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United States Science

Stem Cell Research Moves Forward In The US 807

maniacdavid writes "President George Bush has finally made a clear and final decision on stem cell research. He will allow the existing 60 cell lines to continue their development in the hopes of curing a disease. He said the choice was difficult because of his stand on against stem cell funding during his campaign. But he allowed the 60 to continue because the choice between life and death was already made. This is good for both sides and many people are pleased. " Granted, there's the issue of these 60 lines viability, but at least it's not a total federal funding ban, as was widely expected. As well, there's increased funding on stem cells obtained from adults, umbilical cords, placentas and animals - 250$US million this year, which is still a pittance when you consider the potentials of stem cells.
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Stem Cell Research Moves Forward In The US

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  • by tenzig_112 ( 213387 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @08:51AM (#2110683) Homepage

    "I'm just a boy who can't say no," said George W. Bush as he announced his decision to allow public funding of stem cell research. The President then burst into a medley of other songs from Oklahoma before someone reminded him that he had a speech to finish.

    Some worry that in their push to get the funding approved, biologists have over-promised the potential of stem cells. Several scientists who testified on the issue have had to issue clarifications in recent days. For example, stem cell research will not one day lead to free trips to Disney World. And the field of study will likely never lead to the long-awaited vaccine for Cooties.

    Time will tell.

    Click here for the full story. [ridiculopathy.com]

  • Quick question (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Sc00ter ( 99550 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @08:45AM (#2111235) Homepage
    He said that you can have them regenerate, so in theory they should last forever. If you can keep making more from the ones you already have. And if that's the case, why does only having what they currently have an issue?

    Or was that false?

  • King Solomon? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Amarok.Org ( 514102 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @08:52AM (#2111692)
    At least, that's what some of the media says. I, however, take a slightly more grounded view.

    Personally, I support this decision strongly - regardless of my personal views on the subject (of which I'm sure you're just dying to hear, right? Hello?)

    It's in the President's best interest to appeal to as many groups as possible... after all, he does want to get re-elected (we assume).

    I think this decision appeals to the largest possible group of Americans... including those who don't necessarily support it. The absolute conservatives will (and have) denounce this as a moral travesty, while the pro-research groups will lament the limited viability of the exisiting stem cell lines (claimed to be anywhere from 10 to 80, depending on who you ask).

    What some people are forgetting is that no laws have been passed restricting the research - all that has been done is that FEDERAL funds have been restricted to a subset of the research. Private organizations are welcome to fund any type of research they want.

    The pro-research groups need to realize that they're getting funding for a controversial line of research, and are welcome to do whatever research they'd like with private funds.

    The pro-life groups need to realize that regardless of their feelings on the method of obtaining the existing stem cell lines, they *do* exist - abandoning them will not repair the moral injustice they feel has been done. The new guidlines on federal funding acts to represent their views by not supporting the destruction of human embryos (or "pre-embryos").

    Frankly, I think Mr. Bush has dodged a major bullet here. Important research will continue with the federal government's assistance, and major moral questions will remain at least partially unchallenged.

  • Stem cells, etc. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by The Gline ( 173269 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @08:34AM (#2112558) Homepage
    Kind of odd that there's such a brouhaha about this, given that most of the real progress wth stem cells has not featured fetal tissue in any form. But the placenta/umbilical cord issue does seem to have been addressed by this, which is nice. I like the idea of that former waste product being put to something useful.
    • Re:Stem cells, etc. (Score:5, Informative)

      by psxndc ( 105904 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @09:43AM (#2115116) Journal
      Kind of odd that there's such a brouhaha about this, given that most of the real progress wth stem cells has not featured fetal tissue in any form

      What?? My girlfriend is a molecular biologist who works with the cDNA libraries of a lot of animals and she says human adult stem cells are nowhere near as easy to work with or productive as fetal tissue is. I'm not pro-abortion (but I am pro-choice), but the fact of the matter is: a stem cell, in its purest form is an undifferentiated cell. These "pure stem cells" are best found in undeveloped, terminated fetii (sp?).

      Secondly, my girlfriend says 60 libraries isn't enough despite what Bush and his bio advisors say. She says there are hundreds out there. While I guess Bush acquiescing to a degree is a step in the right direction, there still is a way to go.

