for medical cures - specifically, no duh, spinal injuries.
    • Who's going to pursue this more ethically?

      Amen to that!

      Whenever we relinquish a technology because we feel we're ethically "above that sort of thing", we run the risk that the technology will be picked up by people with WAY less moral scruples. Relinquishment pushes technology into the hands of the unethical, the very thing we'd hope to avoid by relinquishing in the first place.

      There's then this tricky problem: how do we keep a strong technical lead in an ethically problematical area of technology? Historically we've done it with black ops. Maybe that's what would work here. Then again, there have recently been advances [eurekalert.org] that may make Bush's unfortunate decision moot: it is now possible to extract a stem cell from an adult human that is fully capable of differentiating into any cell type.

      So now, maybe we can have our cake and eat it too. If the Chinese make huge gains using fetal stem cells, but we can do all the same stuff with stem cells from adults, then their putative technological lead becomes a tempest in a teapot.

    • The Chinese, who've been alleged to use prisons as organ factories, or us?

      And where is your proof to support that statement? Or is this just he-says-she-says-thingy?

  • The quote at the bottom of the page:

    The entire CHINESE WOMEN'S VOLLEYBALL TEAM all share ONE personality -- and have since BIRTH!!

    Seems a little too relevant...

  • don't they have enough people already? do they really need to start cloning humans? (i know, i know, it's just for stem cells.)

    On one hand, they employ 'neighborhood-watch' for couples who might want a second child. those couples are then 'socially' pressured into getting an abortion. but on the other hand the gummint wants to clone humans... I guess they're going to require someone to have a license to produce humans... (much like a manufacturing license). But then the country is so good at piracy -- you know where that's going to end up. 'pirated copies' -- literally -- will be found on every chinease street corner. what's new?

  • I hope not! (Score:2, Funny)

    by burtonator ( 70115 )
    If China gets to far ahead they will swarm us with...

    Just think... billions of Chinese!!! ah!
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:45PM (#3121193)
    I believe that, if you dig into some of the KGB stuff from the early 80's, the russians were (as a military experiment) working on human body modification through genomic experimentation and gene mutation/cloning. Alot of the documents are obviously still hidden away, but there was a site I visited last year that was a clearing house for recently declassified documents from the Moscow bureau.

    While nothing specifically mentioned the cloning, analyists who had been looking for hints on space weapons, stealth bomber/fighters, and missing prisoners came to the conclusion that some of the rumors about human cloning in remote siberian research stations were not without backing evidence. This was due to a small trickle of the worst dissidents, those who had good health records and whom were fit and free from known genetic diseas in their families, were disappearing.

    These stations still remain closed to the world and heavily guarded, and there are only rumors. Rumors like men being bred from birth with extra ribs and denser/thicker muscles and bones. Men who had enhanced senses of smell or night time eyesight.

    A few of the people who went "missing" from soviet prisons for serious crimes were noted as re-appearing years later in soviet Marine Infantry brigades (spetznat) with clouded service records, but it is difficult to imagine Russia in the 80's having the technical knowhow or where with all to be able to "mutate" or modify already grown adults. I toss that one out though as an x-files kind of rumor that sure could scare the kids up around Mermansk.

    Like I said, alot of rumors... but it makes you think. You gotta wonder what the CIA paid for too... there is alot of black budget money that doesn't get tracked beyond the agency front door... they managed to produce the Blackbird that way, and U2/TR1 as well as who knows what. I wonder if the gov't has dabbled in genetic mutation or embryonic modification/cloning...

    Oh well, in direct comment to the article and posters here, let me go on the record that I think this is not a bad thing. China is not looking to increase their population (which they have difficulty controlling or feeding as is now)... they are doing research to A) Best the US and Europe at their own game, and B) come up with medical breakthrough that meet condition A and benefit their own society as well... maybe even boost their economy with something original that only they can produce, that being working genetic medicines they for once control under patent.
  • That looks like exactly what the People's Republic needs, more republican people!

    It also helps that one can clone the important Party officials and make even truer the tradicional Chinese fascination for long term planning (not the 3-month Wall Street long term standard, mind you, the Chinese long term is measured in centuries). In the future, one will plan and have a clone to implement the plan.

    I hope they remember to learn how to clone the rice, the pork and the fish, to feed all the surplus people they will be making.
  • by rufusdufus ( 450462 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:50PM (#3121228)
    The next man on the moon will be chinese too. They have a plan for manned mission in the near future.
    Our science fiction always assumes that space colonization and the "future" will be dominated by western ideals, but as things are trending now, the future looks brighter for asia.
  • by supernova87a ( 532540 ) <kepler1@hotmail. ... minus physicist> on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:57PM (#3121264)
    many people have predicted (and it's becoming apparent) that Asia will lead the way in such biotechnology areas. People in Asia are not quite as brainwashed or blinded by Christian religious dogma, and probably don't mind conducting research that can improve the quality of human life.

