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California's state sponsorship of cloning will prove to be more onerous than its eugenics programs during the early 1900's.

July 21, 2004
Dear Concerned Citizen,

In the annals of popular democracy, one of the strangest initiatives ever to make it to the ballot is the $3 billion bond known as Proposition 71. It is intended to sustain biotech researchers from the public purse while they pursue a project that private investors have already decided is worthless. And it is a project that nation after nation around the world has already declared to be a felony.

Four things warrant attention:

-- First, we need to be told the truth about the initiative. It purports to be focused on the need for "stem-cell research" to be legal and funded in California. But stem-cell research is already legal and funded in California. That is true of adult stem-cell research, which raises no ethical problems and has already led to cures for what had been incurable diseases. It is true of embryonic stem-cell research, which raises ethical problems for many people (pro-choice as well as anti-abortion) because it involves destroying human embryos. It is even true of cloning, the mass manufacture of human embryos for experiments.

None of this is illegal in California. All of it can be funded by the state, if that's what the state wants to do. In the case of adult stem cells, and some embryonic stem-cell research, it is now being funded by the federal government. Of course, all this research can also be funded by private resources.

-- Second, we need to grasp the fact that this is all about cloning. It is California's cloning proposition. Don't be taken in by talk of the need for extra cell lines for research, or the fate of unwanted frozen embryos. The so- called "therapeutic cloning" idea is what has taken the media by storm, gripped the popular imagination, activated celebrities including the widow of the state's most famous actor/politician, and offered that fragile and most precious quality to the sick and those who love them -- hope.

The idea is disarmingly simple: The technique that cloned Dolly the sheep in 1996 can be used to clone sick people. The cloned embryo, in effect your twin, can be a source of stem cells that will regenerate your tissue, and cure whatever your degenerative disease may be. (In fact, animal cloning experiments have been remarkably unsuccessful, because the embryo stem cells have a nasty habit of causing tumors.)

-- Third, we need to be clear about what's happening outside California. Supporters of cloning for stem cells love to perpetuate the myth that their only opponents are crazy anti-abortion activists. That's plainly a lie; there is no other word for it. If it were true, why has all human cloning -- including exactly the kind of research that the proposition would have us fund -- been prohibited in Canada, under federal law? Why did Australia do the same thing? Why in Germany (where they know a thing or two about unethical research) will it get you five years in jail? Why is France on the verge of a similar law? None of these countries is in the grip of anti-abortion conservatives. Why is momentum building for a global convention to ban cloning at the United Nations (it had 66 co-sponsors last time around)? Nation by nation, the civilized world is turning its back on the mass production of human embryos for destructive experimentation.

-- Fourth: We need to grasp the proposition's bizarre economics. It is being said that this vast investment will actually save health-care costs, as well as cure diseases. This claim does not hold up to logical scrutiny for three reasons: Key pro-cloning researchers have admitted this would take much longer than the five years after which repayment on the bond is scheduled; even if they worked, the one-on-one medications predicted will be hugely expensive; and if the sponsors of the initiative could promise just 10 percent of their claims, private money would be swamping the market. Anyone making such a claim in an IPO prospectus would do jail time. But the proposition is a prospectus to the people of California, and the combination of hype and hubris needs to be nailed. The one thing certain about the proposition is that it will pump billions of public dollars into the pockets of researchers and businesses.

But this is not a mere matter of opinion. California's business community has already made up its mind. If it believed the hype of those behind the proposition, it would be pouring funds into the field in the expectation of reaping vast profits. Instead, it has already voted with its feet.

That is exactly what the people of California need to do in November. They need to resist this effort to railroad them into closing schools and cutting food-stamp programs while they featherbed researchers in privileged positions in which they have a constitutional right to pursue research that business won't fund and legislatures don't believe in.

Published in the San Fransisco Chronicle, Sunday, July 11, 2004

 
 
 
 
 
 
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Responses to: U.S. Senate Debates Federal Marriage Amendment

What a bunch of humanist garbage. Not one mention of the primary reason to ban gay "marriage" God who created heaven and earth, including man and woman in His own image, absolutely forbids it and clearly states in His Word the Bible, the only reliable source of truth, that it is a perversion of His creation. God holds all of us accountable for our actions and those who chose to follow a gay lifestyle and worse yet insist that the whole world, including Bible believing Christians, recognize their perversion as good rather than evil like every other kind of sin, will one day have to give an account to Almighty God. In the meantime I resent their agenda of trying to force the acceptance of their perversion on the whole of the US culture which claims to adhere to Judeo-Christian values.    D. O.