      Regardless, most of the companies doing stem cell research don't need federal funding anyway. The private sector of Biotech has plenty of VC.

      psxndc

  • by cybrthng ( 22291 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @08:36AM (#2112566) Homepage Journal
    I was listening to NPR this morning and both groups, supporters and non supporters say they are happy with the results of Bush's terms. Supporters are happy simply for the fact he didn't nix the whole funding processes, non supporters are happy because they feel no new stems cells will be allowed to be "farmed".

    My question is, why do the non supporters feel this is a win? The government didn't stop these companies from getting NEW STEM CELLS, they just stopped the funding on that spcific process.

    The researchj WILL go on and i'm happy to say i support it 100%. With 2 grandparents that have alzheimers (and died..) and my wifes father dying a horribly painfull death from cancer i can only have praise for such research.

    And lastly, my beliefs is that 4-5 cells do not constitue life, if that is the beginnings of life then sue me for masturbating away billions of cells that would HAVE or COULD have brought "life".

    And for the religious right wingers who's life is in gods hands, i hope you don't ruin it for people who believe in god but believe in humans and science as well.

    • Classic Bush (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Microsift ( 223381 )
      This is what is known as being a "compassionate conservative," which is just code for saying have your cake and eat it too.

      Bush's "reasoning"

      Life is sacred

      Life begins at conception

      Destroying a life to save lives is wrong

      Embryonic Stem Cell research is promising

      Embryonic Stem cell harvesting destroys life

      Some lives have been destroyed already

      Destroying those lives was wrong

      Stem Cell Lines were derived from those lives

      We can't bring back those lives

      So it's ok to use those stem cell lines

      If you are against destroying embryos, you should be against using these stem cells. If you support this research, you should support developing new stem cell lines.

      I think this will be a successful political move on Bush's part, but it demonstrates that he is just as political as Clinton was(something Bush criticized).

      For the record, I support stem cell research, using stem cells from embryos that are a by-product of fertility therapies. I think it is abhorrent to create embryos solely for stem cell research.

      • > Embryonic Stem cell harvesting destroys life

        (Not addressed at you -- I'm just taking this line because it's the core assertion of those who oppose such research, and you phrased it perfectly.)

        So I'll take it at face value. I'll make an argument based on the assumption (IMHO erroneous) that a single fertilized cell constitutes life.

        Why must embryonic stem cell research destroy life?

        They're stem cells. Undifferentiated. If you wanted to "clone" one, you'd do it the same way you made an identical twin -- wait for it to divide, and separate the two cells.

        If one stem cell is a human life, why not let it divide, grab one for research, and stick the other - identical cell - back into the freezer where you got it.

        (And when some fundie says "You still destroyed one life, and suspended another", ask the fundie who created the second life. Without the lab researcher separating the two cells, there would be only one embryo. Will the fundie accept that a mere lab technician can create a new life two? Or will he acknowledge that the remaining cell we put back in the freezer is every bit the "person" it was before it divided.)

    • I'm just replying to the subject line..

      Ask for federal funding, you get political situations.. that's the way it goes.

      The decision will in no way impact private research.

    • (of course, including the standard "real thought, moderators slap it to hell" disclaimer)

      Well, as one of those "right wingers" that you so eloquently talk about, I'm pleased that the government isn't going to pay for science to harvest humans for thier cells. I agree that the research HAS THE POSSIBLITLY to lead to cures for many ills, but the chance that it could have saved your 2 grandparents and your wife's father, or my 2 grandparents or my wife's grandparents is conjecture only. Science THINKS that these things are possible, but science also was sure that the Earth was the center of the universe and that the world was flat and if you got to the edge, you would fall off.

      Science should look at every option, and follow every research path, but federal money shouldn't be used for the harvesting of humans. Private funds and grants from private groups should be used in this case.

      You are welcome to your belief that 4-5 cells do not constitue life, however, I'm sure you will feel different if you find your set to have a child and then it's lost during gestation. Those 4 or 5 cells become as real as any person and the loss felt is terrible. I pray your family never has to deal with that.
      • Yeah, slashdot is killing any article that proposes any signs of inteligence. I know i need to use a spelling checker, but i'm on my morning cup of coffee and at work. Just want to express my opinions.