    While the politicians here debate, and try to cater to every consituency, by holding research back, the rest of the world will be able to run with the ball...
  • from the article...

    Unlike most adult cells, whose functions are preprogrammed, embryonic stem cells can adapt themselves to a variety of specialist roles, filling in as heart or nerve cells.

    so, let's assume i'm born, from an embryonic cell (cloned), and my heart goes bad. the doctor forgets to stick the embryo in the magic soultion that turns the "turn me into a heart organ" switch, and puts the cell directly into me.

    does the embryo turn into a blasocyst and a developing baby/tumor? or would this "know" what to do? i know there's a specific solution that must be prepared to turn on all the genes to clone an animal, but would the body naturally tell this embryo what to do?
  • by james_shoemaker ( 12459 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @05:58PM (#3121278)
    So in the future when you look at the packaging your replacement organs come in it will say...

    "Made in China"
  • I suppose it was inevitable that while the majority of the world wrangles over the ethics of this technology, it would be developed anyway by a government with a total lack of them. While I am not opposed to cloning technologies on philosophical grounds, as a practical matter I trust the chinese government about as far as I can throw them.
    • Is it me or did Fraxis hit the nail right on the head when they put "Chairman Chang" as the leader of the "Human Hive" in Alpha Centauri.

      Is it sick that I can still pretty much boil down much of the socio-political landscape in terms of a computer game? ..... Don't answer that.

  • This would be a step backwards in court cases that rely on DNA evidence.

    With people being truly identical in every which way (not including haircuts and stuff like that) including DNA, it would be nearly impossible to prove innocence or guilt of one of the clones in a court case that currently relies on such technologies.

    Think about it...
    "Your client was on the security camera and it was his blood on the floor"

    "No, your honor, it was his identical clone with the same DNA - my client was nowhere near the place of the incident"

    -kwishot
  • Mixed reactions (Score:5, Insightful)

    by tiltowait ( 306189 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @06:02PM (#3121309) Homepage Journal
    Column A
    This is yet another reason why China scares me. Anyone upset over the American jingoism since 9/11 and during the Olympics should be blown away by the scope of Chinese nationalism, to say nothing of their singularly ass backwards system of medicine, politics, human rights, spam filtering, etc..

    Column B
    Kudos for this country for pushing the scientific frontiers of medical benefits to mankind. This forward-thinking is yet another sign of the benefits of not being caught up in corrupt fundamenalist political wackos. But since China's rich cultural heritage spanks the USA in longevity by about, oh, a factor of ten, it shouldn't be surprising where they're headed - it's only a matter of time before this technically advanced economic powerhouse dominates the globe.
    • I rarely bother to react to reactionary statements, but what with the distemper attendant upon a bout of the flu, bitchslapping an idiot has a perverse appeal.

      Column A is vacuous and needn't be commented upon further.

      Column B is idiotic. China's 'rich cultural heritage' is rife with xenophobic internecine warfare. The present regime is but the latest set of warlords. I've worked with and for Chinese families of substantial wealth, they were urbane, informed and loath to live in China. The Chinese mythos has long held the 'middle kingdom' will 'soon' rule the earth. It's quite funny to hear a chinese person self-deprecatingly state the inevitable rise to world dominance of the Chinese people. It's like they really don't want to rule the earth but destiny *is* destiny. China can barely feed it's people. The Three Gorges Dam is a grandiose scheme to implement a hydroelectric panacea. China historically came 'online', if you will, by development of a series of canal works, but the Three Gorges Dam is thought to be fundamentally flawed and might well silt up in plus/minus thirty years. Long stretches of China's rivers are dead. Environmentally China is a sludge pressure cooker overheating. China had damn well better scramble to advance every and any frontier of learning because in all likelihood when the shit (night soil) hits the fan over the next decade or two were all going to be splattered and forced to help clean up the mess.

      cheers
  • by RealityCrutch ( 561158 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @06:05PM (#3121328)
    Of course they are ahead of us. We are a democracy and any substantial protest brings us to a screeching halt. (Think: nuclear power)

    And as a totalitarian state, not particularly worried about ethics, foreign opinion, or foetuses, they have a very large source of research material.

