This
is a press release from the National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), issued
Wednesday, April 24, 2002, at 1:15 p.m. For further information, send email to
Legfederal@aol.com.
Alice in Cloneland --
Hollywood group TV ad claims cloning is not cloning
A Hollywood-based group called "CuresNow" today released a TV ad in
opposition to the Brownback-Landrieu bill (the bill that would ban the cloning
of human embryos). The ad includes this exchange between "Harry" and "Louise":
"Harry" asks, "Is it cloning?," to which "Louise" responds, "Nooo -- uses
an unfertilized egg and a skin cell."
Douglas Johnson, legislative director for the National Right to Life
Committee (NRLC) commented, "Louise's answer is a brazen deception, and these
Hollywood manipulators know it. Panels of scientific experts at the National
Institutes of Health and elsewhere have agreed that the procedure that the
Brownback bill would ban for humans [somatic cell nuclear transfer] is indeed
'cloning' and will indeed produce a 'human embryo.' "
A sampling of those authorities -- including citations from an article by
leading U.S. cloning researchers in the Journal of the American Medical
Association -- are collected on the NRLC website at
www.nrlc.org/Killing_Embryos/factsheetembryo.html
or may be obtained by sending a request to
Legfederal@aol.com.
Johnson noted that the magazine "New Scientist" published in an editorial
in its Feb. 23, 2002 issue, deploring such "shifty" tactics, and concluding,
"Here at New Scientist we will continue to call a clone a clone."
Moreover, press releases, background papers, and ads released today by the
"Coalition for the Advancement of Medical Research" (CAMR), also opposing the
Brownback-Landrieu bill, repeatedly and explicitly refer to "somatic cell
nuclear transfer" as "therapeutic cloning." Example: "SCNT, also known as
therapeutic cloning . . ." While the term "therapeutic" is itself misleading in
this context ("research cloning" is a more accurate and neutral term), at least
CAMR admits that cloning is the issue. "CuresNow" is a member of CAMR, but
CAMR's own materials refute Louise's misinformation.
Information on ads sponsored by groups that oppose the cloning of human
embryos (and therefore support the Brownback-Landrieu bill) are available at
www.nrlc.org/Killing_Embryos
and www.cloninginformation.org