        I don't appose or really even believe in right wing anything, that is a political term to show your drastic beliefs in anything. I don't believe my life is in gods hands, but i believe god has a role in my life.

        Put yourself in this situation. Say you should have a childe who at his/her teenage years develops cancer. Your dr says you can do whatever you need to do to produce stems cells and use those cells to save your living child, otherwise he will die. Would you choose to let god take your child and hope that your current attempt at having children works out, or would you feel like a mother producing the very "medicine" that will save your child and your family?

      • You wrote:
        science also was sure that the Earth was the center of the universe
        actually, the church saw to it that those proposing that the earth was not the center of the universe were denounced as being 'anti-god' or something. I'm sure other well versed readers here could place names and dates to show examples of this.
        In the future , right now that is, we're unlocking the building blocks of life and may come to figure out how to build 'life' from scratch. This also has the power to destroy the view that Life can only be created by god, in a way the same as removing our world from the center of the universe did so long ago.
        that being said, there's a lot of fetuses just laying around in trash cans from abortions anyhow, why can we just get stem cells from them?

      • Well, as one of those "right wingers" that you so eloquently talk about, I'm pleased that the government isn't going to pay for science to harvest humans for thier cells.
        ... while at the same time the baby-fetishists have taken action in fourteen states to demand insurance coverage on fertility treatments, with a steady supply of embryos flushed down the hopper as a byproduct.
        Science should look at every option, and follow every research path, but federal money shouldn't be used for the harvesting of humans.
        In which case, for consistency's sake, Medicare ought not to pay for organ transplants of any kind, ever.
        Those 4 or 5 cells become as real as any person and the loss felt is terrible.
        That sounds like a truly unhealthy case of projection, man. Hormones can do some really funny things to you, but shouldn't you wait until the kid's born before you start making up fairytales about it?
        I pray your family never has to deal with that.
        The trouble with you "right-wingers" is that you lack the ability to not project your preconceptions of and neuroses about life on everyone around you, damn the inconsistencies, and instead assume everyone is exactly like you and doesn't find you and your preconceptions loathsome enough to cross the street just to get away from. One, I neither have nor had any intention of founding a family; two, within a year or two I will be taking steps to ensure that I do not found a family; and three, a miscarriage would be a BLESSING compared to a quarter of a million dollars of liability over the next twenty years for a book full of Kodak Moments that not only have zero appeal to me, but are infinitely less useful than an intelligent, grown-up human being who's got a skill or two, a personality, and maybe a talent.

        That said, thanks for your concern. I aim never to be in that unenviable position.

        -jhp

      • [activate flamebait mode]

        Yes, science believed that the Earth was the center of the universe. HOWEVER, when new evidence was discovered that proved that the Earth was not the center of the universe, science was happy to say "I've been wrong all along, the Earth is not actually the center of the universe. Thanks for the tip, Copernicus.", thus leading to modern astronomy and many horrible things done by the church to scientists. Science is the only force powering the advancement of knowledge in the world, and to cut it off because it "may not work" or may result in negative consequences is pure Luddism. As so many people here say regarding other issues, the toolmaker is not at fault for misuse of his products.
      • ---
        "You are welcome to your belief that 4-5 cells do not constitue life, however, I'm sure you will feel different if you find your set to have a child and then it's lost during gestation. Those 4 or 5 cells become as real as any person and the loss felt is terrible. I pray your family never has to deal with that. "

        ---
        You wouldn't KNOW if you lost a 4-5 cells embryo ... we're talking 2.5 days after fertilization. In fact, if you're married and "trying" for a baby, you've probably lost a whole bunch. Does that mean you're a murderer, because these clumps of cells died during your quest to produce an heir?

        Not only is a 4-5 day embryo not a real human (it has, if it's lucky, a 25% percent chance of reaching the parturition stage), but every single person who uses artificial fertility techniques wastes 20-odd embryos *each cycle*. Are you also up for baning fertility treatments?

