Obama Rescinds Edict Against Stem Cell Research; Dr. Lanza: "Emancipation Proclamation"
Obama Rescinds Edict Against Stem Cell Research; Dr. Lanza: "Emancipation Proclamation"

March 8, 2009
by Stephen Fox
www.opednews.com

On Monday morning President Obama will sign an executive order overturning the ban on federal funding of embryonic stem cell research. The announcement will be about "restoring scientific integrity to health care policy," an administration official tells wire sources.

In August 2001, George W. Bush signed an executive order prohibiting federal funding on embryonic stem cell research except for a few dozen lines. Then, White House estimated scientists would have more than 60 cell lines to use, but ultimately fewer than two dozen lines were usable, and two times during his tenure as President, Bush vetoed efforts to overturn his ban.

While campaigning, Sen. Obama promised to overturn Bush's ban; Mr. Obama said the ban "handcuffed our scientists and hindered our ability to compete with other nations."

On Jan 29 2009, in a prophetic and vital moment for the most contentious areas of science's intersection with American politics, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a path for the first-ever human trial of a medical treatment derived from embryonic stem cells.

This news from the Obama White House will have a massive impact on the stock market for these corporations with products in the Phase I and Phase II stages, particularly Advanced Cell Technology, the firm that owns 400 of the key patents and has perfected a way of creating stem cells without destroying embryos. Their products include stem cell methods of repairing retinas, pancreases, and heart tissue after heart attacks. ACTC's Dr. Robert Lanza has appeared on Barbara Walters analyzing stem cell frontiers less than a year ago, and is recognized world wide as one of the great pioneers in stem cell research and product development.


In 1980, Stephen Fox founded New Millennium Fine Art, a Santa Fe gallery specializing in Native American and Landscape, and is very active in New Mexico Legislative consumer protection politics, trying above to get the FDA to rescind its approval ..

Reply: Dr. Lanza quoted in USA Today: "Hallelujah!"
Mar 9, 2009
by Jade Bruhjell

Many in the scientific community welcomed news of the move. "What really is important is that ideology will not drive science," said bioethicist Jonathan Moreno of the University of Pennsylvania, who will be at the White House ceremony Monday alongside legislators and disease organization advocates.

"Hallelujah, this marks the end of a long and repressive chapter in scientific history," said stem cell researcher Robert Lanza of Advanced Cell Technology in Worcester, Mass. "It's the stem-cell Emancipation Proclamation."

But UCLA's Russell Korobkin, author of Stem Cell Century: Law and Policy for a Breakthrough Technology, said this reversal is less important than it would have been two years ago. In that time, scientists have learned how to make "induced" cell lines from skin cells that may one day eliminate the need for embryos.

Restrictive state policies banning or limiting stem cell research are one hurdle scientists still face, said sociologist Jason Owen-Smith of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

Many in the scientific community welcomed news of the move. "What really is important is that ideology will not drive science," said bioethicist Jonathan Moreno of the University of Pennsylvania, who will be at the White House ceremony Monday alongside legislators and disease organization advocates.

"Hallelujah, this marks the end of a long and repressive chapter in scientific history," said stem cell researcher Robert Lanza of Advanced Cell Technology in Worcester, Mass. "It's the stem-cell Emancipation Proclamation."

But UCLA's Russell Korobkin, author of Stem Cell Century: Law and Policy for a Breakthrough Technology, said this reversal is less important than it would have been two years ago. In that time, scientists have learned how to make "induced" cell lines from skin cells that may one day eliminate the need for embryos.

Restrictive state policies banning or limiting stem cell research are one hurdle scientists still face, said sociologist Jason Owen-Smith of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor.

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