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New Hope for Stem Cell Research

ExE122 writes "A new scientific breakthrough allows scientists to harvest stem cells without harming the embryo. From the article: ''We have shown that we can not only generate stem cells without destroying the embryo, but that the remaining embryo also has the potential to go to on create a healthy blastocyst' said Dr Lanza, whose team's research is published in Nature. Asked if he expected the advance to satisfy President Bush, Dr Lanza said: 'Well, as you know, the President objects to the fact that you would be sacrificing one life to save another, and in this instance there is no harm to the embryo.''"

466 comments

  1. Yay! (Sort of) by ackthpt · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Lab Tech 1: "Ok, we're going in, to harvest a few stem cells."

    Right Wing Right-to-Life Zealot: "Oh no you aren't! You're going to kill an unborn life! That's murder!"

    Lab Tech 2: "No, we've got a process now where we can safely remove a few stem cells and the embryo will be unharmed and develop normally."

    Right Wing Right-to-Life Zealot: "What? Really?"

    Lab Tech 1: "Yep, 100% safe from killing unborn babies."

    Right Wing Right-to-Life Zealot: "I don't believe you!"

    Lab Tech 2: "Watch." *poit* "There we go, got a stem cell out and the embryo is totally unharmed."

    Right Wing Right-to-Life Zealot: "Gosh! What do you do with the embryo's when you're done?"

    Lab Tech 1: "We plant them in women who wish to have a child but can't concieve or volunteers who wish to give them a chance at life."

    Lab Tech 2: "Would you like to adopt one?"

    Right Wing Right-to-Life Zealot: "Absolutely not!!! I insist they not be murdered, but I'm no charity, go find someone else to raise it!"

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  2. Future plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, as you know, the President objects to the fact that you would be sacrificing one life to save another, and in this instance there is no harm to the embryo.

    Come on, you're talking as though Bush is going to still be around after 2008. Hm... maybe I should start looking for somewhere to move just in case...

    1. Re:Future plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Come on, you're talking as though Bush is going to still be around after 2008

      Must the world wait that long? Shouldn't he be in jail already?
    2. Re:Future plans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heres' a though for you...

      JEB Bush

  3. We'll see... by geekmansworld · · Score: 0, Redundant

    The President objects to things he doesn't understand.

    1. Re:We'll see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      The President objects to things he doesn't understand.

      That's not true. The President does not object to a great many things that he doesn't understand.

      Perhaps you meant that he objects to things that he is aware he doesn't understand.

    2. Re:We'll see... by Lux · · Score: 5, Funny

      > The President objects to things he doesn't understand.

      Clearly untrue! The President has always been an avid supporter of the war in Iraq.

    3. Re:We'll see... by skorch · · Score: 1

      and improving National Security

    4. Re:We'll see... by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 1

      Neither do you. Although I am not religious myself, I can understand well enough not using goverment funds on something controversial. Fortunatly we all agree that making weapons to kill hundreds of thousands is agreeable.

      Got it?

      --
      Please sign petition to restore sanity to our banking system!!!

      http://financialpetition.org/
    5. Re:We'll see... by neonprimetime · · Score: 1

      > The President objects to things he doesn't understand.
      Clearly untrue! The President has always been an avid supporter of the war in Iraq


      I love it how lazy couch potato video game addicted Americans claim they understand stuff like the War on Terror better than the President and other government officials who are right in the thick of things. I mean clearly these lazy Americans are not at all biased by the slanted media. They also have absolutely no tendancy to become impatient and start to just look at where they can point their fingers. Oh no, I can't afford to go to the movies! I must blame the President, the War, Gas Prices, and every other item out of my control. It by no means has anything to do with the fact that I throw all my money away on dvd's, alcohol, video games, and whatever else. It also has nothing to do with the fact that I can't hold a job because I get bored easily and claim to have several disorders that make it hard for me to concentrate. Everybody is just looking for handouts and a place to point their finger if they don't get them.

    6. Re:We'll see... by amabbi · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The President objects to things he doesn't understand.

      Look, I'm not going to go around and pretend like our current US President is doing a great job. But it's tiring to see a supposedly intelligent, educated base like Slashdot fall for the Democrat propaganda machine.

      Under Clinton, you couldn't do any research on ESC using federal funds-- at all. This is a bill that Clinton signed into law in 1995. In fact, Bush's rules are less stringent than Clinton's, and yet all we do is demonize Bush for his stance on stem cells. Why is that?

    7. Re:We'll see... by SlowMovingTarget · · Score: 1
      Under Clinton, you couldn't do any research on ESC using federal funds-- at all. This is a bill that Clinton signed into law in 1995. In fact, Bush's rules are less stringent than Clinton's, and yet all we do is demonize Bush for his stance on stem cells. Why is that?

      Because it's fashionable and popular?

    8. Re:We'll see... by Xofer+D · · Score: 2, Informative
      This is a bill that Clinton signed into law in 1995. In fact, Bush's rules are less stringent than Clinton's, and yet all we do is demonize Bush for his stance on stem cells. Why is that?
      Easy: They're both wrong, and people only now noticed. Just because Clinton got away with it doesn't mean that Bush should too.
      --
      The Signal/Noise ratio can be improved in two ways. Remaining silent is the OTHER way.
    9. Re:We'll see... by Lux · · Score: 1

      Sarcastic tone. Inflamatory, baseless personal attacks.

      You, sir, are trolling. I'm not 100% sure you know you're trolling, but you are.

    10. Re:We'll see... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 4, Informative
      For the complete picture instead of half-truths (from wikipedia):

      In 1995, the NIH Human Embryo Research Panel advised the Clinton administration to permit federal funding for research on embryos left over from in vitro fertility treatments and also recommended federal funding of research on embryos specifically created for experimentation. In response to the panel's recommendations the Clinton administration, citing moral and ethical concerns, declined to fund research on embryos created solely for research purposes,[21] but did, however, agree to fund research on left-over embryos created by in vitro fertility treatments. At this point, the Congress intervened and passed the Dickey Amendment in 1995 (the final bill, which included the Dickey Amendment, was signed into law by Clinton) which prohibited all federal funding for research that resulted in the destruction of an embryo regardless of the source of that embryo In 1998, privately funded research led to the breakthrough discovery of hESC (Human Embryonic Stem Cells). This prompted the Clinton Administration to re-examine guidelines for federal funding of embryonic research.
      The bolding was done by me.
      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    11. Re:We'll see... by danbeck · · Score: 1

      Amen! It's impossible to have a resonable discussion here that doesn't devolve into "lowest common denominator" type of Bush bashing and hatred. It's like every waking second of the day for these people is filled with irrational rage and hatred about Bush, deserved or not.

      The person these people hate the most seems to be the single greatest force that defines their very existence. Ironic, don't you think?

    12. Re:We'll see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      THANK you.. I get so tired of hearing that irreverant argument

    13. Re:We'll see... by danbeck · · Score: 0, Troll

      What good does the re-examination of the guidelines do if no substantive action is taken? Is this one of those "I feel your pain" moments?

      Your point is -1 Irrelevant and the original point remains valid.

    14. Re:We'll see... by danbeck · · Score: 1

      Yeah, he's trolling for sure, but it does get old for nearly every article on slashdot to get hijacked by the Bush Hatred crowd. Even the most unrelated articles are rife with anger, irrational Bush hatred and people whoring for karma.

    15. Re:We'll see... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      irrational Bush hatred

      It may be emotional bordering on hysterical, and it is often inappropriate, but it's entirely rational.

    16. Re:We'll see... by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 1
      That part is answered by the link I provided, but for your convenience:
      In 1999, the president's National Bioethics Advisory Commission recommended that hESC harvested from embryos discarded after in vitro fertility treatments, but not from embryos created expressly for experimentation be eligible for federal funding[3]. Even though embryos are always destroyed in the process of harvesting hESC the Clinton Administration decided that it would be permissible under the Dickey Amendment to fund hESC research as long as such research did not itself directly cause the destruction of an embryo. Therefore, HHS issued its proposed regulation concerning hESC funding in 2001. Enactment of the new guidelines was delayed by the incoming Bush administration which decided to reconsider the issue.
      --
      It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
      Be yourself no matter what they say
    17. Re:We'll see... by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

      Well, it wouldn't make much sense complaining about that now, now would it? Or at least not unless you were bitter or something...

      Newsflash: people care more about what's going on now then political conditions over a decade ago.

      If it was wrong then for Clinton to oppose ESC research, then it's still wrong for Bush to do it now. The Bush administration is the current impediment to scientific progress in this area, which is why there's so much criticism against him for it and not Clinton.

    18. Re:We'll see... by amabbi · · Score: 1
      If it was wrong then for Clinton to oppose ESC research, then it's still wrong for Bush to do it now. The Bush administration is the current impediment to scientific progress in this area, which is why there's so much criticism against him for it and not Clinton.

      Fair enough. But I didn't hear anyone call Clinton "submental," like the dean of my med school did today. The fact of the matter is, people have an illusion that things under Clinton were peace, progress and prosperity, and all of the world's ills are due to the man in the White House. Which might be true, but the arguments that are made for it are patently absurd and absolutely short-sighted.

      But who cares, right? The majority of Americans will just go right on believing what's spoon fed to them by the media.

    19. Re:We'll see... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      That's not true.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    20. Re:We'll see... by Shaper_pmp · · Score: 1

      See, this is why we need precedence brackets in the English language:

      "(complete picture from wikipedia) instead of half-truths", or
      "complete picture instead of (half-truths from wikipedia)"

      Of course, the beauty of it is they're both true.

      --
      Everything in moderation, including moderation itself
  4. Irrelevant by LunaticTippy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Pro-life people are generally against cloning. I don't understand the objection if no embryo is destroyed, but it does bring up some difficult issues regarding souls.

    This is similar enough to cloning to trigger the same hostility. I don't really see the difference it will make.

    Not to mention the problem of what to do with the excess embryos after the desired number of offspring has been reached. I don't understand how pro-life POV can accept fertility treatments that generate extra embryos.

    --
    Man, you really need that seminar!
    1. Re:Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "and in this instance there is no harm to the embryo."

      umm except for the harm of taking out a few cells at the very earliest stages of development- hopefully there won't be any trouble down the road from THAT when a person gets older.

    2. Re:Irrelevant by wiggles · · Score: 1

      Strict Pro-life people are against IVF as well, because embryos are created and destroyed in the process. They're also against most forms of birth control, cloning, and the death penalty, FYI.

      The interesting thing is that they have set up 'embryo adoption' organizations where willing couples can adopt embryos from IVF couples who are through having kids, but have embryos left over.

      The reason you don't see as much hostility toward birth control and IVF is that they generally place a higher priority on fighting abortion. Not only that, but some pro-lifers are stricter than others, just as some pro-choicers are stricter than others.

    3. Re:Irrelevant by neonprimetime · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm pro-life and voted for GW (a minority on /. from the sounds of it), but I for one would be very pleased and happy to vote for this new stem cell research. As long as it is confirmed that the embryos are not being harmed, I am all for this. I don't have an ethical issue with cloning (although I see it as a major problem if the technology was abused ... just take for example several of the movies that have been released about cloning). I would hope that GW would come out supporting this new stem cell research that does not harm the embryo.

    4. Re:Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't understand the objection if no embryo is destroyed, but it does bring up some difficult issues regarding souls.

      Yes, it's the dreaded Evil Twins Problem(TM) all over again!!! Simply put, how do you know for sure which twin got the soul (the "good twin"), and which one didn't (the "evil twin")?

      And, since cloning makes time delayed twins (or worse, quadruplets, quintuplets, or more!), do the all those souls have to wait in line extra long before they get to go through the Heavenly Gates?!?

      The religious ramifications on this issue are simply dizzying! ( Then again, the religious ramifications on most issues make my dizzy...)

    5. Re:Irrelevant by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      Pro-life people are generally against cloning. I don't understand the objection if no embryo is destroyed, but it does bring up some difficult issues regarding souls.

      Souls are a made up concept. They were created by people as a kind of adult pacifier, to stop people fretting that once they die they will entierely cease to exist. Utterly. The thought is so unsettling that people latch onto a complete fantasy to comfort and reassure themselves. Namely and intangible, unobservable, immaterial "thing" that is your "life essence", and it will go on after you die.

      It's the same kind of denial as people who believe that all parallel lines never intersect of that the universe is "fair". Delve deep enough and only your own doublethink can convince you that either of these facts is absolute. Emotion is physical, memory is physical, thought is physical. There is no magic force, and if there was, eternity means floating around as an unthinking blob with no memory forever.

      Oh wait! Silly me. I can't prove souls "don't" exist. Just ignore all the above and return to your regular viewing.
      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    6. Re:Irrelevant by Threni · · Score: 0, Troll

      > This is similar enough to cloning to trigger the same hostility. I don't really see the difference
      > it will make.

      Pro-life people are driven by dogma rather than science and logic. It's a close enough call that it's possibly possible to choose which position they'll take by phoning radio shows, posting to net forums, writing to church leaders etc and putting your side of the argument. Once it's been decided upon it'll probably have enough enertia behind it to become hard to change back without a humiliating u-turn. So probably a good idea to push a pro-cloning (with regard to "soul copying/duplicating") argument now!

    7. Re:Irrelevant by MindStalker · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yes like the harm that is caused when HALF of the cells are removed to create a twin? Early development is just a process of creating as many cells as possible to use as building blocks. In this stage no cells have any destined use in the final body.

    8. Re:Irrelevant by ILikeRed · · Score: 5, Informative

      You don't understand the goal. (Most) Scientists do not want to create a clone of an entire person - rather the idea is to clone parts (e.g. organs such as the liver, heart, and lungs) so that people who need a transplant can get a clone of their own heart rather than trying to match something from a dead donor.