        I'm sure everyone remembers that ass who stood up in front of the Senate and asked which one of his two former-adopted-embryos-now-children should be killed. Well, he overlooked the fact that he and his wife originally adopted THREE embryos. One of those embryos is no longer "alive." I'd argue that this is far more immoral than stem cell research (which I wholeheatedly support), because the cells harvested for research at least have the potential to help millions of living, breathing, productive people. The millions of embryos hanging out in fertility centers' liquid nitrogen tanks aren't going to do anyone any good ... they're basically rotting where they are. And thanks to Bush's decision, they will continue rotting.
      • One little thing to think about: About half (maybe just 1/3) of all pregnancies actually end up aborting naturally. Those have more than 4-5 cells. People don't go and cry about those because they don't know there was a pregnancy. Period arrives a few days later, embryo gets lost with the flow. I have some problems considering alive and deserving all the protection you'd give to an adult for example since so many don't survive. Maybe you could say those are worth every effort to save them, but it remains a very natural process. Start again next month and maybe you'll get lucky. As opposed to having lost the full 9 months of pregnancy and things like that.
      • by edremy ( 36408 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @09:11AM (#2132138) Journal

        but science also was sure that the Earth was the center of the universe and that the world was flat and if you got to the edge, you would fall off.

        Methinks you're confusing science with religion. Science knew thousands of years ago the world was round, and scholars quickly accepted the copernican solar system. It was religion that tortured people for believing the truth.

        Private funds and grants from private groups should be used in this case

        This is exactly what both sides don't want. Without federal oversight, you're going to see experiments that simply ignore ethical boundaries- see the various privately funded groups that are currently trying to sell human clones. (It was on NPR last night: $200,000 a shot. The mere fact that they probably can't do it doesn't seem to bother them.)

        That doesn't do either side in this debate any good: it tarnishes the real value of the research while at the same time making a mockery of life.

        Eric

        • Science at one point in history did believe those things, science changed at another point, but it was too "radical" for society. I suppose this could be viewed as another split, but I doubt it. There is no evidence that anything can or could happen from these cells.

          I am not against oversite of private research in these cases. That has always existed. New oversite bodies are going to be created to deal with this, as was stated in the speach last night.

  • by joel_archer ( 124897 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @08:37AM (#2112568)
    I want my replacement body parts, and I want them at reasonable prices.
  • No ideology (Score:3, Insightful)

    by truesaer ( 135079 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @08:38AM (#2112570) Homepage
    I found it interesting that Bush's decision was devoid of ideology. If you are pro-life and believe these little clumps of cells are human life, then experimenting on some because they had already been killed is hardly a logical moral or ethical distinction.

    If on the other hand, you believe they aren't life, then not experimenting on the other surplus embryos that will be discarded anyway is a poor decision because it holds back the progress of science in curing some terrible diseases and afflictions.

    It appears Bush avoided an ideological decision and opted for the political decision that made everyone a bit happy with some reservations. This should have been an all or nothing decision.

    • Re:No ideology (Score:3, Insightful)

      by bmj ( 230572 )

      don't we expect our presidents to make _political_ descisions? hopefully the media won't deride bush for making a politically-expedient decision, given the precedent set by his predecessor....politicians are driven by focus group results. it's rare that we see a politician make an _idealogical_ decision (unless of course, you're a representative and your idealogy is supported by your constituency).

      This should have been an all or nothing decision.

      i disagree. i used to think middle-of-the-road politics was spineless, but i've come to my senses and realized that we really do need _moderate_ leaders. there are positives and negatives to the idealogies on both sides of the aisle. think of this way...had bush followed his conservative instincts and banned all funding, image how much research time would be lost while we waited for the next liberal president. at least research can continue (albeit at a slower rate in some cases). though bush came of as a little spineless for not making an idealogical decision, you've got to give him _some_ credit for standing firm against the uber-conservative base of his party.
  • A coworker pointed out that if there shouldn't be a moral objection to using discarded fetuses. The moral objection, if one exists, must be with the people who allowed the fetuses to be created in the first place. Once that step is taken, then using the discarded fetuses for research is at least more noble than flushing them down the toilet.
  • but I think he made the best political decision! This should appease some of the moderates that would have totally abandoned him if he had banned the research completely. The dems would have only been happy if he had given the bank away for the funding. If he had done that though, he would have lost the people on the far right, and probably much of the red map. Now nobody is too pissed off at him.

