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The following letter was sent to members of
the U.S. House of Representatives by the National Right to Life
Committee on July 14, 2006.
Dear Member of Congress:
The Senate is scheduled to vote on H.R. 810 on July 18. If, as many
expect, the Senate approves the bill, the President has indicated
that he will promptly veto it, in which case we anticipate that the
House will vote on whether to override the veto. We write to
reiterate the strong opposition of the National Right to Life
Committee (NRLC) to H.R. 810, a bill that would mandate federal
funding of research that requires the killing of human embryos. NRLC
will include the roll call on a veto override vote in its scorecard
of key pro-life votes for the 109th Congress.
Each human being begins as a human embryo, male or female. The
government should not fund research that requires the killing of
living members of the species Homo sapiens. H.R. 810 would require
federal funding of research projects using stem cells taken from
human embryos who are alive today, and who would be killed by the
very act of removing their stem cells for the research.
Stem cells can be obtained without killing human embryos, from
umbilical cord blood and from many types of "adult" (non-embryonic)
tissue. Already, humans with
at
least 72 different diseases and conditions have received
therapeutic benefit from treatment with such "adult" stem cells. In
contrast, embryonic stem cells have not been tested in humans for
any purpose because of the dangers demonstrated in animal studies,
including frequent formation of tumors.
Those who favor federal funding of research that kills human embryos
sometimes claim that these embryos "will be discarded anyway," but
this need not be so. Many human embryos have been adopted while they
were still embryos, or simply donated by their biological parents to
other infertile couples. Today they are children indistinguishable
from any others.
It appears likely that the Senate will approve two other bills on
July 18: S. 3504, the Fetus Farming Prohibition Act, and S. 2754,
the Alternative Pluripotent Stem Cell Therapies Enhancement Act. If
that occurs, NRLC encourage you to support both S. 3504 and S. 2754
when they come before the House.
S. 3504 would make it a federal offense for a researcher to use
tissue from a human baby who has been gestated in a woman's womb, or
an animal womb, for the purpose of providing such tissue. Some
researchers have already conducted such "fetus farming" experiments
with animals -- for example, by gestating cloned calves to four
months and then aborting them to obtain certain tissues for
transplantation. This research is obviously being pursued because of
its potential application in humans.
S. 2754, the Alternative Pluripotent Stem Cell Therapies Enhancement
Act, would require the National Institutes of Health to support
research to try to find methods of creating pluripotent stem cells
(which are cells that can be turned into many sorts of body tissue)
without creating or harming human embryos. The bill does not endorse
any particular method, and does not allow funding of any research
that would create or harm human embryos.
For additional information, please contact the NRLC Federal
Legislation Department at 202-626-8820 or
Legfederal@aol.com.
Additional resources are available at the NRLC Human Embryos webpage
at
www.nrlc.org/killing_embryos/index.html and at
http://www.stemcellresearch.org/
Sincerely,
David N. O'Steen, Ph.D.
NRLC Executive Director
Douglas Johnson
NRLC Legislative Director
To view or download this letter in PDF format, click
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To return to the NRLC Human
Embryos webpage, click
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