      For an interesting perspective on the impact of life and culture in the future without the benefit of cloned organs - try reading some of Larry Nivens works. (I think Limits is the collection with the stories of a detective who goes after black market organ harvesters.)

      --
      I have come to a conclusion that one useless man is a shame, two is a law firm, and three or more is a congress -J Adams
    9. Re:Irrelevant by ILikeRed · · Score: 2, Informative

      No - Niven's book on organ harvesting is The Long Arm of Gil Hamilton

      --
      I have come to a conclusion that one useless man is a shame, two is a law firm, and three or more is a congress -J Adams
    10. Re:Irrelevant by oyenstikker · · Score: 1

      Really? I'd think most people would be content to cease to exist. The idea of having a soul is lot scarier: there may be long term - even eternal - consequences to your actions.

      --
      The masses are the crack whores of religion.
    11. Re:Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, it's the dreaded Evil Twins Problem(TM) all over again!!! Simply put, how do you know for sure which twin got the soul (the "good twin"), and which one didn't (the "evil twin")?

      Easy. Have them both dance. It will be obvious as to which one's got soul.

    12. Re:Irrelevant by Mattintosh · · Score: 1

      Souls are a made up concept. They were created by people as a kind of adult pacifier, to stop people fretting that once they die they will entierely cease to exist. Utterly. The thought is so unsettling that people latch onto a complete fantasy to comfort and reassure themselves. Namely and intangible, unobservable, immaterial "thing" that is your "life essence", and it will go on after you die.

      I find it interesting that you've come to that conclusion, especially since most "christians" refuse to, despite the fact that the Bible (the book these "christians" claim has all the answers) clearly states two things: 1) "Man came to be a living soul." and 2) "The soul that is sinning, it itself will die." On top of that, they ignore the fact that the "you will live forever as a floaty soul" idea is a blatant lie told in the very beginning of the Bible, in the story about Adam and Eve in the garden of Eden. The serpent told Eve, "you positively will not die." Eve died. So to cover the lie, the idea came about that you live on forever as a floaty soul thingy. Souls are a lie.

      I can't prove souls "don't" exist.

      I just did, at least for reasonable people that call themselves "christians" or "jews". You can thank me later. The general gist of how this works is: if science says souls don't exist AND the Bible says that souls don't exist, then in belief structures that involve science and/or the Bible, souls don't exist. They are a lie.

      As for the parallel lines thing, well, I'm pretty sure the definition of parallel lines requires that they never intersect. If they intersect, they're (by definition) not parallel. ;)

    13. Re:Irrelevant by 0xABADC0DA · · Score: 1

      Let me elaborate on the soul issue. There are two basic definitions of a soul, the religious one where it is some bogeyman ghost that floats away to heaven / hell / purgatory, and the rational one where it is the collective description of a being's thoughts / feelings / knowledge / personality.

      The science-based definition is simple. You clone somebody and each has its own soul.

      The religious definition is more complicated. If you clone somebody then it either:
            1) creates a new soul, thereby usurping the god's power
            2) sucks a soul out of heaven/hell (and the god gets angry)
            3) creates a soul-less being (that, by divine right, must be exploited / eaten)
            4) each clone shares a single soul

      Thus anything remotely related to cloning is already 3/4ths evil (case 1-3). And the remaining 1/4th that is not evil violates the prime directive of all religions: selfishness. They won't sacrifice their life/soul by just fucking dying, no they have to live forever on some cloud rejoicing (and 'preach the word' about how they'll be sipping lemonade while everybody else is in limbo). They won't confront the fear that they will just return to the earth. And Gods forbid they actually share their soul with clones, they "need" it all to themselves.

      So you have to realize that when it comes to cloning, a religious person is like a cornered animal: they have no ideological escape. Anything even remotely clonish is met with completely irrational rabid fanaticism. So, no, it's far more likely that Bush round up the scientists involved than to let any reasearch money flow.

    14. Re:Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pro life, and I am against fertilization methods that develop multiple embryos.

    15. Re:Irrelevant by format1337 · · Score: 1

      I am having a hard time sorting out the sarcasm in your post, if there even is any.

      Going on the assumption that you are 100% serious, which I doubt. I pity anyone who thinks like you, taking life as a meaningless span of time with a definate start and end seems like a very morbid way to spend the time.

      I don't see the problem with allowing people to believe in souls, parallel lines and a fair universe. What is the harm there?
      The definition of parallel means they never cross, roll two dice and add them together, the 'fair' laws of probablility(read: the universe) dictate 7 will come up most.

      I myself don't really belive in the afterlife, but I definately 'hope' such exists.

    16. Re:Irrelevant by ADRA · · Score: 1

      /religious rhetoric
      In that vein, how can a good christian support blood transfusions and organ transplants since "it does bring up some difficult issues regarding souls". How do Christians define souls these days? When a fertilized egg splits into identical twins, does only one of them have a soul? If so, then when do you draw the line between parents' souls, new soul, and no soul? If I bleed, am I shedding a piece of my soul? If I 'spread my seed on the ground' am I not then loosing a piece of my soul? If you transplant cells from one person to another, does a part of the doner's soul get implanted into the recipient? In that extension would jehovah's witness's actually be right? /end

      Ignoring all the religious rhetoric, there are definitly issues that span beyond the boundaries of religion. The entire spectrum of reprogenics will be an issue for the 21st century, and should be addressed by law makers now. We have to (as a society) address these issues with untained biases. The religious dogma holding back the progress of celular manipulations and selection will only last for so long. To dismiss the fight because of dogma when all society would be changed is not acceptible. This isn't a religious concern, its a concern of us all.

      I think its important to develop a set of criteria regarding these practices that limit the extent gene manipulation can be taken both pre and post birth. Worrying about where the material is coming from is just one concern to address.

      --
      Bye!
    17. Re:Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know what the real problem is?

      LOL GEORGE LUCAS OMG CLONES ARE BAD OMG SITH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!eleventy

      Seriously, I wish the media would go piss off. Informed public electing officials, my ass. It never happened at the start of this country, and it's only getting worse now - seriously, who the hell has time to be informed?

      No, really - think about that. Take, I don't know, cosmology. If Stephen Hawking says black holes release giant turds known as 'usually dark, but sometimes light, and sometimes it floats' matter, y'know what? I'm going to keep that in mind. Partially because he's the Hawkman himself, but moreso because - hey - guess what? I have no clue how the universe works.

      Okay, cosmology isn't that relevant to the average politician's destruction of our country. Who here is an expert on biology, genetics, law enforcement, military tactics, city planning and development, economics, the many varied facets of agriculture, physics (think nuclear power), blah, blah blah blah blah?

      Many of us are well-versed laymen in one of the above, maybe a few of the above. There might be, heaven forbid, actual real live experts who do one of the above for a living, here on Slashdot.

      I'll guarantee you won't find anyone who is an expert on everything(tm). Even Da Vinci wasn't an expert on everything.

      In theory, this shouldn't matter. We should all sit back, let the experts tell us what's what, and then there you have it - Bob's yer uncle. What we get instead is a voting public who doesn't know much about anything, save for a few sound bites chosen for shock value that they hear on CNN.

      Completely misquoted/misunderstood/etc data + a complete unwillingness to learn = people falling back on 'gut instinct' and for some stupid reason, becoming downright hostile. (Ever work on a helldesk? You know you've seen it.)

      The gut instincts of people who have no real knowledge and thus no business offering their opinions on things (or more properly, being granted the power to dictate law/etc. based on those opinions) shall be the damnation of us all, I swear to Bob.

    18. Re:Irrelevant by L0rdJedi · · Score: 1

      The serpent told Eve, "you positively will not die." Eve died. So to cover the lie, the idea came about that you live on forever as a floaty soul thingy. Souls are a lie.

      Wow, way to take that out of context. The serpent said she wouldn't die if she ate the fruit of the tree of knowledge. God told her she would. God of course was right. Sure, it wasn't an immediate death, but they could no longer live in God's grace. By sinning (eating the fruit) she separated herself and all of mankind from God. It would take Christ's sacrifice to bring mankind back to God. By dying for the sins of man, we are given the gift of everlasting life. "He who believes in me will not die". I'm sure that quote isn't quite right, but the gist of it is there. If you believe in God and Christ as your saviour, you will not die. Your physical body will stop functioning, but your soul will live on forever.

      Had Eve not eaten of the fruit, mankind would have never left God's grace and she would have been immortal. Or maybe you'd rather believe the serpent (Satan) over the almighty God?

    19. Re:Irrelevant by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      Yeah. It's like they have an unwritten commandment: thou shalt not play God.

    20. Re:Irrelevant by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      So what happens with identical twins? Do they share one soul, or does God give the second twin a soul after the two embryos split? If the latter, why can't he do that with clones?

    21. Re:Irrelevant by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      How is this any different than donating a kidney to save a reltive's life?

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    22. Re:Irrelevant by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

      Why does lack of belief in an afterlife equate to making life meaningless to you?

      My life is full of poignant meaning and I haven't even gone to an afterlife yet. I am motivated to make my life the best that I can since there is no evidence whatsoever for an afterlife. I act as if this were it. My one chance at a beautiful strange life. What a precious thing, I feel so lucky to be alive!

      I think there is nothing more sad than somebody who lives a fearful, clenched, and dried-out life, expecting to be rewarded later. What a rip-off. Not even living their own life, but one decided by lunatics who wrote down some self-contradicting myths thousands of years ago. Not even living that bizarre life, but one re- and mis-interpreted hundreds of times over the years by controlling men with conflicted motives.

      I don't have a problem with people believing such nonsense. Nor do I have a problem with people playing the lottery. I think people should be allowed to think whatever they choose. Just don't expect everything to be accepted, and be prepared to defend your beliefs. Religious zealots who want to impose their beliefs on others or kill each other over made-up bullshit can go to hell. They'll have to build hell first, probably with wars and stupid laws.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    23. Re:Irrelevant by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

      Fraternal twins each get their own soul. Maternal twins are hellspawn, forever damned.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    24. Re:Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen.

    25. Re:Irrelevant by danbeck · · Score: 1

      >>Pro-life people are driven by dogma rather than science and logic.

      This is such a ridiculous statement. Since when, in normal society, does the convenience of one person supersede the right to life of another? What logic or science could you possibly espouse that would justify the death of one person simply to statisfy the convenience of another?

    26. Re:Irrelevant by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

      Strict Pro-life people are against IVF as well because embryos are created and destroyed in the process.

      This is true. Like as has been shown with stem-cell research, there is no need to destroy one human to save or create another. Indeed, some nations (Italy, for example) have passed laws declaring that all embryos involved in IVF must be implanted - with no major problems. Success rates fell a little at first but have essentially recovered as clinics adapted to the new rules.

      They're also against most forms of birth control, cloning, and the death penalty, FYI.

      This does not follow. While their is a correlation between proponents of these various arguments, they are all founded on different lines of reasoning. I have never understood the religious objection to birth control - as if a bit of latex can stop the Will of God. Few people at all understand what cloning is, and people on both sides of the aisle are irrationally opposed to it. The death penalty is an entirely different debate - it is not about what circumstances one gains one's rights - rather, it is about how one can throw them away.

      The reason you don't see as much hostility toward birth control and IVF is that they generally place a higher priority on fighting abortion. Not only that, but some pro-lifers are stricter than others, just as some pro-choicers are stricter than others.

      Or, perhaps they are just smart enough to choose battles where they stand a chance.

    27. Re:Irrelevant by Rooked_One · · Score: 1, Insightful
      well... since "GW" supports big business, it would make sense for him not to 'approve' of this sort of thing as it would harm the pharm-co's business right?

      I mean if we could cure hemophilia for example, with giving the person a new liver that wouldn't be rejected, it would cause the pharm-co's lose of tons of cash considering each shot a hemophiliac must take for an injuy costs about 1500 dollars. Consider that your average hemophiliac needs about 40-60 shots a year and you are talking BIG cash.

    28. Re:Irrelevant by lysergic.acid · · Score: 2, Funny

      There's no use. If one can't distinguish an embryo in a petri dish from a human child, how are they supposed to grasp the finer details of embryonic development.

    29. Re:Irrelevant by format1337 · · Score: 1

      The way the post was written led me to believe that it was written by some over the top fatalist/existentialist. Opposition to extremism is seen as extremist in the other direction, at least from the POV of the original. I did not mean to equate those two things in my post and I will just say that extremism made me do it as I really actually beleive with everything else you said.

    30. Re:Irrelevant by mooingyak · · Score: 1

      Maternal twins are hellspawn, forever damned.

      And paternal twins are always really cute?

      --
      William of Ockham had no beard. The most likely explanation is that it was chewed off by squirrels every morning.
    31. Re:Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      By sinning (eating the fruit) she separated herself and all of mankind from God.

      Thereby proving that God is a complete asshole.

    32. Re:Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      As long as it is confirmed that the embryos are not being harmed

      You mean before or after they're thrown out with the rest of the medical waste?

    33. Re:Irrelevant by Matt+Perry · · Score: 1
      ...so that people who need a transplant can get a clone of their own heart rather than trying to match something from a dead donor.

      And so they don't have to take anti-rejection drugs every day for the rest of their life. Let's not forget that.
      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    34. Re:Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no person. There is an embryo. It is pure dogma to pretend the two are the same and make the repeated logic mistakes of your (now, finally, failing) movement.