    The only thing that troubles me is that he is trying to play this off as if it wasn't a political decision, but a personal one. He heard moving stories from both sides, but when it came down to it he went with the best political position he could take. If he had gone with his gut he would have kept his campaign promise!
  • One very interesting result of Bush's announcement is that we are beginning to see the same change in him as a President that we have seen in our last two (Clinton and the other Bush). GWB came into office on a very conservative platform and immediately began implementing conservative policies and reversing many Clinton policies. Public reaction to these actions was mixed, but I think generally unfavorable. GWB's foreign policy has received a huge amount of criticism both at home and abroad. But now we are seeing Bush being forced to shift more to the center. He won't ban federal funding for stem cell research outright. He won't unilaterally proceed on a lot of the foreign policy or military intiatives that he has lately been pursuing. I think as his administration moves forward, we are going to see more movement to the center. I believe that no president can expect to be successful in today's political climate without becoming a conciliator of vastly different viewpoints. The notion that either conservatives or liberals run this country at any one time lives on only as a fiction convenient for reelection and media purposes.
  • by werdna ( 39029 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @10:40AM (#2114234) Journal
    "Splitting the baby" indeed. It was an excellent call in many regards and, but for his campaign promises, may well be taken as presidential.

    But one is left to wonder how, exactly, can one "compromise" on these questions? If the fertilized egg is not a living human being, then the question is a no-brainer: of course, you harvest the tissues for life-saving research. If the fertilized egg is a living human being, then the question is likewise a no-brainer: of course, you may not harvest the tissues, even if it has potential to save a life.

    If you recognize a third possibility, that the fertilized egg is merely a potential life, then we have much deeper --and intellectually far more interesting-- questions. When does a potential life require protection from harm?

    Of course, these questions defy authoritative answer -- and yet a binary policy decision must be made (for even the failure to make a decision effectively serves as a decision). The President was therefore faced with a Hobson's choice.

    To that end, this left-of-Che-liberal salutes the man (or his advisors). It would be a great cop-out to simply announce a result, or worse, to announce a result and give a half-of-the-case justification, or worse yet, to do all of that and undertake to marginalize other reasonable arguments.

    He actually gave a fair summary of some of the difficult issues and announced his policy without pretending that a fundamental principal that required the result. This enures much to his credit. (Alas, his spinmeisters continue to try to pretend this is consistent with those campaign promises and pose him as the ultimate pro-life candidate, but what can you do?)

    Bush solved the political quandry by reducing the problem of sponsoring fertilized-egg-killing to one of "what do you do with the socially positive profits of an act, if the act is arguably immoral?" Credit where credit is due -- this is a stroke of genius. One needs to violate Godwin's law to point out the ultimate difficulties of the ethical position (something along the lines of whether it would be morally right to use Mengele's research if it yielded a cure for Cancer) taken, and in the end, the secret heart of most Americans wants the potential cure more than they understand the enormity of harvesting a non-implanted fertilized egg.

    Amusingly, few people seem to have identified the actual ethical issue-shift that the policy accomplished. Amazingly, Hughes actually side-stepped a question about Catholic dissent by pointing out that a Pope had blessed the use of medicines resulting from research that included acts previously deemed immoral. However many debating points she thinks that may have won on intellectual grounds, suggesting a Pope's absence of infallibility suddenly unfinesses all of Bush's successes for the day.

    Time will tell if there will be a price to be paid on this one. Bush turned a Hobson's choice into a chance for success and sound policy -- sound indicia of leadership.

    Whether or not it succeeds, this left-liberal salutes a brilliant piece of political strategy.
  • USA Today [usatoday.com] has been running a lot of coverage on this issue. Of the most amusing group highlighted by this whole thing are the fair-weather lifers. People like Rep. Jum Langevin, who was backed by pro-life groups during his campaign. Langevin is a quadriplegic and even though he is "pro-life," the hope of a cure is apparently more compelling to him than his belief that life begins at conception. Thus he has decided to back stem cell research.

