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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: PROLIFE who wrote (171279)8/14/2001 2:13:50 PM
From: Srexley  Respond to of 769667
 
"Maybe Thomas said that because it IS a sad thing"

It clearly is in his (and your) opinion. I was just pointing out that many will take that as an insult. I for one cannot understand gay behavior, and therefore don't want to judge whether it is good or bad for gay people. As a logic based person it seems pretty far fetched that someone would just choose to be gay so it seems there is more to it than that. I do have fairly strong opinions against accepting gay relationships as exactly the same as marriage, but do not think it is sad that someone is gay unless that person is tormented by being gay.



To: PROLIFE who wrote (171279)8/14/2001 2:44:12 PM
From: Thomas A Watson  Respond to of 769667
 
Adult Stem Cell Miracle Breakthrough Reported in Canada.
And more media bias........
In a development that could halt the political momentum behind embryonic stem cell research, a scientist working at Montreal's McGill University has made the first-ever discovery of human stem cells in the skin of adults.

The findings of Montreal Neurological Institute researcher Freda
Miller, first published Monday in the scientific journal "Nature Cell
Biology" are generating "huge" interest in the scientific community,
according to the Montreal Gazette -- though the American media has by
and large ignored the miraculous breakthrough.

"The dream scenario would be to take someone with spinal cord
injuries, say an 18-year-old, take a biopsy from their skin and use
that to treat the injury in the same patient," Miller told the
Gazette, which noted that her discovery may even facilitate the
regrowth of human organs.

Before Miller's find, scientists believed that adult stem cell
research would never be as productive as the embryonic variety, since
adult stem cells are found only in the brain and bone marrow.

"(Skin-derived stem cells were) just not on the radar screen in terms
of the way any of us were thinking," Miller told the Gazette. "The
idea of lots of stem cells in different tissue is a very, very new
one. Can it be true that you could get a stem cell from one place and
it would make another kind of cell? We didn't believe it ourselves."

The medical implications of Miller's discovery are "enormous," the
paper said, especially as they relate to the embryonic stem cell
debate in the U.S.

"Opinions vary but the prevailing view in North America seems to be
that obtaining stem cells from human embryos, even to cure diseases,
is considered immoral. The embryo is destroyed in the process."

But Miller's research opens the door to a world of new, far less
controversial possibilities.

"We gave it two months," the Montreal scientist said of the research
into skin-derived stem cells. "But it worked right from the beginning.
Every step of the way it's been an 'I can't believe that it's true'
experience."

The McGill University research team found that its isolated cells
began growing in grape clusters and duplicating "at an amazing speed"
-- once every two or three days.
What's more, the skin-based adult stem cells were able to produce
different types of cells.

"It was almost a hybrid or a more promiscuous version of those adult
stem cells," Miller told the Gazette, adding, "It's very exciting."

Still, despite the enormous scientific and medical potential of the
McGill University discovery, more than a day after the Gazette report,
the U.S. media continues to ignore the story.

In its Tuesday edition, the New York Times, for instance, was still
touting the wonders of embryonic stem cell research, with a front page
story on the progress made in Britain.

In the U.S., only the Washington Times and the Christian Broadcasting
Network have covered Miller's findings.

newsmax.com
tom watson tosiwmee