The headline read, "Urged By Right, Bush Takes On Gay Marriages."  This frightens me to the bone & here is why.  The US Constitution is a secular document that does not refer to God in any way.  It is designed to make the county that adopts it a civilized country; a country of law & order.  The Bill of Rights too determines certain rights for those citizens under the US Constitution in a secular society; not a religious society.  Has anyone noticed that the Founding Fathers were very careful about mixing individual religious ethics with public policy?

The question that has bothered me is:  Since the US is a secular Nation that has some religious underpinnings, How is it that the Religious Right have pressured the President of the US to support an Amendment to the Constitution that would limit marriage to one man & one woman?  Isn't that imposing a religious value judgment upon the people of the US by a group of religious extremists?  Wouldn't passing an Amendment to the Constitution begin the process of turning the Constitution into a more religious document?  One that could entirely lead to the kind of abuses history reveals took place in Europe when the Church controlled most of society: not to mention the government!  Is America headed for a theocracy?  Under who?

Folks, there are a lot of different people groups and faiths represented in the US.  We also have a number of different kinds of extremists & a number of different kinds of pacifists & yes even atheists, yet most seek to follow the "Golden Rule" & seek to live in peace.  I have to ask you fellow citizens: How can a Constitution that is designed to protect the minority from the majority be fair if a minority is singled out for legal abuse? 

I am not gay but I have a few friends that are.  Do I want to see them abused by someone who claims to worship the same God I do?  Well, maybe they don't.

I am not smart enough to articulate an answer to the dilemma we as a Nation find ourselves in regarding same-sex marriages however, if our legislator's gut the 4th Amendment, want to bet on how long it will take to gut the 1st?   L. G.

Dear Sirs: I appreciate your concern over the dispute concerning the marriage amendment. I admire and applaud the courage of President Bush in proposing an amendment to the Constitution regarding the definition of marriage as existing between a man and woman only. It is a shame that such a clarification has to be made.

We all have responsibility in the eyes of God, creator of man and woman, who called them to cooperate with him in the procreation of all human beings. We are offending the incomparable blessing and role of women as mothers. At the very same time, we are responsible for the authenticity of human nature. The eyes of many nations are fixed on us. I can assure you that those who denigrate the beauty of marriage will pass into history as an embarrassment. This is a great country; let us keep our standards high!

I strongly believe in President Bush because he is acting courageously against different agendas and philosophies of life. Mr Bush is the kind of president we need at this moment - a man with solid values and principles - not a weathervane moved by winds that yield to human conveniences and manipulations.

I would tell Mr Bush: Thank you for your support and understanding of what is the only true marriage. I very much value your consistency and hope people strongly support your reelection. If it should happen that your are not reelected, you will leave the presidency with your head high and your integrity intact.   J. M.

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THE SURVIVAL OF THE FITTEST
Introduction to Eugenics
Remaking Humans: The New Utopians Versus a Truly Human Future
Human Cloning: Religious Perspectives
State Human Cloning Laws
 
We live complex lives. We strive to sort out priorities that sometimes conflict or seem incompatible. A moral framework is needed to help us understand the reality around us. Our Judeo-Christian heritage provides a framework to help us comprehend the choices we make and the conflicts that arise over them. It is not only the main source of our spiritual values, but also many of the secular values we depend on.

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that features informed opinion on current cultural issues.
  Dr. Nigel Cameron
Nigel M. de S. Cameron, former provost and distinguished professor of theology and culture at Trinity Evangelical Divinity School, former dean of the Wilberforce Forum (Wilberforce.org) and director of Colson's Council for Biotechnology Policy. He also serves as chairman of The Center for Bioethics and Culture (thecbc.org). He is a consultant in ethics and public policy, and in his specialist field of bioethics he has given congressional testimony and represented the United States at the United Nations.
  Jennifer Lahl
Founder and National Director of CBC and Executive Director of the Bay Area CBC. Jennifer has her B.S. degree in Nursing from California State University at Fullerton and her M.A. degree in Bioethics from Trinity International University in Deerfield, IL. She also serves on the North American Editorial Board of the international journal, Ethics and Medicine. Ms. Lahl is an adjunct fellow with Charles Colson's Wilberforce Forum and is a member of the Council for Biotechnology and Policy in Washington, D.C.
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