    I wonder how many others in the lifer contingent are similarly only pro-life because it's either convienent or because they have a selfish cause of their own to be pro-life. How many of them, faced with a decision like "back stem cell research or spend the rest of your life in a wheelchair," would say "YEAH BABY! LINE THOSE FETUSSES UP!" Perhaps it's just that while they feel fetusses are human life, all human life is not created equal. Seems to me that if your politicis are pro-life, any choice other than rejecting all stem cell research (And anything that comes from that research) out of hand is complete hypocracy. I wonder just how many hypocrites the future will show the lifer demographic to have...

  • Is Bush's "We will have a committee to oversee this, made up of doctors, scientists, bio-ethicists, and THEOLOGIANS" (I'm paraphrasing, emphasis mine - he DID say the word theologians EXPLICITLY)

    Sorry, but clerics have NO place in science. Just as scientists have no place dictating religion.

    I find it funny that he talks of "th' sanctutty uh hyumin life" - but executes the mentally retarded HAHAHAHAHAHA what a hypocrite.

    No, you can't study the heavens! The Bible already tells us the world is flat! No! You can't dissect people to find out what their organ systems do - that's against the dignity of human life, excuse me... yes, that heretic... draw him and quarter him, flay the other one alive...
  • Many leading stem cell researchers in the US have only heard of a dozen or so cell lines. Here's an article [sunspot.net]. The only person in it who accepted the 60 figure is a "senior Bush administration official" who wasn't willing to give their name.

  • I was listening to NPR in the car about 1/2 hour ago. The scientist being interviewed said this winds up being a ban on future research. This is because many of the 60 lines are in Europe. He said we should not expect to get access to them. Of the 5 to 10 lines that are available here he said that Mr. Bush got it wrong when he said that these lines could be extended on and on. He said that after a finite number of extensions, they are worthless. Lastly, he said that data gathered on stem-cells from one ethnic group may have limited applicability to other ethnic groups. He said that after 9 months or so, our research will pretty much be shut down. Personally, I can not see how Bush, an anti-choicer, can be in favor this since he believes that life begins at conception. But then there's not much loot to be made by allowing women access to safe abortions. But there's tons of potential booty here. And I've never known a Republican to let their "ethics" get in the way of that.
  • by Remote ( 140616 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @08:48AM (#2123968) Homepage

    I can't see how supporting research on already-obtained cells differs in practice from funding resarch for stem cell farming. If there is more money available for a given stage in a process, wouldn't some of the money that would be originally employed in that stage be diverted to research in other stages now much more in need?

    Am I missing something fundamental or is this really just GWB hedging against criticism?

  • Wisdom (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Shotgun ( 30919 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @09:25AM (#2129051)
    I listened to the speech, and I thought he made a very wise, reasoned decision. Unfortunately, what I heard on talk radio was that he 'waffled'. 'He didn't make a decision at all,' the commentator spouted.

    The sad thing about politics is that sometimes exactly half of the people are for one side and exactly half are for the other. There is no way to please both sides completely. I thought this decision did the job of giving both sides what they claimed they wanted (research on the one side vs. not killing babies on the other).

    You can say he waffled. You can say he is an idiot. You can say whatever you want, but in the end I'm proud to call this man President. He to the time to carefully consider the argument from both sides are reached a decision that should make everyone happy.

    Of course, this is the real world, and for a lot of people (especially the blowhards who dominate the media) it's not about getting what they claim they want. It's about being in control. The previously mentioned commentator would only be happy if Bush had denied all funding for research, and would then claim Bush was a weeny if the President didn't send his own personal bodygaurds out to hunt down rogue scientist who would dare try to cure Parkinson's disease (which my father has, and I dread). A lot of the 'scientist' (ie, liberal blowhards) would only be happy if Bush came out and said that he is putting up a billion federal dollars to start cell farms, then would get upset if he balked over spending more money to harvest near-term babies from underprivileged women for body parts. You won't hear either of these parties expressing thankfullness that everyone got what they needed, even if they didn't get what they wanted.

    • Re:Wisdom (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Tim ( 686 ) <timr@alumni.was[ ... u ['hin' in gap]> on Friday August 10, 2001 @12:06PM (#2146178) Homepage
      "You can say he waffled. You can say he is an idiot. You can say whatever you want, but in the end I'm proud to call this man President. He to the time to carefully consider the argument from both sides are reached a decision that should make everyone happy."