    35. Re:Irrelevant by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

      The religious definition is more complicated. If you clone somebody then it either:
                  1) creates a new soul, thereby usurping the god's power -----easy fix if this would happen IT WON'T HAPPEN (clone will not be viable)
                  2) sucks a soul out of heaven/hell (and the god gets angry) -------- im sure that God or Lucifer wouldn't let an "escape happen"
                  3) creates a soul-less being (that, by divine right, must be exploited / eaten) ----- demon/angel/nephilim would be the "soul"
                  4) each clone shares a single soul -- not likely

                    5) each clone is "issued" a normal soul with a possible sub link (sort of like cypto with a time vector same settings will have different results due to time skew)

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
    36. Re:Irrelevant by deKernel · · Score: 0, Troll

      You sir could quite possibly be the biggest ass here. Because _YOU_ have let your life go to crap does not mean that all should be as bitter as you. Try getting out of your celler, off the liberal blogs, get a job and take control of your life and for God's sake, please stop being a victim to your laziness.

    37. Re:Irrelevant by Veliena · · Score: 1

      I feel like I have to defend the parent a little here.

      Most of the time, actually, especially in a normal society. Plenty, but certainly not all, current and historical wars are little more than land or other resource grabs with a thin veil of religious, moral or ethical justifications. So the logic is "we're making the world a safer place," "we're defending our territory," "we're doing what our god commands," etc. I don't believe this is an ethical way to be, but we're humans and it seems to be what we've got to work with until we evolve out of it or die off as a species.

      The question I wanted to defend after reading your post was, "When is something in the process of becoming a human a person?" I say birth and I'd wager that you'd say or are arguing on the side of conception. The parent was saying a little heavy handedly that it seems that the majority of pro-life believers come from a religious standpoint and the majority of pro-choice believers come from a science standpoint. Wouldn't you agree with that in the majority of cases? The nasty bit was when he used the word logic; we both experience the evidence and come to very different logical conclusions. I also believe that people's lives are equally important. I'm against most current wars and the death penalty but I simply do not believe that life begins when you believe it does.

    38. Re:Irrelevant by Rooked_One · · Score: 1

      wow... I didn't know you knew me so well. Would you like to pay for my medical bills? I won't come out of a celler, becuase I don't have one, and my college is way too demanding to get a job, and i'm hardly a victim to my laziness... should I go on or are you just the type to be bitter about things you couldn't possibly understand?

    39. Re:Irrelevant by plunge · · Score: 1

      Lol. The embryos harmed? That's about as ridiculous as it can get: something with no nervous system, no functional organization, and which is about as far distant from any sort of feeling life as it is possible to get and still be alive "harmed."

      The irony is that even if this research is successful, what you will actually have is essentially yet another potential "life." Or two of them, or potentially thousands: but hey, who is counting? That precious, precious embryo is a human individual, right? Or five million of them. But again, who is counting?

    40. Re:Irrelevant by plunge · · Score: 1

      I'll be happy if we can discover other means around the problem so that everyone can be happy, but that isn't going to change the perverseness of treating an embryo as if it were akin to a person. I'm perfectly willing to agree that fetal development is a legitimate point where no obvious line can be drawn. But at the embryonic stage, we are so far over that line as to be promoting insanity is we claim that it must have the same rights as persons.

    41. Re:Irrelevant by plunge · · Score: 1

      This is one of the goofier realms of the debate. Claiming that an zygote or an early embryo is a "human person" is nutty for other reasons, but it especially nutty in the sense that under various conditions, that embryo could ultimately develop into two, three, or theoretically thousands or millions of different people.

      The reality is that human biology was not built with the beliefs of a bunch of camel herders and new agers in mind. It neither fits nor even tries to make sense with their beliefs. Humans, like all sexually reproducing life, are really not that different from asexual splitting: it's just that the splitting happens to have an artificial barrier requiring two sexes. But there's nothing fundamental about that. Parthogensis is not theoretically impossible, and clonging basically demonstrates our asexual roots.

      The reality is that nearly every cell in your body is another potential human... or twenty. The zygote just so happens to have the right chemical signals turned on, but there's nothing particular special or magical about it.

    42. Re:Irrelevant by danbeck · · Score: 1

      The question I wanted to defend after reading your post was, "When is something in the process of becoming a human a person?" I say birth and I'd wager that you'd say or are arguing on the side of conception.

      Yes, you are correct.

      The parent was saying a little heavy handedly that it seems that the majority of pro-life believers come from a religious standpoint and the majority of pro-choice believers come from a science standpoint. Wouldn't you agree with that in the majority of cases?

      I won't argue with you that a large number of the pro-life crowd are strongly influenced by their religious views, but it's unfair and a bit bigoted to discount the argument that a child's right to life is more important than a parent's convenience simply because the person making that argument isn't an atheist or agnostic. Maybe you aren't doing that, but I encounter many people who do. It's the idea that anyone with religious views are intellectual dirt and it's fostered and cultivated here at slashdot.

      Furthermore, I disagree that the pro-abortion crowd's argument is steeped in science. It's a well documented fact that children, well within the timeframe to be legally aborted, can survive ouside of the womb with medical assistance and there are documented cases of unborn children responding to physcal contact during surgery and crying due to ouside stimulus.

      Currently, science can hardly prove one way or another when an unborn baby becomes a sentient being. So, when it comes down to it, it's just a strong belief for both sides of the argument, whether it's religious or not.

      I also believe that people's lives are equally important. I'm against most current wars and the death penalty but I simply do not believe that life begins when you believe it does.

      That's rather convenient for you to selectively believe when and what shares the right to live and it ties in nicely with my last point. It's simply a matter of belief on both sides of the argument and for the original poster to make the claim that only the pro-life side is rife with dogma is simply ludicrous.

      The question that I could like to ask you is that since it's really an argument about the very orthogonal belief that both of us share, would it not be more prudent to err on the side of caution and side with the right of the child to live until real conclusive information is known?

    43. Re:Irrelevant by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      (although I see it as a major problem if the technology was abused ... just take for example several of the movies that have been released about cloning)

      For one, I see the cloning movies as being as realistic at describing how cloning will work as James Bond describes the average life of a government agent. Secondly, I have seen nearly zero ethical problems with cloning that are not already in our society. I'd be curious about any specific problem that would occur. Of course, to help make the movies more interesting, there is almost always incubation technology, memory imprinting technology, consciousness transfers, or other things that are currently impossible. But as for the ability for one person to make a clone of themselves to raise from an infant (or clone others), with no genetic modifications, no accelerated growth, no memory planting, or anything like that, I've never seen a movie that address that issue. What abuses do you think will occur from cloning?

    44. Re:Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck off republican shit pig. Stop listening to that fucking traitor Rush Limbaugh and do us all a favor and blow your fucking head off with a shot gun. At least you will die knowing that you weren't a fucking "LIBERAL".

    45. Re:Irrelevant by Magius_AR · · Score: 1
      Scientists do not want to create a clone of an entire person - rather the idea is to clone parts


      As with all things, that's a slippery slope. All things start small. At this point, I'm honestly unsure of where I stand on the cloning issue. The health benefits I'm sure would be enormous in the realm of "lives saved", but the potential risks of where that technology could lead terrify me to no end. Same goes for nanotech.

  5. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    hrm... as a right-to-life-zealot. I sure appreciate the scientists' even keeled response to the President. I doubly appreciate that we have figured out a way to do this w/o harming the embryo. It is always amazing that given the incentive, science always finds a way to work through the requirements if the application is worth working on.

    as an aside: I've adopted two children so some of us practice our beliefs.

  6. What's the problem? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I flush viable human genetic material away all the time.

  7. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by distilledprodigy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I'll have you know that I plan on, and know many "right wing right-to-life zealot's" that plan on, or already have, adopted. We are well aware that if we say adoption is the best option we have to step up and make it possible. You insensitive clod.

  8. This is good news... by udderly · · Score: 1

    Hopefully, this will take the controversy out of this issue.

    1. Re:This is good news... by sgt_doom · · Score: 0, Troll
      Using logic.....what a peculiar idea when one has a psychopath for president.

      [When an individual kills a person, he is called a murderer. When an individual kills, maims or tortures over one hundred thousand people, he is called George W. Bush.]

    2. Re:This is good news... by udderly · · Score: 1

      [When an individual kills a person, he is called a murderer. When an individual kills, maims or tortures over one hundred thousand people, he is called George W. Bush.]

      Or FDR, or Winston Churchill, or Abraham Lincoln, or any other leader who led a country during a war.

    3. Re:This is good news... by sgt_doom · · Score: 1
      Historically speaking, yes, but by itself your comment is most insipid and speaks volumes about your limited knowledge and perspective.

      In previous times, information was severely limited to the public, whereas today, there is very little excuse not to have some idea of what is actually transpiring. All wars principally benefit the rich elites, the successful wannabes, and their political lackeys.

      Let me guess! You were modded up by your posting buddy, right?

    4. Re:This is good news... by udderly · · Score: 1

      Historically speaking, yes, but by itself your comment is most insipid and speaks volumes about your limited knowledge and perspective.

      Probably about as much as your affected writing style says about you being a pseudo-intellectual. It was probably the whole "...most insipid and speaks volumes..." cliché that did it. Hint: people who are really smart don't need to *try* to sound smart--just try to be yourself when you write.

      In previous times, information was severely limited to the public, whereas today, there is very little excuse not to have some idea of what is actually transpiring. All wars principally benefit the rich elites, the successful wannabes, and their political lackeys.

      I pretty much agree with that but I'm not sure what it has to do with what I wrote. I wasn't talking about the public; I was talking about three world leaders, who presumably had a little more information.

      Let me guess! You were modded up by your posting buddy, right?

      Ummm...no, it's called a Karma-Bonus Modifier. But nice try.

      I'm not exactly sure why you decided get so nasty and personal, after all, I didn't make presumptions about you or your intellect when I originally posted. Maybe a little less coffee would be a good idea.

  9. A little one-sided by PrescriptionWarning · · Score: 5, Funny

    where's the Left Wing Say-anything-to-get-me-elected-zealot?

    1. Re:A little one-sided by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      where's the Left Wing Say-anything-to-get-me-elected-zealot?

      Probably trying to figure out how to dodge Rove's strategically dropped bombshells which have nothing to do with wise leadership, but polarise the electorate into making irrational choices they may regret later.

    2. Re:A little one-sided by Red+Flayer · · Score: 3, Insightful
      where's the Left Wing Say-anything-to-get-me-elected-zealot?
      He's been pounded into obscurity by the Political-Hack-Jub-Swift-Boat-Veterans-for-Truthin ess.
      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    3. Re:A little one-sided by garcia · · Score: 0, Troll

      where's the Left Wing Say-anything-to-get-me-elected-zealot?

      Up there on the stage... Right next to the New-Aged-Right Wing Say-anything-to-get-me-elected-zealot.

    4. Re:A little one-sided by P3NIS_CLEAVER · · Score: 2, Funny

      they're knitting a couple of hemp socks for it.

      --
      Please sign petition to restore sanity to our banking system!!!

      http://financialpetition.org/
    5. Re:A little one-sided by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Huh? I thought Hillary was a she, not a he.

  10. hooray! by aleksiel · · Score: 3, Insightful

    now all those banks that have unused, stored embryos can keep them alive until they throw them in the garbage instead of killing them!
    /obvious

  11. good news, let us see it twisted someday by happyfrogcow · · Score: 3, Insightful

    'Well, as you know, the President objects to the fact that you would be sacrificing one life to save another, and in this instance there is no harm to the embryo.'

    I can just see it now. Bush will claim something like, "By sticking to our upstanding morals, we have driven science further than any other generation ever."

    Bush is like a broken path in the Internet. Science will route around him.

    1. Re:good news, let us see it twisted someday by Technomonics · · Score: 1

      Your comment reminds me of a line from "The Andromeda Strain". When the presidential representative is told to stop the nuclear bomb from being detonated, the representative said "I am sure the President will be happy to know he originally made the right decision." One of the scientists responds with "Please Thank the President for his Scientific Insight."

    2. Re:good news, let us see it twisted someday by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1
      Bush is like a broken path in the Internet. Science will route around him.
      Except here in the US, we're quickly becoming like an island in the Pacific -- only one trunk comes in or out.
      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    3. Re:good news, let us see it twisted someday by neonprimetime · · Score: 1

      Bush will claim something like, "By sticking to our upstanding morals, we have driven science further than any other generation ever."

      I was thinking the exact same thing you were, but not as sarcastic. If this article is true, then I see this as a victory for both parties ... one side gets their science with morals, the other side still gets their science. If this is accepted, what's the problem here?

    4. Re:good news, let us see it twisted someday by Gogo0 · · Score: 1

      There doesnt have to be a problem, some people just like to complain about nothing.
      I agree with your thought completely. The science has progressed further because of the "limitation" (that stops no one from doing their own privately-funded research) placed on it, not despite it.

    5. Re:good news, let us see it twisted someday by deanj · · Score: 1

      And yet, he's gotten more money for this type of research than any other president. ...Apparently, you forgot that.

    6. Re:good news, let us see it twisted someday by Bob+of+Dole · · Score: 1

      Inflation's a bitch, aint it?

    7. Re:good news, let us see it twisted someday by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      Bush is like a broken path in the Internet. Science will route around him.

      Yes, but Science will suffer from much greater lag than if the broken path hadn't been broken in the first place.

    8. Re:good news, let us see it twisted someday by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      the "limitation" (that stops no one from doing their own privately-funded research)

      Who would fund a private stem cell research lab?

      Research universities are out, because they would lose their federal funding for other types of research if they did that.

      Pharmaceutical companies are out, because the profit-making potential of stem cells is still too far in the future to be quantified.

      Who's left? Maybe the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Can't think of anyone else who might have both the capital and philanthropic bent to even try.