    But I expected better from many of you. They aren't doing this to increase their population. They aren't even doing this for stem cell research per se. They have plenty of stem cells from their very aggressive population control program. No, what they want is money. They want to clone embryos to sell to us squeamish westerners. They have to develop the technique of cloning them, so they can clone the stem cell lines we hypocritically approve of, then sell them back to us. What a wacky world we live in!
  • So in a nation where parents can only have 1 child, they are cloning humans...

    Yeah, that makes sense.
  • by gosand ( 234100 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @06:10PM (#3121359)
    Jackie Chan is reportedly the first person in line to be cloned, so that he can have an unlimited supply of stuntmen, while still being able to claim "I do all my own stunts"
  • Especially with the hordes of westerners flying in en masse for organ replacements.
  • by Picass0 ( 147474 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @06:23PM (#3121468) Homepage Journal
    There is nothing that bans the cultivation of stem cells for medical research in the United States.

    The only policy that President Bush has established concerning stem cells said that an existing set of stem cell strains (aprox. 60) would recieve federal funding. That's not the same as outlawing or limiting future stem cell research.

    Other stem cell strains may be created, but not at federal expense. Medical Companies would need to use private financing to start future strains.

    • I think your view on this is rather narrow. The problem isn't that the US government is not going to fund your stem cell research. The fact is, they are NOT going to fund anything done at your lab if there is stem cell research going on in it. This would be a MAJOR loss to a lab to lose federal funding on all of its research.

      Universities would lose a great portion of their grants if they were to even consider stem cell research. Major companies still rely on federal funding. It is only the smaller ones or the ones located in other countries that's going to succeed.

      The problem with this is this. Let's just say China does research and finds a cure for cancer (per se). Now 1) would the FDA approve this treatment? 2) Would you be willing to try a treatment that was not FDA approved? 3) Would the US respect the patent on this treatment (if there was one) or if Bush and his people are in power, will they just ignore the patent laws? (Look what they were considering to do with Cipro - allowing another company to produce a generic version at a cheaper price. And Cipro was produced in the US and is protected by US laws)
  • Doesn't China kind of have a little over-population problem as it is?

    Like to the tune of 1.2 BILLION people!

    ;-)

  • by RembrandtX ( 240864 ) on Wednesday March 06, 2002 @06:33PM (#3121553) Homepage Journal
    Its sad to think that I will probally be the last generation in my family to have known the USA as a technological superpower.

    With increasing restrictions on scientific study, assanine patent law, and scientific monopolies - it seems everyone is out for either the buck or the moral highground. [or a political office.]

    Hobbes would be proud, since he was the first to preach that to inturrupt the 'process' of god was a sin. Apparantly cloning (as well as violent video games and open source software) falls into this catagory.

    Am i using a sweeping generality , you betchya`. Is it far from the truth ? not really as far as I would like it to be.

    While i must say .. im registered as a Republician, and fairly conservative about stuff in general. I'm ironically a futurist. I think we should be more green, use cleaner technology, and improve our life/life style. But keeping the cost to future generations in account.

    Apparantly the way the govt slid the last 8 years, was to pander to the highest voting majority, go back to our 16th centruy religious roots, and avoid change.

    change apparantly is evil. and will destroy our 'family' values. Whatever values they have 'saved' in 15 years when people are mutating horribly due to all the petrolium toxins in the air/water/soil won't matter .. its TODAY that counts.

    As the US becomes more and more self centered and less a 'world' player .. we are going to isolate ourselves from new technology .. new ideas. [fun experiment, ask your average religious right how much the yen is at .. or the euro .. and see if they know.]

    Anyone see what japan did ? Japanese as a culture are rather xenophobic. [Just watch a 6 foot tall black man walk down a street in Yokohama .. and you will understand what i mean.] When a society isolates itself socially, it stagnates. They may have been a super-power economy once, but the bubble burst - and with that loss of economy, the last 40 years of growing pains are showing.

    Incest between mother and son is common due to bonds formed from 'exam' stress. Rape and molestation is practicaly a way of life for young girls. And 12 year old prostitutes in the Tokyo/yokahama area are not only common, but ALMOST accepted. Theft and crime, once unthinkable (outside organized gangs) are becoming common place.

    Again, im being general here .. some to make a point, some to save time.

    I just wonder, how much of 'protecting our values' Japan did 10-15 years ago. Are we repeating the same social mistakes? By refusing to let our scientists to explore? When our future is being decided by people who are holding onto beliefs that were founded 2000 years ago, when the world (to them) comprised of about 1/3 of europe - is that system equiped to handle the way the world is now ?

    would you choose to program your new graphics application in C++ ? or COBOL ?
  • I know this is extremely bad taste, but ..

    Now you're really going to have to worry about what you've got in your dim sims.

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