      Except that it doesn't, because it doesn't address the fundamental problems that either side had. The religious extreme still see the embryo research they hate. The scientific community knows very well that the existing stem cell lines are NOT immortal (contrary to what Bush has said) and are NOT sufficiently genetically diverse to do many types of meaningful work. So no, Bush's decision was not a paragon of enlightened decision making and compromise. It was a politically-motivated decision designed to protect his voting constituencies as much as possible.

      Yeah, Bush delayed a political nightmare last night (sort of). Big deal--he's a politician, he should be able to do that. You'll have to excuse me if I, and a lot of other thoughtful Americans don't gush with praise over poorly-informed decisions made in the name of political expediency.

      • by rho ( 6063 )

        I have a question:
        Why is it The religious extreme and The scientific community?

        I could just as easily say the supporters of life and the killers of babies -- but you'd probably call that hate speech.

        Those opposed to human embryo stem cell research are not neccessarily extreme, or even religious. And those scientists who will pursue the research are not neccessarily pure, or even scientific. They could be complete charlatans, only wanting the funding because they're greedy. Hell, what if one of the scientists create a cure for alzheimers from this research and manages to patent it? What will you say then?

      • Re:Wisdom (Score:3, Insightful)

        The religious extreme still see the embryo research they hate.

        Who is this "religious extreme? that you speak of?
        Which religion do these people practice?

        I am opposed to federal funding of fetal stem cell research because I'm opposed to legalized abortion. I support your right to be in favor of it, and ultimately we'll settle the issue at the ballot box. But what I'm getting at is this, I'm sure that some strides will be made in this area, and it will make it harder to work for reform of the nation's abortion laws.

        Instead of being accused of wanting to deny women their rights, we'll be accused of wanting someone's child to die from a terrible disease.

        I understand why bush made this decision, but I am opposed to ANY federal funding of ANY program that uses tissue from human fetuses.
  • I was surprised (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Ender Ryan ( 79406 ) <MONET minus painter> on Friday August 10, 2001 @08:42AM (#2129629) Journal
    I thought this decision was very surprising, I expected an all out ban. I thought he was taking his time because he wanted to present the appearance of actually considering it, but he actually did.

    I realize many people will still be pissed with this decision and spew a ton of vitriol towards Mr. Bush, but you have to recognize that this was a huge comprimise on his part.

    After Bush spoke with the pope(who Bush recognizes as actually meaning something... I sure don't) and the pope told him not to allow any funding for stem-cell research I thought that was going to be final.

    • I'm not surprised at all. It's the least politically damaging choice he could have made.

      The e. coli is hitting the fan, and he just ducked. The man wants to be re-elected, so he needs to keep his political white robes clean.

      So, in that context, it's the best decision he could have made, evading as much of the ethical issues as possible.

  • bad precedent? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by tdrury ( 49462 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @10:13AM (#2129734) Homepage
    I'm not going to argue whether Bush's decision was right or wrong, but what struck me as unusual during the speech was his decision to let the research continue on stem cells whose embryos were already dead. This smacks of "washing his hands" of the one aspect he thinks is wrong- the destruction of embryos (aka potential human life).

    Again, I'm not judging the right or left wings here, but his justification could be a bad precedent. During WWII, German and Japanese "doctors" were known to have performed horrible experiments on Jews and POWs (and others). Maybe I'm confusing this with an X-files episode, but wasn't it decided not to use the results of any those experiments, no matter how beneficial, since the experiments themselves were totally unjustifiable?

    If Bush is against abortion, embryo destructions, etc. isn't his decision to use these stem cell lines hypocritical? Fruit from a poison tree (or however that saying goes)?

    -tim
    • Re:bad precedent? (Score:3, Informative)

      by Galvatron ( 115029 )
      X Files episode. In real life, most of what we know about the limitations of human endurance have are from Nazi doctors' notes. How long it takes to drown, how much blood you can lose, ability to recover from concussions, all of this is stuff the Nazis tested under laboratory conditions. Obviously, we would never replicate these experiments, so as grim as it is, it's useful data that is otherwise totally unobtainable.
  • by Dr_Cheeks ( 110261 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @09:27AM (#2130208) Homepage Journal
    Well I, for one, am glad at this. I just hate it when a large predator attacks me, bites down on a limb, and I'm unable to shed it and grow a new one.