      The "gotchas" on federal funding attached to the stem cell research limitations effect a de facto ban on unrestricted stem cell research.

  12. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by dr_dank · · Score: 1, Funny

    Right Wing Right-to-Life Zealot: "Absolutely not!!! I insist they not be murdered, but I'm no charity, go find someone else to raise it!"

    Some people really do think that a microscopic clump of cells is a baby. Perhaps there exists an untapped market in teeny tiny baby supplies for these really small children. A playpen made out of a ring of hydrogen atoms and an amoeba for a pet.

    --
    Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
  13. Makes sense by krell · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "Lab Tech 2: "Would you like to adopt one? Right Wing Right-to-Life Zealot: "Absolutely not!!! I insist they not be murdered, but I'm no charity, go find someone else to raise it!"

    Makes sense.... as much as the idea that anyone opposed to the death penalty being should be required to take death row inmates into their homes.

    --
    Where were you when the voynix came?
    1. Re:Makes sense by MutantHamster · · Score: 1

      Uh, we're not killing death row inmates because they have nowhere else to go...

      --
      My Greatest Heist - Muisc partly inspired by the unbeatable Qwantz
    2. Re:Makes sense by krell · · Score: 2, Funny

      "Uh, we're not killing death row inmates because they have nowhere else to go..."

      Well, we are not colonizing distant lands with convicts any more, are we?

      --
      Where were you when the voynix came?
    3. Re:Makes sense by Surt · · Score: 1

      Well, how about being willing to pay to take them into their states prisons? That would be a closer parallel, I think, and one I think most anti-death penalty advocates would be happy to support with increased taxes.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    4. Re:Makes sense by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Well, we are not colonizing distant lands with convicts any more, are we?

      Personally, I know of a few NEAR lands that need colonizing- BLM lands in Nevada that could be used for this purpose- and it ties in to the Catholic Seamless Garment of Life movement in that research on embryos, abortion, and capital punishment are all equal sins under that argument (at least, if your society has the technology to prevent escapes from the super-jail-interal-exile thingy).

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  14. Another possibility by amigabill · · Score: 1

    I've read about other methods, such as harvesting a person's own stem cells from his or her bone marrow. Some medication is able to encourage the marrow to produce and release stem cells that can be collected from blood samples or something like that. (it's been long enough to forget some details) Why dont' we get a few of them that way for research?

    And I still think it's an awful waste to toss everything into a biohazard disposal or incinerator or something when someone has an abortion. I'd rather see some benefit come from that kind of thing, rather than take that life and simply throw it in the trash. How is that better than learnign new ways to save lives?

    1. Re:Another possibility by bunions · · Score: 2, Informative

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cord_blood

      Thanks to the embargo on stem cell research, someone is making a fortune off nervous new parents by storing this stuff just in case something awful happens. Graaarrr.

      --
      there is no need to sign your posts. this isn't usenet. your username is right there above your post. stop it.
  15. thank god by DohnJoe · · Score: 0, Redundant

    this is good news, I was getting sick of the current method: sucking the brain out of aborted fetuses...
    Hmmm, but will this still give me superpowers?

    1. Re:thank god by Technomonics · · Score: 1

      Nope, only Promicin (http://www.the4400.com/) will do that.

    2. Re:thank god by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      Apparently, but your only weakness will be equestrian events. Oh, and I'll take a window seat, thanks.

  16. The word "harvest". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The US team, led by Dr Robert Lanza, have now shown that a single cell harvested in this way can also be grown in culture to create stem-cell lines.

    I wish folks would stop using that word and find another one. "Harvest" gets a lot of folks riled up and gives them the impression that people are going to be farmed (or whatever) for their parts.

    Yeah, yeah, I know that's not the case, but in this day and age of bumper sticker sound bites, that's all people hear and they don't want to investigate further. They'll just jump to the first two-bit opinion that fits or the opinion that was given to them by a pundit and to hell with the facts.

    1. Re:The word "harvest". by SlowMovingTarget · · Score: 2, Funny

      How about "disenfranchised"?

      Allow me to use the newly redefined word in a sentence: "We disenfranchised a single cell from the embryo to create a stem cell line that will allow us to grow extra nose tissue for Michael Jackson."

    2. Re:The word "harvest". by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1
      I wish folks would stop using that word and find another one. "Harvest" gets a lot of folks riled up and gives them the impression that people are going to be farmed (or whatever) for their parts.
      How about...

      Thinned-from-the-herd?
      Ripped-from-the-blastocy st?
      'Cultured'?

      Unfortunately, I'm not sure there are too many more-tasteful options than 'harvested.'
      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    3. Re:The word "harvest". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That will only work if the cells are deemed to be liberal, a soldier, or otherwise inconvienent to The Party.

    4. Re:The word "harvest". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about "liberate"?

    5. Re:The word "harvest". by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Allow me to use the newly redefined word in a sentence: "We disenfranchised a single cell from the embryo to create a stem cell line that will allow us to grow extra nose tissue for Michael Jackson."

      Great. So we've gone from harming the embryo to harming the stem cells we collect from it. :P

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    6. Re:The word "harvest". by morie · · Score: 1

      "got"
      "isolated"
      if realy want: "rescued" (assuming the embryo is going to the medical waste disposal anyway)

      --
      Sig (appended to the end of comments I post, 54 chars)
    7. Re:The word "harvest". by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      I wish folks would stop using that word and find another one. "Harvest" gets a lot of folks riled up and gives them the impression that people are going to be farmed (or whatever) for their parts.

      Too late. It's medical jargon that's not going away any time soon (if ever). Just as "master" and "slave" have negative connotations for most people but are perfectly normal technical jargon, medicine has it's own specific meanings for words that have little to do with their "normal" meanings.

      One of my wife's patients screamed at her because she wrote in that patient's chart that "the patient denies using smoking, alcohol, and recreational drugs." The patient interpreted the word "deny" to mean "is probably, but won't admit to", but my wife was using it in the accepted medical sense of "answered 'no' to". Just as she refused to re-word that patient's medical history, there's roughly zero chance of getting scientists (or organ transplant teams) to pick a different word or phrase.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  17. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Pebble · · Score: 0

    Nearly right..

    RWZ: It's unethicle to detroy an embryo to harvest stem cells.
    Lab Tech: We have addressed you concerns No embryo is destroyd using our new method.
    RWZ: Realy? That's good news. What do you do with the embryos afterwards.
    Lab Tech: We Destroy them, but it's a compleatly different process it was going to be destroyed anyway.
    RWZ: Ha! Then it's unethical to harvest stem cells from them!
    Lab Tech: What?? Right! I'm off to Europe. Bye!
    RWZ: Yay for us! Yay for America.

  18. Finally something to make everyone happy by LotsOfPhil · · Score: 1
    the remaining embryo also has the potential to go to on create a healthy blastocyst
    As long as the blastocyst is healthy, no one should have any objections.
    --
    This post climbed Mt. Washington.
    1. Re:Finally something to make everyone happy by chrisb33 · · Score: 1

      A possible argument could be - how safe is this? If there is a 1% chance that the blastocyst won't survive, is it still okay (according to those who believe killing embryos is murder)? If there's a 30% chance, is it okay?

      I'm not sure if I understand TFA on this point: "The team used embryos created for in vitro fertilisation, allowing them to multiply to eight or ten cells, or blastomeres, before removing one or two.
      Most of these blastomeres, divided at least once more in the laboratory, and about half produced outgrowths of 50 to 100 cells including some identified as stem cells."

      "Most" of the blastomeres survived? Sounds like it's still an issue. Also, half of <i>what</i> produced outgrowths - the blastomeres? That doesn't seem to make sense.

      That being said, having "a set of immortal stem cells" unique to a person would be incredible, not to mention the help this would be to stem-cell research in general.

    2. Re:Finally something to make everyone happy by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      You're assuming Bush knows what the words "blastocyst", "embryo", and "potential" mean. That's a pretty big assumption.

    3. Re:Finally something to make everyone happy by CrazyDuke · · Score: 1

      "As long as the blastocyst is healthy, no one should have any objections."

      This assumes:

      A) No one is ignorant.

      B) No one is spiteful.

      C) No one thinks a stem cell by itself is a viable human. ...or any combination of the above.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
  19. Fantastic! by alouts · · Score: 1

    This is great news!

    Now we can do our research and all the "pre-babies" that would have been destroyed in the process of creating stem cells can instead be thrown in the trash, just as God intended.

  20. Totally relevant by common+middle+name · · Score: 1

    IVF is already legal in the United States. If this process does no harm to the embryo, what complaint could the right to life movement possibly have? It's not like the embryos are being cloned. Even this administration would have an impossible time passing a law based on the idea that a "soul" might be damaged.

    1. Re:Totally relevant by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

      They're against using spare embryos for science. Embryos that will be stored until they die.

      These type of objections are not logical to me, so I have no problem predicting that further illogical objections will be raised.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
  21. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by grub · · Score: 3, Insightful


    Forget where I read this but it illustrates the hypocrisy of the right-to-life kooks.

    Your friend is working in an in vitro lab. The place catches fire, do you save your friend or the freezer full of frozen embryos? Most pick the friend.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  22. Safety First by krell · · Score: 1

    "A playpen made out of a ring of hydrogen atoms and an amoeba for a pet."

    You do have a "No Smoking" sign in the vicinity of that playpen, I hope?

    --
    Where were you when the voynix came?
  23. Well, what now, Karl? by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ME: Shit, Karl, what do we do now? Abortion is a dead horse, and now we've lost yet another wedge issue to drive 'moral' Christians into the Party who would otherwise realize that we're bending them over at every possible moment.

    KARL: Look, over there! A terrorist plot! Here's a chip for your More Secure[1] passport!
    And here's some FAA guidelines to prevent people from bringing liquids onto planes, which will prevent[2] terrorists from hijacking or destroying a plane in flight!
    And here's some legislation that will stop[3] terrorists from eating our babies by allowing us to monitor their email and telephone calls without a warrant!
    And here's some statements by the Prez that say he can legally[4] ignore any law he wants in the name of NatSec.

    [1] Not really.
    [2] Not really.
    [3] Not really.
    [4] Not really.

    Ok, I'm done ranting for the day. But seriously, the Fundies are going to have to find a different wedge issue now, especially as we gear up for the Nov elections.

    On the down side, what I see coming from this promising research is a "See, if we forbid it, they'll find another, permissible, way to do it" reaction which may or may not be true with the next contentious research issue we face.

    --
    "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    1. Re:Well, what now, Karl? by wiggles · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And here's some FAA guidelines to prevent people from bringing liquids onto planes, which will prevent[2] terrorists from hijacking or destroying a plane in flight!

      The funny thing is that Ann Coulter actually agrees with you.

    2. Re:Well, what now, Karl? by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1
      The funny thing is that Ann Coulter actually agrees with you.
      That manhanded bag of antlers is welcome to agree with me on that point. But her main point there is not a logical dependency on my point here.
      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    3. Re:Well, what now, Karl? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 2, Insightful

      First of all, you're unnecessarily limited in thinking that killing humans is a "fundie" issue. Most non-materialists have a problem with it.

      Second, you should distinguish between the set of issues that Dr. Evil, I mean, Karl, use to whip up support, and the set of issues that religious / non-materialist persons care about. For example, Christian's care[d] about killing humans before, while, and after the Republicans use it to get people to go vote.

      Not doing evil things is a religious (or as you say, "fundies") / non-materialist issue. Getting people to vote Republican is a Karl Rove issue. If you think they're the same, you're exactly the kind of chump that Karl tries to manipulate to the voting booth.

    4. Re:Well, what now, Karl? by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Maybe you misunderstand how the political process works wrt Fundamentalists here in the US. Fundies like Pat Robertson and Lou Dobbs energize their followers through the use of wedge issues. They are often helped along by political strategists such as Rove. This is how the Red Revolution has happened in the interior states.

      Second, why do you keep putting 'religious' and 'non-materialist' together? The terms are unrelated and not even close to synonymous. Often, they are directly opposed.

      Third, you assume that by "Fundies" I mean religious people. Far from it. Fundamentalists are a subset of religious people, and it is my contention that they, among others, voting for Neoconservatives on the basis of 'religious' issues, have enabled the worst US government of the past century to exist. Christian Fundamentalists vote based on establishing theocratic government, and the Neocons have done an excellent job of marrying Fundie issues to smash-and-grab corporate government.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    5. Re:Well, what now, Karl? by Guuge · · Score: 1

      Most non-materialists are opposed to the death penalty? Most are opposed to war? Please cite your source.

    6. Re:Well, what now, Karl? by wiggles · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but you see now we get to make fun of you for agreeing with her :)

    7. Re:Well, what now, Karl? by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 1

      My bad. I should have said the taking of innocent life so that others can live longer. My original word choice was a bad one.

    8. Re:Well, what now, Karl? by hachete · · Score: 1

      Karma to burn. This is troll, right? Why is this insightful? It's gratuitous bollocks. Bullshit. Generalisations of the highest stink.

      All those religious wars? All that End Of Days shit where the non-believers are going to be killed? That's killing, right?

      Atheists, like myself, care for human-life, do not use our beliefs to make people who do not believe what we believe into the Other, objectify the Other so that they can kill them. In fact, we go one better: we care for those who are alive rather than that which is obviously not alive.

      Remember, every sperm is sacred. Every time you wank (let's face it, you don't have sex) you kill a million potential beings ... have a nice day

      --
      Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious
  24. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by deKernel · · Score: 1

    So, at what point does it become a baby? When it is born? When shows similarity to a human in the womb?

