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Phillip V
Guest
Obama today lifted the 8 year ban on federal funding for stem-cell research by executive order. Given the headlines I thought this would be a good time to resurface the (friendly) debate. I read the book by Ian Wilmut and Keith Campbell almost 10 years ago- about Dolly the sheep, about biomedical research, and about it's promises. Here is my argument supporting stem cell research. Do you know anyone with one or more of the following?Parkinsons, Alzheimer's diseases, spinal cord injury, stroke, burns, heart disease, diabetes, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, leukemia, lymphoma, liver disease, cancer, multiple sclerosis, brain disease, blindness, deafness, HIV, or aids? Studies show these can all be treated or even cured using stem cell treatment. Recently, there are reports of a low-cost procedure to -cure- heart attacks using stem cells (see link below).http://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-415156/Stem-cell-cure-heart-attacks.htmlWhat's more important? The survival of an embryonic cell or the survival of the boy in the article below? His fatal disease was -cured- using stem cells. http://articles.latimes.com/2008/jun/07/science/sci-stem7Some individuals say killing embryonic cells is equivalent to murder- but by that logic don't I commit mass murder every time I sneeze, or scratch my arm, as both actions kill millions of cells?Shane- read the title of my question- i am not misinformed. You just are'nt reading the question