    This (or possibly having several extra limbs grafted on so I've got more to spare) looks like the most promising research to facilitate this defence mechanism. Hooray for George W!

  • by freeweed ( 309734 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @09:33AM (#2136536)
    Perhaps someone can shed some light on this for me, or I'm just completely misunderstanding the issue here:

    When a fully-grown human dies, they have the legal right to allow for their body to be used for medical research/treatment. When a child dies, the parents have the legal right to allow the child's body to be used for medical research/treatment.

    If we have a microscopically small cluster of cells, not being used for anything, which is going to be literally flushed, but just so happens to be an embryo, the US government does not want research done on it. Sorry if I seem a bit shady on the details, CNN's recap at 2 am last night never really explained whether this is more of a funding issue or a legal one.

    Am I completely missing the point here? Or is my life not considered as valid a form of 'human life' as a 5-day old embryo?

    • by Judebert ( 147131 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @10:03AM (#2116662) Homepage
      You're not completely missing the point. Here are a few things you are missing that might help you understand the issue:

      Even the staunch opponents of embryonic stem cell research would agree that your life is just as valid as any other -- even that cluster of cells they believe is human.

      The difference in the cases you cite is that you are already dead before we do research with your corpse. The child is already dead before we do research with its corpse. We have to kill the embryo before we can do research on its corpse.

      You noted that the embryo will be flushed anyway; killed in any case. That's another point the opponents dislike. They believe that flushing the embryo is a problem, too.

      The US government itself just said that it won't spend people's money on research that involves killing an embryo. It also said that it would continue to fund research where the embryo is already dead, and it would increase research funding for stem cells obtained from sources where human life isn't an issue.

      Note that the US government didn't say that it doesn't want research to happen. The House of Representatives may say such a thing later this month, but I'll hold comment on that until it happens.

      Judebert
      "We're out of explosives. What we need is a plan!"
  • by Goldenhawk ( 242867 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @08:52AM (#2153999) Homepage
    The President made the only pragmatic decision possible.

    The Senate, in particular Sen. Daschle and the other Democrats, has already made it clear this morning that they will attempt to overturn what is from their point of view a ban. This article [washingtonpost.com] in the Washington Post is a fairly liberal take on the decision, and includes some comments by Daschle.

    On the other hand, outright permission from the President would have resulted in an equally vicious attack from the Republican-led House of Representatives and conservatives. This article [washtimes.com] in the Washington Times is a good example of the typical mix of conservative responses.

    At least the limited approach the President chose has a chance of standing up against the legislature. Regardless of your personal feelings about the politics or morality of the situation, I believe the President's decision was a fairly balanced approach to an extremely difficult issue.

  • by Trinition ( 114758 ) on Friday August 10, 2001 @09:09AM (#2156778) Homepage
    I don't know a lot of details about this area,s o I hope someone can shed more ligth on it. I'll just raise the question. Who owns the 60 lines of stem cells?

    It is my understanding that when drug research is partially federally funded, the drug companies doing the research still get patents on their creations. Thus, they can enter a new drug into the market without any short term hope of competition and make tons of mony off of tax payers -- the same tax payers that footed part of the bill for the research! (Again, this is what I've read elsewhere, but may be wrong.)

    So, who owns those stem cells? I think its great that there are 60 stem cell ines available, but how available are they? Will you have to buy a license to use some? And after you buy that license, will you be prevented from culturing them yourself to create your own supply or be forced to license more? Will the owners of these lines take a cutt of whatever you find with them?

    I think Dubya looked awfully concerned about the whole thing. I just wonder what changes his mind. And while the whole things seems to be a happy medium, what are the missing details?

    • I just found an article [cnn.com] on CNN that almost touched on the point. It seems there is a National Registry of Stem Cell Lines being proposed. However, it seems it will be nothing but a registry -- a way for people wanting to do research to find cells they can use and still use federal funds. It seems the ownership is still in the hands of those who did the work to get the cells. While licensing was not mentioned, I'm guesisng my original fears are still justified.

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