  25. As a pro-lifer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have to agree. If it's the real deal (I didn't RTFA), I see no reason not to get behind it.

  26. Raises a new problem by Michael+Woodhams · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So you extract stem cells from an embryo, and allow the embryo to come to term, so now you have a baby and a stem cell line. The baby grows up. What rights does this person have over the stem cell line? Can they demand (e.g.) that the cells be used only thereputically, not for research? Can they charge a licensing fee to use them?

    --
    Quattuor res in hoc mundo sanctae sunt: libri, liberi, libertas et liberalitas.
    1. Re:Raises a new problem by confu2000 · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure where this concept of rights comes from. Unfortunately, I can't cite a good source, but 99+% of the genes in that stem cell are going to be the same as any other person on the planet. Are you suggesting that because of that 1% difference, a person can lay claim or ownership? And if so, would his parents be entitled to 50% shares due to providing the source material?

    2. Re:Raises a new problem by PatTheGreat · · Score: 1

      Hrm. I know this sounds fuzzy, but I heard of this one case where "this guy" got cancer, so he got whatever organ removed. Ye old doctors looked at the organ and found the guy had freaky awesome cancer-fighting cells. So they researched it, patented it, and made buckets-o-money.

      So what did "this guy" do? He sued, asking for some of the profits because it was his liver or whatever. The ruling? Nope, the guy did not have a right to the research that resulted from his organs.

      I would think in this case it would be something similar. However, I suppose there would be a difference, since the guy gave permission to have his organ removed, and the embryo did not.

      --
      Google: "All your data are belong to us."
    3. Re:Raises a new problem by Surt · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It's actually straightforward. It's the same as when parents negotiate for a baby to be in a shampoo commercial. Do you get to renegotiate the shampoo commercial contract when you turn 18 and demand all of the shampoo company's profits for the last 18 years?

      The short answer is no.

      The parents (probably even just the mother) of the embryo gets to negotiate away the rights to those cells, and the grown up embryo will have no rights involving those cells excepting those negotiated by the parents.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    4. Re:Raises a new problem by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      IANAL, but I highly doubt those would be real problems. The parents are the owners, not the kid. I believe it's technically illegal to sell living human biological material anyway, but regardless, by the time the person is 18, the potential patents have expired anyway. Trying to lay claim to something that was given away 18.75 years ago, just because it has the same DNA as you, seems like a long shot.

    5. Re:Raises a new problem by Guuge · · Score: 1
      However, I suppose there would be a difference, since the guy gave permission to have his organ removed, and the embryo did not.

      That's an amusing line of thought. Could someone sue their parents for creating them without permission? You could prove that the parents knew they had lousy genes but had a kid anyway. It's impossible for the kid to sign away the right to nonexistence, so if potential humans do have such rights then the parents would have to be held liable.

    6. Re:Raises a new problem by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 1
      You bring up an interesting if somewhat unrelated question....

      Lets say we're in a country with cloning technology available. Is there the possibility of some shady people making clones of themselves and using them as slaves? I mean, hey, they own the cells. Would the clones be treated as children in terms of the law? Thats where I think things will get really interesting.

      Because correct me if I'm wrong, but wouldn't the clone start out as a baby and grow up normally? When clones are made they are not at the same physiological age as the original. So I really don't see how in the end cloning is different than having a child with the exception that it is propogating the genes of one individual as opposed to two. Yes, its a bit creepy at first to live around a baby YOU but hey, its an interesting chance to see how you COULD have grown up.....possibly multiple times depending on how many clones you grow. I could even see that becoming a hobby.

      Ok, enough for the drunken SLashdot rambling for one night. I'm actually quite amazed at how vaguely coherent my above thoughts were. (P.S. I'd prefer your thoughts on my above scenario to your mod points)

      --
      Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
    7. Re:Raises a new problem by edbarbar · · Score: 1

      what makes you think the embryo would ever become a person? There are 500000 embryos on ice in the US right now. I'm sure they would use one of those.

      --
      Ed Barbar, President and General Manager, Furnit USA
    8. Re:Raises a new problem by Surt · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure that every sane country will require you to treat a clone as you would treat any other child. They'll have all the usual human rights, and the parent will have all the usual power over their child til the age of majority.

      Certainly seeing how you would turn out if you raised yourself is an interesting question, it will be fascinating to see as that technology becomes practical.

      --
      "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
    9. Re:Raises a new problem by darkmeridian · · Score: 1

      The similar case of Moore v. Regents of University of California has decided on this question. A man was ill with hairy cell leukemia and his spleen was removed in the course of treatment. The hospital did research on his spleen and he sued, claiming that he had a property interest in the removed spleen. The court disagreed with him and ruled that there was no such property interest once the part was removed.

      --
      A NYC lawyer blogs. http://www.chuangblog.com/
  27. What the banks really do with them. by krell · · Score: 1

    "now all those banks that have unused, stored embryos can keep them alive until they throw them in the garbage instead of killing them!"

    You think the banks throw the embryo's AWAY? I bet you also think that those ATM machines are controlled by microprocessors and electronics. If it makes you feel better to believe these things, go right ahead.

    --
    Where were you when the voynix came?
  28. not the first time I've heard that.... by StressGuy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I often run across the assertion that many viable embryos, suitable for harvesting stem cells, would actually have been "medical waste" otherwise. Can somebody confirm or deny this? and back it up with references?

    If true, it kinda makes the extreme right a bit hypocritical, doesn't it? Kinda like saying you refuse to sacrifice one life for the sake of another while maintaining a war in the mid-east....but I digress.

    --
    A goal is a dream with a deadline
    1. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, it's true. Bush has vetoed the use of embyros that were otherwise going to be discarded anyway. NO REFS FOR YUO though because I can't be bothered finding them.

    2. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by neonprimetime · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Hmmm, confirmed by an AC on /.
      That's reliable.

    3. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by MindStalker · · Score: 3, Informative

      Well thats EXACTLY what the most recent veto was about. During fertilization treatments often extra embryos are created. Sometimes these are donated, often they are destroyed. There was a bill passed (with many republican supporters) that stated that these embroyes marked for destruction could be used in stemcell research. GW vetoed it.
       
      /I voted for GW though I don't support everything he does I don't mindlessly bash the guy...
      //I definatly don't understand this one though.

    4. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by Gogo0 · · Score: 1

      There is no government funding of stem cell research. If you have the cash, you can harvest all the stem cells that you want.

    5. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by Zorque · · Score: 1

      From Wikipedia: "1995 - President Bill Clinton signs into law the Dickey Amendment which makes it illegal for Federal money to be used for research where stem cells are derived from the destruction of the embryo." There are currently 61 (I believe) stem cell lines which are eligible for Govt. funding. only about 11 of these are worth a damn, and their worth is quickly drying up.

    6. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by Gogo0 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, so then "If you have the cash, you can harvest all the stem cells that you want."

    7. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by rrohbeck · · Score: 2, Informative

      I often run across the assertion that many viable embryos, suitable for harvesting stem cells, would actually have been "medical waste" otherwise. Can somebody confirm or deny this? and back it up with references?

      "Each year, thousands of laboratory-facilitated embryos no longer needed in the treatment of fertility are routinely discarded." (http://hatch.senate.gov/newsite/index.cfm?FuseAct ion=PressReleases.Print&PressRelease_id=190023&sup presslayouts=true)

      From (drumroll, please...) Sen. Orrin Hatch, Utah.

    8. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by thefirelane · · Score: 1

      If true, it kinda makes the extreme right a bit hypocritical, doesn't it?

      That's because you think the point of 'pro-life' is to protect life. Its primary focus is sex. Abortion clinics allow people, in their view, to have sex without consequences. Fertility clinics, while destroying more embreyos (per woman) have nothing to do with sex, so their 'killing of babies' is ok for christians.

      This same mentality allow 'pro-life' america to have one of the highest rate of infant mortality in the developed world... the woman has already dealt with the 'consequence' of sex, which is the primary goal of the movement.

      It is also why many 'pro-lifers' disagree with abortion in the case of ectopic pregnancies, where the embreyo is certain to die, but an abortion will save the mother's life/health.

    9. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by Bob+Uhl · · Score: 1

      They are embryos that would have been destroyed, yes. Whether that makes them waste or not is of course a matter of some contention. The pro-life movement has stepped up to the challenge to be logically consistent, and is working on such things as embryo adoption in order to ensure that every human gets at least a chance to be born.

    10. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

      You're absolutely right.

      It's going to become painfully obvious when pro-lifers are against mandatory AIDS vaccine when it becomes available. They're already against HPV vaccine for teenage girls. This will kill women via cervical cancer. Culture of life my ass. More like culture of sex = horrible enforced artificial consequences.

      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    11. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      A counter-argument I have heard to this - and I am pro-choice and in favor of stem cell research - is that in the event that stem cell research actually leads to treatments, to practically apply those treatments would require many more stem cells than can be supplied by IVF clinics. There was a reference for this that looked reasonable enough, but I don't remember what it was. In any case, the presumption is that these extra stem cells would come from fetuses that might not otherwise be destroyed. Anyway, a person to make this argument would have to favor ending embryonic stem cell research of any kind, I think.

    12. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by CrazyDuke · · Score: 1

      Eh, granted, this is an out of my ass opinion, but my observations of people lead me to believe it is more base than that. Some people have deep seated insecurities over people in general "getting what they deserve." This often leads these people to seek to artificially punish people who are percieved to be deserving of it. And, often enough, to actively break not only moral and ethical rules to enact that punishment, but to also do so in order to get something they feel they deserve.

      It is a dark sense of justice, perverted by jealousy and wrath, often with roots in pride, lust, greed, and envy.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
    13. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by geekoid · · Score: 1

      yes, they would be waste.
      yes, they are hypocritical.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    14. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No way I'm going to post on this unless as AC but you could go talk to various levels of staff at hospitals. Hang out where they take their smoke breaks etc. or simply get a job there.

      1. Yes it's medical waste, few if anyone at all (I've never heard of it) give burials to aborted fetuses. That's if everything is done right, ugly stuff can happen like fetuses being forgotten among the sheets and appearing during the first-stage sorting at the hospital cleaners -- where I worked they wouldn't even let "normal" people do that job considering how gruesome (body parts etc.) and dangerous (misplaced used surgery tools etc.) it can be.

      2. The fact that it's medical waste doesn't make one iota of difference to the anti-embryonic stemcell argument, it's actually a strawman argument as it doesn't argue their points of view at all; that there are inherent dangers and ethical quandries connected to using what was potentially live humans as a source for potentially highly sought after medicines.

      The really big problem that the thinking opposers of embryonic stemcells are trying to point out is this:
      - the more successful embryonic stemcells would be, the higher pressure and demand there would be to attain embryonic stemcells. Couple this with the zero cost of creating fetuses (most would enjoy it right?) and it becomes incredibly naive to believe that those wanting easy profits wouldn't farm abortions for pay. Don't talk about laws or regulations, this would be a black market from the get-go.
      - in case embryonic stemcells aren't successful in any significant way (they haven't been so far; adult stemcells are much better) then the above is avoided, but if allowed and encouraged because of the imagined benefits then the damage would already have been done anyway in respect to the law and if a similar ethical situation were to appear in the future a sort of precedence would already have been established, if nothing else in the eyes of the public. Because of that it would be even harder to argue for a conservative/restrictive attitude in such matters at such a point in time and the ultimate outcome would become just as bad in their opinion: loss of sanctity and dignity of human life.

      Now I'm actually pro-choice but would like unwanted pregancies to be avoided i.e. against abortion in itself (probably the only thing I could agree with Kerry on but Bush was my choice, McCain next). But I'm sympathetic to the point of view described above simply because I realize it is indeed a slippery slope. I don't know why people fail to see the ethical issues, perhaps they think anybody and all that takes an abortion is an angel. Before people misunderstand me; I've had very close aquaintances choose to take abortions and I've supported their choice to do so, hoping they would never get themselves into such a situation again. But they've told me stories of "regulars" they've met and talked to, people who by choice are having their seventh, ninth or fifth abortion out of convenience. And I find that repugnant on level with ghouls and cannibals --I'll make no excuses for them, they've dehumanized themselves-- so I have absolutely no belief there wouldn't be plenty of willing participants to any black harvesting markets.

      So this makes those wanting to harvest stemcells from dead fetuses kinda hypocritical doesn't it? Sort of like those who think the absence of war is peace.

      Perhaps they should stop chanting their silly Hitler slogans and take a deep look inside themselves... plenty of sheep in need of brains on all sides of the fences.

    15. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by kbielefe · · Score: 1

      It's mostly about how close to "the line" you are willing to get. Nearly everyone agrees that the line is somewhere between unfertilized eggs and full-term infants, but the exact point at which experimentation becomes morally wrong is a lot harder to pin down. People who make moral and ethical decisions from a purely secular point of view tend to get as close to the line as possible. People who make those decisions from a purely religious point of view tend to stay as far away from the line as possible. The President is closer to the latter group.

      A more practical side of the argument is that the bill would have made it harder to guard against intentionally creating extra embryos for research, which a lot of people think is unethical even if they don't have a problem using unintentional extra embryos.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank.
    16. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      Which of course this technology leads to the same problem. Someone could intentionally create embryos then use this method. Personally I think the idea is slightly silly as there are many unintentional embryos created and really enough to go around.

    17. Re:not the first time I've heard that.... by fm6 · · Score: 1

      Oh please. The information in question is easily verified. The problem with information gained casually, whether it's from an AC on Slashdot or from somebody you actually know, is that nobody bothers to verify it.

      The Internet didn't create BS; it just propagates it more quickly. The problem is not forums like Slashdot, it's the mental laziness of people who prefer truthiness to actual thought.

