http://news.worldfit...lityDoubted.php
a link to related articles: http://news.google.c...CELLS.xml&hl=en
Edit: My appologies, This probably should have been posted in the "Stem Cell Research News" thread.
Edited by rombus, 16 July 2006 - 09:42 PM.
Posted 16 July 2006 - 09:23 PM
Edited by rombus, 16 July 2006 - 09:42 PM.
Posted 16 July 2006 - 10:20 PM
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Edited by treonsverdery, 02 November 2006 - 04:48 AM.
Posted 18 July 2006 - 10:35 PM
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Posted 19 July 2006 - 10:43 AM
he said he would veto it
Posted 19 July 2006 - 10:57 AM
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Posted 19 July 2006 - 07:36 PM
Posted 19 July 2006 - 07:43 PM
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Posted 19 July 2006 - 08:21 PM
Yeah, but torture can help save millions of lives... Er, wait...What a bastard. Claiming moral high ground too. Um, torture is okay though?
Posted 19 July 2006 - 08:28 PM
Well, then he's really inconsistent, because billions of dollars of federal grant money go into scientific research which relies on "taking something living and making it dead"....said White House spokesman Tony Snow. "The president is not going to get on the slippery slope of taking something living and making it dead for the purposes of scientific research."
Posted 20 July 2006 - 05:43 PM
Posted 20 July 2006 - 11:23 PM
Posted 20 July 2006 - 11:45 PM
7. "As we all know, on Aug. 9, 2001, President Bush laid out his principles and put in place a policy, which I supported, that for the first time allowed federal funding for embryonic stem-cell research." -- Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist (R-Tennessee)
Not true. President Clinton put in place the first policy (.pdf) to allow federal funding of human embryonic stem-cell research. Bush halted this policy upon entering the White House and didn't take up the subject again until 2001.
Posted 21 July 2006 - 08:19 PM
Posted 21 July 2006 - 11:07 PM
Germany seeks EU ban on stem-cell research funding
By Carsten Lietz
Thu Jul 20, 1:57 PM ET
BRUSSELS (Reuters) - Germany pressed its EU partners to ban European funding for embryonic stem-cell research, a day after President George W. Bush vetoed a bill that would have expanded such work in the United States.
"The European Union science programme should not be used to give financial incentives to kill embryos," German Research Minister Annette Schavan wrote in a letter seen by Reuters on Thursday before a meeting on EU science funding on Monday.
"The current proposal from the European Commission and the European Parliament does not rule this out."
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Diplomats said Germany was hoping to persuade Italy, home of the Roman Catholic church, to join the objectors, creating a blocking minority that would force an amendment.
A narrow majority in the European Parliament voted last month in favor of allowing continued public funding for stem-cell research. If Germany can force an amendment in the council of EU governments, parliament would have to reconsider the issue on a second reading.
(excerpts)
Posted 25 July 2006 - 02:20 PM
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