  29. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by grub · · Score: 1


    When it can survive on it's out outside the womb.
    If it can't, it's eligible for le Scrape.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  30. off topic, but still... by Travoltus · · Score: 4, Informative

    Feminists for Life of America would completely shatter the grandparent poster's parody script (which was quite funny IMO). There are a lot of pro-lifers out there who don't bomb clinics, adopt kids, and who believe strongly in societal safety nets for the working and poor class.

    Pro-life liberals outnumber pro-life conservatives but they get almost no press.

    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    1. Re:off topic, but still... by bheilig · · Score: 1
      Pro-life liberals outnumber pro-life conservatives but they get almost no press.

      I don't believe this statement, but am interested in having my belief changed. Do you have any corroborating evidence you'd like to share?

      Thanks,
      Brian
    2. Re:off topic, but still... by Saanvik · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Are you sure that anti-abortion liberals outnumber anti-abortion conservatives? Any numbers to back that up?

    3. Re:off topic, but still... by Frightening · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's the same for us Muslims. There are a lot of extremely devoted Muslims everywhere in the world including war zones, who don't make news. In fact, only a minority (ignorant idiots) get the press coverage, because they have the bang-bangs.

      It's just human nature. Humans are intrigued by physical action. It..moves them. That's why action movies get most box-office dollars. Kiss-kiss bang-bang.

    4. Re:off topic, but still... by Travoltus · · Score: 1

      That's easy. Remember when Nancy Pelosi and Hillary Clinton were talking about a big tent policy in the Democratic Party over abortion?

      http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2004/12 /19/democrats_eye_softer_image_on_abortion/

      That's because there's a massive groundswell of pro-life liberals in the Democratic Party about to break through, politically.

      Also see: Robert Casey Jr. and his present handing of Rick Santorum's hiney to him on what may well be a silver platter this election season (unless, that is, Casey Jr gets caught with an intern).

      --
      --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    5. Re:off topic, but still... by Aqua+OS+X · · Score: 3, Informative

      "Pro-life liberals outnumber pro-life conservatives but they get almost no press."
      Could you supply a link with data supporting this?

      There is a lot of gray area here. There are also pro-choice "conservatives." Theoretically, more "traditional" conservatives would argue for liberty over regulation and would not attempt to make this a federal issue.

      That said, you're also going to find a lot of people, liberal and conservative, who may not think abortion is an option for themselves. Yet that does not mean those very same people wouldn't view abortion as a personal choice that others should be allowed to make.

      --
      "Things are more moderner than before- bigger, and yet smaller- it's computers-- San Dimas High School football RULES!"
    6. Re:off topic, but still... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you so sure that pro-death leftists outnumber pro-death conservatives (at least on the abortion front)?

      I have never met one Democrat that told me abortion was a good thing, every woman should get pregnant so they can go have one. No one likes abortion and no one that I have ever met says that it is a good thing. The question is whether it is socially necessary to allow a woman to make up for a bad choice that resulted in getting pregnant to make a second bad choice, prenatal infanticide. After all, that is what unrestricted abortion is about. It is not about some small percentage of pregnancies resulting for rape where the woman actually had no choice in the matter a priori.

      On topic, that single cell could still develop quite well into a fully-formed, normal human if implanted and allowed to come to term. It is still a metabolically active cell and still genetically human. That means it is human life.

      Diploid rights! That's my stand. If it has two sets of human chromosomes, it should remain alive. (And my own perspective extends to both abortion and the death penalty.)

    7. Re:off topic, but still... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Pro-Life is a conservative political term meant to divide people. It is not a liberal political term and it does not apply to liberals, except those that buy into conservative rhetoric. Since everyone is pro-life (save for a very small minority of mentally ill individuals, such as president bush, other warmongers, and serial killers), the term really is meaningless. The appropriate term is the liberal term: anti-choice. People who want to save and protect embryos from abortion and use in scientific research, such as stem cell research, and identify themselves as pro-life are really just against others deciding on their own what to do with their own bodies (such as have sex and, if necessary, then have a medical procedure to remove the embryo from the woman's body well before birth can occur). As is very well known, and is why the Republicans have lost on the stem cell research front, is that hundreds of thousands of embryos are thrown away every year by fertility clinics. The so-called pro-life movement does nothing about this. But the pro-life movement complains loud as a banshee when scientists want to use these embryos that are going to be thrown away for stem cell research. You see (as you very well know conservative mouthpiece Travoltus) the movement is anti-choice, it is not pro-life (not in the sense of saving these embryos marked for disposal or saving the people who have terminal illnesses that could benefit from stem cell research).

      America is moving left because they have seen what the right has to offer and it ain't pretty. It is pretty damn ugly. Stopping stem cell research and claiming they are "pro"-life is but one element of the Republican collapse.

    8. Re:off topic, but still... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You cite an article from 2004 -- 2 years ago -- to support a claim about today's political climate. If you consider that easy, that is because you did not do the assignment.

    9. Re:off topic, but still... by Millenniumman · · Score: 1

      Was there any particular reason that you combined bombing clinics and not believing in (enforced) societal "safety nets"?

      --
      Stupidity is like nuclear power, it can be used for good or evil. And you don't want to get any on you.
    10. Re:off topic, but still... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wait... you think that what happened in the Democratic party 2 years ago isn't happening now? that the demographics have changed that much in just 2 years? Woah. Iwant what you're smoking.

    11. Re:off topic, but still... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sort of like the way the left considers itself "Anti-War" ? ;-)
      - as if anyone is actually "pro" war or "anti" life.

      There are a lot more "Pro-choice" republicans than you think, though.
      I'm not so sure that "America is moving left" as you say, the left is butt ugly too. Let's keep it in the middle.

    12. Re:off topic, but still... by Carpe+PM · · Score: 1
      The appropriate term is the liberal term: anti-choice

      Meaningless. I don't make a habit of replying to ACs, but if I were in favor of giving judges/juries the option of ordering the death penalty for the convicted (I'm not) and you were against that, that makes you anti-choice, right?

  31. Congratulations, Darl McBride! by krell · · Score: 1

    "The baby grows up. What rights does this person have over the stem cell line? Can they demand (e.g.) that the cells be used only thereputically, not for research? Can they charge a licensing fee to use them?"

    Looks like Darl McBride's a daddy again!

    --
    Where were you when the voynix came?
  32. Irrelevant-Organ donors. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well setting the religious issues aside (It'll just start another flamewar anyway). The thing one has to worry about with some of these "treatments" is that peole will be having embryos not because they want kids, but because they want an organ donor. Cheapening life even more than our society already cheapens it.

    1. Re:Irrelevant-Organ donors. by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 2, Funny

      Having more kids cheapens life all by itself. When the supply increases, the price goes down.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
  33. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Hentai · · Score: 1

    When its neural structure begins to self-organize and exhibit patterned firings.

    --
    -Hentai [in vita non pacem est]
  34. Re:mod parent underrated, lol by isellmacs · · Score: 2, Insightful

    That makes no sense at all.

    People who are "pro-life" are also "anti-choice" it's true, but the opposite end of the spectrum isn't actually true; the "pro-choice" people aren't "anti-life" at all.

    Abortion isn't something women do for recreation, it's a very major life choice. One side beleives a woman doesn't have a right to make a choice, and that having an abortion is evil, while the other side beleives that no matter how evil abortion is or isn't, that taking away a womans right to make that choice is the greastest evil of them all.

  35. Adopt an Embryo by CustomDesigned · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Adopt an Embryo

    Also, while the objection of President Bush and other moderates is killing the embryo, the Catholic Church and real "right wing zealot" Protestants have another deeper objection: the separation of sex and procreation. The idea is that it is fundamentally disordered to separate the two, as we have done since the 1930s. There is an analogous separation of eating and nutrition - also enabled by modern technology. While the Catholic Church has not said anything (that I know of) about the food angle, it is less emotionally charged and may help understand the reasoning concerning sex and procreation (described in full jargon laden glory in The Theology of the Body and various attempts to explain it to laymen).

    Technology enables us to separate eating and nutrition. You can eat without nourishment thanks to Olestra, Aspartame, Sucralose, and friends. You can nourish without eating thanks to IVs, vitamin pills (get your necessary nutrients while eating junk food), feeding tubes, and friends. You can justify the nourishment without eating in various special circumstances - but the attempt to repeat the pleasure of eating beyond the requirements of nourishment is gluttonly and has generally bad results.

    Similarly, the attempt to repeat the pleasure of sex beyond the needs of procreation (birth control, gay lifestyle, etc) has generally bad results - physical, emotional, and spiritual.

    1. Re:Adopt an Embryo by Xofer+D · · Score: 1
      ...the attempt to repeat the pleasure of eating beyond the requirements of nourishment is gluttonly and has generally bad results. Similarly, the attempt to repeat the pleasure of sex beyond the needs of procreation (birth control, gay lifestyle, etc) has generally bad results - physical, emotional, and spiritual.
      What the hell? First you made some comments about food and nutrition, and then from nowhere, you claim that sex is the same. Where do I start with this? First, your claims about food and nutrition are mistaken; obesity results from the lack of separation between eating and nutrition. If you really could eat in a manner separated from nutrition, it would by definition have no effect. The word "gluttony" is defined in terms of consumption and not the results thereof, so it has everything to do with eating and nothing to do with nourishment. You haven't really made a case for why separating eating from nourishment is a bad thing. Second, none of this has anything to do with sex. You have totally failed to demonstrate why this is a parallel case. Considering you didn't demonstrate why the first case wasn't made anyhow, I don't really see how you expect to convince anyone.
      --
      The Signal/Noise ratio can be improved in two ways. Remaining silent is the OTHER way.
    2. Re:Adopt an Embryo by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      Similarly, the attempt to repeat the pleasure of sex beyond the needs of procreation (birth control, gay lifestyle, etc) has generally bad results - physical, emotional, and spiritual.

      I agree with you except that I think you take your examples too far. Human beings seem to have a deep psychological need for sexual intimacy. Unfortunately, they often also have a deep economic need to NOT procreate. Would you have parents that cannot afford more children not have sex anymore? The human vagina (so I've read) is positioned to encourage people to have sexual intercourse facing each other, cementing the pair bond between them. Human love is in some way reified as sex, which is acknowledged by the phrase "making love". In the language of your analogy, sex in the context of love IS nutritious, regardless of whether it leads to procreation.

    3. Re:Adopt an Embryo by thefirelane · · Score: 1

      Similarly, the attempt to repeat the pleasure of sex beyond the needs of procreation (birth control, gay lifestyle, etc) has generally bad results - physical, emotional, and spiritual.

      And there we have it ladies and gentlemen.... the modern, conservative chrstian 'nanny state'. They get full access to your bedroom because 'your actions could have negative emotional consequences for you'

      How about the fact that more liberal leaning areas have lower divorce rates? How does that affect your view of seperation of sex and procreation as pertaining to the family and society?

      Try before you buy was adopted for clothes because it leads to less returns... same thing for marriage.

    4. Re:Adopt an Embryo by RsG · · Score: 1
      Similarly, the attempt to repeat the pleasure of sex beyond the needs of procreation (birth control, gay lifestyle, etc) has generally bad results - physical, emotional, and spiritual.
      A reduction in population growth in an already crowded world is a bad thing in your books?

      Seriously, what the hell? The old ways that people like to paint a rosy picture of, the one with no birth control and sex directly leading to procreation, can be seen in all it's glory in modern Africa. In fact, the limit on human population growth throughout the vast majority of our history was a low average life expectancy and a high infant mortality rate. This is somehow better than a world in which sex doesn't always lead to babies? This is the world you strive for?

      No thanks. My girlfriend and I will keep using birth control until or unless we both decide we want to bring another human being into the world. To hell with the medeval trappings of the Vatican and their ideological compatriots.
      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    5. Re:Adopt an Embryo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ever since embracing my homosexuality instead of shunning it, I have received absolutely nothing but positive physical, emotional, and spiritual results. I love my boyfriend deeply, and he loves me, and we have both grown as wonderful, moral individuals thanks to our relationship. More so than the jackasses criticizing us, I'm 100% certain of that.

      That's such an absurd comparison to make to food. People discussing gay relationships have absolutely no clue about them whatsoever.

    6. Re:Adopt an Embryo by RsG · · Score: 1
      The human vagina (so I've read) is positioned to encourage people to have sexual intercourse facing each other, cementing the pair bond between them.
      Sounds like bad science to me. The human vagina is positioned where it is because humans are upright standing bipeds.

      The entire hip structure of a human adult is configured for walking on our hind legs with our spine perpendicular to the ground, and since the birth cannal runs through the hips in human women, there can be no other vaginal configuration. Remeber that the primary function is childbirth, not sex.

      If the opening were facing further forward or backward, then more complications would arise during birth (which is already very difficult for humans due to the size of our offspring's skulls at birth). Note that this configuration is unique to humans and hominids; other primates do not have the same hip configuration (as they do not walk upright all the time), and other bipedal species do not have the same upright stance as we do.

      Emotional bonding may be a consequence of this, but it is not a cause. Furthermore, it is quite possible to have sex with a women without being face to face - there are far more positions than just the missionary one, many of which are back to front.
      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    7. Re:Adopt an Embryo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, you've covered eating and sex, what about the pleasure derived from other things?

      Can I walk somewhere for the pleasure alone or do I have to have a destination?

      Can I look at something solely for the joy of seeing, such as a work of art, or do I have to only use my eyes to gather the minimum nutrition needed and to find a mate to procreate with?

      Can I play games, watch movies, and read books, or do I only get to use my brain to contemplate the glory of your god?

    8. Re:Adopt an Embryo by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I understand the philosophy, but it doesn't hold up. It's a rationalization of the belief that anything done purely for pleasure is sinful. That experiencing pleasure can only be justified if it satisfies some other survival need. I don't buy it. And I certainly don't buy that this is something that has only resulted from technology and is a recent phenomenon.

      Human societies have had non-essential-nourishment foods in the form of desserts for millenia. Sure there's a huge range of nutritional value among desserts, but many are not very nutritional at all (long before the invention of sugar substitutes) and were certainly not eaten for their nutritional value. Yet apparently the first time an ancient human hunter-gatherer, having already taken in their daily requirement of calories and proteins and looking at a surplus of food, decided to eat a handfull of berries because it tasted good we became sinners.

      Similarly, the 1930s were hardly the beginning of the separation of sex and procreation. Animal skin condoms and other forms of birth control existed for hundreds if not thousands of years before. I'd wager that the desire to separate sex from procreation has existed for as long as humans were aware that one can lead to the other, even if methods to do so didn't exist. Before that, our sex drive was driving us have sex without caring about procreation, so if having sex without intent of reproduction is a sin, then we have always been sinners.

      Similarly, the attempt to repeat the pleasure of sex beyond the needs of procreation (birth control, gay lifestyle, etc) has generally bad results - physical, emotional, and spiritual.

      Which I don't see as supported at all -- for starters, what physical harm comes from . It has been shown that couples with more active sex lives have healthier relationships. Yet a couple with more children than they can afford is going to be miserable. What is healthier? A couple having sex without producing a child, or a couple having sex producing a child they don't want, and neglecting, abandoning, or just killing it (and don't think for a second that abortion is a modern phenomenon either)?

      Is there such a thing as too much sex, as sex that is in fact damaging physically, emotionally, and spiritually? Yes! Same with desserts -- there is such a thing as gluttony! But the mere act of engaging in eating or physical pleasure without survival of the species being the underlying goal is not necessarily in the same category. In fact, I'd say that in every instance in which sex could be considered harmful physically, emotionally, or spiritually, the use or non use of a prophylactic has zero impact whatsoever on that harm -- no, wait, check that, in reality using a prophylactic can prevent physical harm (STDs) and emotional harm (resulting from an unwanted pregnancy). The idea that a committed married couple making love suddenly becomes harmful through use of a condom makes no sense at all.

      There's a rational idea in there -- that eating too much of the wrong things is harmful, that entering into sexual relationships irresponsibly can be harmful -- but the extreme thinking that says that any non-nutritional food or sex without making a baby is immoral is actually more detrimental than it is helpful. Like most extreme thinking, it causes the very problems it claims to abhor.

      Okay, but I'll be perfectly honest, I just can't believe that God sees blowjobs as a sin.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    9. Re:Adopt an Embryo by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      That's a good point. Still (and my apologies if you, you know, really know what your talking about, because I don't) the, uh, angle could presumably still be different. Women are born with "backwards" uteruses, for example. So I would think that it wouldn't require a huge change for back-to-front to be easier than front-to-front. which is not the case in my opinion. In any case, I still think biology can easily motivate belief in a God who intends sex to be used to cement human relationships, as well as to reproduce.

    10. Re:Adopt an Embryo by RsG · · Score: 1

      Well, just to point out the obvious, humans (and primates more generally), aren't the only group that establishes pair bonding. Yet the vast majority of species that reproduce via sex mate back-to-front (obviously this only counts species that actually mate). If sex needed to be a certain way to cement relationships, then that particular way wouldn't be largely confined to humans.

      And the current configuration for human anatomy supports both back-to-front and front-to-front mating, so it can't be a question of one form of mating being more normal for humans than the other. We aren't constrained to one or the other.

      The particulars of human hip configuration and child birth are well known; we have far more problems with this than most live-birthing species. One of the evolutionary constraints humans face (in fact, one of the places where evolution has equipped us very poorly) is in bearing children. By being upright standing we're forced to have comparatively narrow hips, and due to our intelligence our heads are quite large at birth. Trying to fit a large skull through a narrow opening is not easy, for either the mother or the baby.

      To make birth easier, we've evolved along certain anatomical lines. Human infants are born smaller relative to the size of human adults than is the case with other primates, and take a relatively long time to reach maturity as a result. Infantile skulls are softer and not fully fused when they're born, allowing for a certain amount of compression. Women have wider hips than men, in order to make room for a child's skull during birth. All these things make human birth possible, but even then human females have a much harder time of it than females of most other mammalian species.

      The generally accepted explanation for these problems is that humans developed from a non-upright standing ancestor to our current stance in a relatively short time period, and we never fully adapted to standing upright. There are dozens of anatomic holdovers from an earlier aboreal form that get in the way of many aspects of human life, or else merely serve no useful function.

      All of this makes it difficult for me to believe that women would develop any sort of vaginal configuration for the purposes of mating that wasn't optimized for giving birth. Evolution would select for the best configuration suited to surving childbirth and producing children with larger brains.

      This doesn't mean that we don't also pair bond from mating front-to-front, it just means that the pair bonding is more of a bonus or side effect than anything else. Ie, it's a consequence, not a cause.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
  36. Re:War Protests by neonprimetime · · Score: 1

    most of those folks don't protest against wars and have no problem sending our young folks off to a dubious war.
    Where's their outrage over those lives?


    They have a voice? They can choose to be part of the military or not. Last I checked, there was no draft.

  37. Troll parent by ExE122 · · Score: 1
    On the other hand, I can imagine a whole lot of pro-choicers refusing to have these stem cells because no embryos were destroyed. They're utterly obsessed with aborting something, anything
    Really? You know many pro-choicers? You have accounts and statistics supporting your claim? I could've sworn they were fighting for the right to choose, not a systematic requirement that all pregnant women must abort. Obsessed with aborting? I've never met anyone, no matter how pro-choice, that I would ever sat that about. And I've also never met anyone who has had an abortion who says it was an easy thing to do.

    One side blames fetuses for all their problems and is obsessed with picking on the weak who can't fight back. The other side wants to save all babies and then let them fight for the remaining petty economic scraps or starve in the free market afterwards.
    Neither side does any of that. One side believes we have a right to choose wether or not you should be forced to bring a child into the world when you can't take care of them. The other believes that its not an ethical choice and you are supposed to spend your life doing the best you can to take care of your child. These aren't a bunch of evil people arguing over which one can outdo the other... they are expressing the views that they believe are the right thing to do. Both sides have legitimate arguments, and to dismiss them all as hypocrites is to be just as bad as any extremist.

    That's what makes this stem cell find so amazing... it offers a solution that can satisfy both sides. How often can a news headline say something like that?

    --
    "A man is asked if he is wise or not. He replies that he is otherwise" ~Mao Zedong
    --
    Capitalism: When it uses the carrot, it's called democracy. When it uses the stick, it's called fascism.
    1. Re:Troll parent by Vancorps · · Score: 1

      The biggest problem with this whole issue is that there are hypocrites on both sides. Much like the Isreali rest of the middle east bullshit. When both sides do wrong it becomes hard to hammer out the issue at hand.

      This is a remarkable advancement, personally I see nothing wrong with harvesting stem cells from fetuses that are going to be discarded anyways but this does allow them to collect stem cells on a much larger scale since any pregnant woman could potentially donate. That could help on a massive scale and I wonder if having a larger sample will reveal a lot more information about how stem cells work. Controlling the growth rate is quite difficult as I understand a lot of stem cells have a nasty habit of turning cancerous. It's always hard being on the edge of something which could potentially have a greater impact on modern medicine than penicillin. There are also a lot of cultural ramifications that need to be worked out.

      One thing is certain, cheers to these guys for this advancement. This is one advancement that does satisfy both sides without either one of them having comprimise. I only wish office politics worked out so well.

    2. Re:Troll parent by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      I could've sworn they were fighting for the right to choose, not a systematic requirement that all pregnant women must abort.

      Read the writings of Margaret Sanger, the creater of Planned Parenthood and the pro-choice movement, sometime. The whole idea was to encourage poor people to stop reproducing- eugenics.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    3. Re:Troll parent by isellmacs · · Score: 1

      Many people out there wouldn't be poor if they didn't have kids they couldn't afford. Not slamming people who can't afford kids (I certainly can't) but remarking that the quality of life for those people would be better if they had been able to use a contraceptive or have an abortion, and then have children 5-10 years later.

    4. Re:Troll parent by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      Many people out there wouldn't be poor if they didn't have kids they couldn't afford.

      And nobody would be poor if we'd just enact a living wage. Stop with the stupid 19th century amorphisms and give it some thought for once.

      Not slamming people who can't afford kids (I certainly can't) but remarking that the quality of life for those people would be better if they had been able to use a contraceptive or have an abortion, and then have children 5-10 years later.

      And who's holding the gun to their head forcing them to have sex or work at a dead end service industry job? You can afford whatever you can budget- and kids are cheap entertainment at the price!

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    5. Re:Troll parent by Julian352 · · Score: 1

      And nobody would be poor if we'd just enact a living wage.

      That is such a bad generationlization. There are large number of people in the world who make sufficient amount of money to live, but spend/save it badly. I have seen people spend thousands on gambling/drinking/drugs and completely destroy their own lives.

      The definition of a living wage is also extremely vague. Should a living wage include one person working, two people working, no kids, two kids? And why should one of those win over the others? Without defining the specific requirement, the idea of living wage is just a good slogan.

    6. Re:Troll parent by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1
      Read the writings of Margaret Sanger, the creater of Planned Parenthood and the pro-choice movement, sometime. The whole idea was to encourage poor people to stop reproducing- eugenics.

      That's a red herring; What does it matter what Margaret Sanger thinks?

    7. Re:Troll parent by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      That is such a bad generationlization.

      Exactly my point. It's no more true that you can help the poor with minimum or living wages than it's true that having children makes people poor. Both are stupid generalizations- I guess I should have used sarcasm tags.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    8. Re:Troll parent by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      What does it matter what Margaret Sanger thinks?

      One should always know the intent of a bandwagon before jumping on it. The entire pro-choice movement is tainted by the eugenics beliefs of the few.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  38. Re:mod parent underrated, lol by FerretFrottage · · Score: 1

    I hope I caught sarcism as your post reads very well. While there are extremists on both sides, being pro-choice is not pro-get-laid-and-go-kill-all-the-unborned as the extremists of the pro-life side would like people to believe. It means letting the women have the right to choose and one of those choices is to have the baby(ies). Regardless "Hypocrites, all of them." applies across the board.

    --
    "Look Lois, the two symbols of the Republican Party: an elephant, and a fat white guy who is threatened by change."
  39. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Mattintosh · · Score: 1

    Your friend is working in a daycare. The place catches fire. Do you save your friend or the cage full of screaming toddlers? Most pick the friend.

    Hint: cages weigh as much as freezers, and most people can't lift them. It's not hypocrisy, it's just efficient use of resources. You don't throw away your life AND your friend's life on a mission with a 99.9% chance of failure when you can save yourself and your friend with an equal chance of success. And I doubt most people would disagree that toddlers are people too. Of course, this ignores the fact that there may be enough time to save some or all of the toddlers/embryos before the fire reaches a critical point, or that it's possible that the freezers won't be harmed by the fire and there's no sense worrying about it anyway.

    In short, your illustration is very flawed.

  40. Isn't each part of the embryo a separate person? by 14erCleaner · · Score: 1
    From the article:

    Now a team at Advanced Cell Technology - a private company - has found that it is possible to create human stem cells using one or two cells from an early embryo, without doing any damage to the embryo.

    If you split cells off of an early embryo, aren't they also viable embryos in their own right? Isn't this what creates identical twins?

    I expect the Bush administration to object to this technique on the basis that each separate cell bundle from the embryo is an "individual".

    --
    Have you read my blog lately?
  41. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    So you guys are stepping up and adopting all the unwanted babies? And you're working to reduce the social/societal consequences on young unwed mothers who carry children to term?

    I'm pro-choice, but I do think there is a negative moral angle on abortion. I don't think any truly advanced society should have a place for abortion; education, contraception, and societal support for young mothers should completely remove the need for any such thing.

    But you know what? The same right wing that preaches so hard against abortion, also preaches against practical sex ed, available contraception for minors, and social services for unwed mothers...not to mention the moral stigma they attach to young unwed mothers.

    So don't talk about how you're adopting some of the babies who actually got born...That's the smallest part of what you need to be doing.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  42. Once again! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Once again Slashdot has posted an article that they know will bring about little or no scientific discussion and just be a bashfest. Good job guys, losing too many users to Digg?

    Whatever happened to the science around here?

  43. Re:War Protests by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    They can choose to be part of the military or not

    So, that's an excuse to send them off to be killed?

    "Oh well, they volunteered so their lives mean nothing."

    If anything, we should value their lives even more since they actually volunteered to serve their country and possibly die for it - even if they're doing it to pay for school. So, we should be very very careful how we use the gift that those folks have given this society.

    Oh yeah, how about coming up with your own opinions. I've heard that opinion you've expressed many times on AM radio talk shows. You have a brain, a sharp one, please use it. ;-) We need everyone to think for themselves these days.

  44. Bush won't change his mind by emil10001 · · Score: 1

    There are other methods of Stem Cell research that are not destructive or do not involve embryos which the president does not support. He does not support any form of Stem Cell research regaurdless of the method, even though some of his right-wing constituants are warming up to the idea. Unfortunatly, I don't think this will do anything to change his mind.

    Also, what is so wrong with doing Stem Cell research on discarded embryos anyways? The research would be putting them to good use instead of letting them go to waste.

    1. Re:Bush won't change his mind by amliebsch · · Score: 1

      He does not support any form of Stem Cell research regaurdless of the method

      You are either a liar or severely ignorant. See, e.g., Bush's support of umbilical-cord stem cell research.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    2. Re:Bush won't change his mind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, what is so wrong with doing Stem Cell research on discarded embryos anyways?

      Precisely for the reason that it would encourage more embryos to become "discarded", which is a really big thing that the "Pro-Life" group seems to be against. This news, if actually true, is a wonderful breakthrough, and just goes to show what you can accomplish when you are forced to get up off your backside and think about stuff. There are more of these situations out there, if only people had the right motivation not to be lazy.

  45. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hate to sound crude, but not outlawing fornication is the best option to reduce the demand abortions. I bet you'll think twice about screwing around if your could get your ass jailed for 10 years.

  46. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by OakDragon · · Score: 1

    It really is an "out there" example.

    Say the lab has my wife's frozen embryos stored there. Say maybe we have no chance of conceiving again. Sorry, "friend." :)

    Or again, say a night club is burning down (Great White venue*). I might save my friend even over several strangers. Maybe. It just all depends on finer circumstances.

    * What? Too soon?

  47. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by grub · · Score: 1


    The embryos are in a cooler, you can fit hundreds in one.

    Day care? I'd save my friend and let the kids burn to a crisp, I never argued otherwise. What's your point?

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  48. Re:This won't change his mind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I never really got this ambiguity. Is the President an idiot or an evil genius? You can't have it both ways. Either Bush honestly has "misguided" beliefs or Bush is a genius who is a master at manipulating the public. Which is it? You can't choose the one that's more convenient when it suits your purpose.

  49. Re:War Protests by oyenstikker · · Score: 2, Informative

    There are a lot of us crazy Christian conservatives who are against:
    1) abortion
    2) IVF
    3) death penalty
    4) war
    5) George W. Bush
    6) the Republican Party, which has gone off the deep end

    There just don't seem to be enough of us to rival the rest of the voting population.

    --
    The masses are the crack whores of religion.
  50. Brilliant! by Zenaku · · Score: 1
    This is great news! At last, we can get stem cells from embryos without harming them, allowing them to remain healthy and viable right up to the moment they hit the medical waste incinerator that they were destined for anyway!

    Seriously, as it stands today these leftover embryos are being discarded and destroyed, and the President's policy says, hey, I'm not going to get in the way of that, but for the love of God, don't try to get any medical benefit from them first! Because it's wrong to destroy an embryo for medical research, but just fine to destroy one for no benefit whatsoever.

    So now we've been reduced to investing our research dollars in finding a way to make sure that they aren't harmed until after we take the cells, just to appease people who can't grasp basic logic?

    --
    If fate makes you a motorcycle, you become a motorcycle.
    1. Re:Brilliant! by $uperjay · · Score: 1

      Kant would say that it's wrong to treat people as mere objects. If you believe that a fetus is a person, and you follow Kant's reasoning, you would consider it wrong to treat a fetus as a mere object, even if it's destined for a futile death.

      </devilsadvocate>

  51. I am pro-life, here what I have to say by Bryansix · · Score: 1
    First of all I do object to embryonic stem cell research when an embryo is destroyed. I know the first argument to such a position and in fact it is quoted in the article.
    "I am also unconvinced by the ethical arguments. Spare IVF embryos used to derive stem cell lines would have been destroyed anyway."
    The problem that people do not understand derives itself from the form of IVF used and has existed as a moral and ethical dilemna way before stem cell research was popular. Since IVF is a relatively new procedure (in the last 20-30 years) there is not much experience or knowledge about what works and what doesn't. In the beginning stage of clinics offering IVF they had to fertalize many embryos and try to implant all of the "healthy looking" ones. Most of the time this resulted in pregnancy but sometimes it did not. Nowadays the procedure is more refined and more embryos take hold. This means sometimes twins or triplets will be born. When IVF worked, the remaining embryos were discarded or sold to private research companies. Now the state of California also uses these embryos.

    But these embryos were alive and their lives were taken because of inefficient IVF procedures. That is, they were murdered for the sake of efficiency of resource usage and science. So how can IVF be changed to be acceptable? One method is to fertalize one embryo and implant one embryo at a time. Another method would be to adopt out any remaining embryos that were not used in the implantation part of the IVF procedure. That would mean each life would get a chance to live

    So does the this new breakthrough solve anything?
    Well that all depends on the facts.
    Now a team at Advanced Cell Technology - a private company - has found that it is possible to create human stem cells using one or two cells from an early embryo, without doing any damage to the embryo.
    If this is true then it is a great breakthrough. There are some more ethical questions but generally I would feel comfortable if the government sponsored this kind of research.
    "We have shown that we can not only generate stem cells without destroying the embryo, but that the remaining embryo also has the potential to go to on create a healthy blastocyst" said Dr Lanza, whose team's research is published in Nature.
    This last quote makes it seem like it is possible that the procedure could cause harm to the embryo. If that is the case then this is going to face a lot more scrutiny in the court of public opinion.
    1. Re:I am pro-life, here what I have to say by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      But these embryos were alive and their lives were taken because of inefficient IVF procedures. That is, they were murdered for the sake of efficiency of resource usage and science.

      I disagree with your definitions of 'alive' and 'murdered'.

  52. Oh come on... by VitrosChemistryAnaly · · Score: 1

    Harming the Embryo is half the fun of Stem Cell Research!

    --
    "It's a tarp!" -- Dyslexic Admiral Ackbar
  53. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I call bullshit. You clearly have never had a kid, because the absolute first instinct is to go for the kids. Rationality never even enters into the picture.

    And frankly, it's much easier to carry two kids than one adult.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  54. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hasn't stopped me.

    --John Mark Karr

  55. Re:Isn't each part of the embryo a separate person by Loc_Dawg · · Score: 1

    No, it's more like pulling the tail off a lizard. The embryo will correct itself by growing back the missing cells.

    --
    _signature creation failed.
  56. Re:Isn't each part of the embryo a separate person by DamnStupidElf · · Score: 1

    I expect the Bush administration to object to this technique on the basis that each separate cell bundle from the embryo is an "individual".

    In the interest of science: Ssshhhhhh!

  57. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Kesch · · Score: 1
    I bet you'll think twice about screwing


    Exactely, the first thought would be from my first brain which be along the lines of "Man, this is kinda of illegal and stuff"

    The second thought would come from my other brain saying "OVERRULED!"
    --
    If this signature is witty enough, maybe somebody will like me.
  58. Re:Isn't each part of the embryo a separate person by Jsprat23 · · Score: 1

    Then we're killing thousands of ourselves everyday. Won't someone think of the skin cells?!?

  59. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Reasonable idea, but the deterent wouldn't work. When you consider the jails are filled with rapists who have less justification for their act than two consenting (but unmarried adults), you might soon find the jails filled with hippies and frat/sorrority members.

    (yes, generalization about frat boys and sorrority girls)

  60. And yet, we need people like Bush by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The very idea that a purely scientific world, unchecked by philosophical thought,(let alone religious), could exist raises a huge red flag to me. The way I see it, religion and science play to a sort of balance of powers situation, and that's the way it's always been.

    Religion and science CAN co-exist. Some religions moreso than others, that's clearly obvious, and the level of peaceful co-existance will vary from scientific field to scientific field. And, I would argue, that there is a great benefit that comes from those who question science from outside the scientific perspective. Not always, and great advances may be held back by ignorance, but I would say that sometimes, it is a good thing.

    Take this breakthrough, for example. Religious truth aside, we managed to preserve the embryo without permanently damaging it or destroying it. Now, this probably won't matter when it comes to the ones that are frozen and slated for destruction anyhow, as people have noted -- they'll still be gone at the end of the day. But what, I might ask, if even one embryo (in the future) is implanted and grows into something? We came up with something better. A less invasive method that wouldn't have happened had there not been some questioning of the original method.

    I realize, of course, that my point there may be a minor one, and a grasp at a straw. That's fine. But consider the danger of many like-minded individuals. While they have a great deal of potential, and may do something very well, they don't tend to see the other side of the coin. It is a "group think" problem. Were it that I had time, I would come up with more examples, but I think the point can lead you, the reader, to your own challenging quesitons.

    Religion and science provide much needed diversity to our way of thought. They cannot do so, however, if they don't interact and don't have the ability to interact and encourage (or discourage) each other.

    1. Re:And yet, we need people like Bush by plunge · · Score: 1

      "Take this breakthrough, for example. Religious truth aside, we managed to preserve the embryo without permanently damaging it or destroying it."

      The problem was that there were actually some nutcases who think that's important in the first place.

      "Now, this probably won't matter when it comes to the ones that are frozen and slated for destruction anyhow, as people have noted -- they'll still be gone at the end of the day. But what, I might ask, if even one embryo (in the future) is implanted and grows into something? We came up with something better."

      How so? There are the same number of available wombs in the world, ready to bring people to term. Generally, what is good is when this happens to loving expectant parents. The fact that we stuffed all these spare embryos in some of them is not any more "good" than if they had sex the normal way. The same number of people are born. So what?

      It's ETHICS and MORALITY which need to check our behavior. But they should not be twisted by one particular popular fantastical imaginary scenarios over all the other possible crazy scenarios for which their is no proof. Using faith in ethical judgements is not only dishonest, it's dangerous. Choosing to point a gun at you and pulling the trigger because I have a strong faith that nothing bad can happen is not laudable: it's irresponsible and negligent.

  61. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by corbettw · · Score: 1

    I might save my friend even over several strangers. Maybe. It just all depends on finer circumstances.

    And what those strangers look like...chicks dig guys who jump through flaming debris to save them.

    --
    God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
  62. Soulitude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can imagine some of the objections:

    Those cells you harvested could themselves become a viable fetus, and you're destroying them. So you're still killing babies. That's a soul being denied life!

    We don't harvest enough cells for them to become viable, while preserving the viability of the source. We take even less than would be taken by the development of a twin.

    And if a fetus has one soul, and you induce it to produce twins, where did the second soul come from? Do you claim identical twins are lesser people because they each only have half a soul, or that a new soul is created at the moment of separation? Does it destroy a soul by viably rejoining them so that they become a single organism?

    So you're pulling cells off a blastocyst, then you're pulling off a sizeable percentage of that baby. If you did that same percentage to a birthed child you'd be dismembering it. And since at this stage they can regenerate the cells, you can do this repeatedly, so you're practically torturing these babies!

    There's no nervous system developed at the stage where we harvest. It's even less painful than surgery under anesthetic as there can be no pain, yet even pediatric surgeons aren't being charged for "torture" of children.

    And besides, I thought we approved of torture these days, even of innocents who only might have needed information.

  63. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Lord+Prox · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It is always amazing that given the incentive, science always finds a way to work through the requirements if the application is worth working on.

    It is also amazing that we make them work through the requirements at all. It would also be amazing what they could have done if their work had not been bureaucraticly retarded for how many years now? At least they did manage to do it. Give thanks.



    Bless Dr Lanza

  64. Bush is against what? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    objects to the fact that you would be sacrificing one life to save another

    Err we are kidding here right? Isn't this the philosophy behind the war on terror? Kill people in other countries to "prevent" Americans being killed.

    1. Re:Bush is against what? by WarpSnotTheDark · · Score: 1

      I am sure they are kidding, but it doesn't really matter. Your statement has sparked a need within my very core to respond. I'm not directing this at you "Anonymous Coward", rather, at anyone reading these posts. "the philosophy behind the war on terror" is not "Kill people in other countries to "prevent" Americans being killed". The philosophy behind the "war on terror" would be more accurately summarized as forcing our politics (political system) into places where we have been unable to enforce "our" religion.

      This whole argument clearly boils down to religion. However, those religious types who believe that "god" put plants and animals on the planet so that we could eat them should really try to understand the big picture: We're all animals, and all plants are alive as well. The bacteria and parasitic organisms which depend on humans to survive, and subsequently cause a myriad of health problems, are alive and reproduce as well - your own immune system is fighting to keep them in check daily. By the time you've come home from work or school at the end of a hard day, how many lives have been cut short simply as a result of your own selfish need for survival. If "god" created those life forms for you to consume and/or live with you in harmony as you feel fit to freely define, how do you know he didn't create embryos for you to experiment with? You don't, and the reason you don't know is because "god" hasn't told you anything at all...ever - and never will. If you're speaking with "god" on a regular basis, ask him/her/it that for me, then get yourself checked out because the voices in your head have obviously driven you completely mad.

      The meaning of life is to live. The meaning of death can be surmised by contributions made by that life form whether during its life or as a result of its death. If the embryo, which eventually developed into my extremely attractive body, could have led to a cure for cancer 30 years ago - I'd have signed the dotted line were I to have had the mental faculty and opposable thumbs to do so. I don't wish to die or to have never existed, but if that had been the case - I wouldn't know about it right now, would I?

      Go to a 3rd-world country and eat at a McDonalds and then tell me about how "sacred" life is. The only thing sacred in this world is money and there will be no major advances coming out of stem cell research because there is more profit to be made from the sick and dying than from the healthy.

  65. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by necro81 · · Score: 1
    Another take on it:

    Right Wing Right-to-Life Zealot: "Gosh! What do you do with the embryo's when you're done?"
    Lab Tech 1: Put it right back in the freezer with the hundreds of other fertilized embryos that we got from the fertility clinic down the street. I'm sure you know that, by and large, once their customers successfully have a kid, they either keep them on ice indefinitely or simply throw them out away after a few years?

    Right Wing Right-to-Life Zealot: What? No! That's murd... [remembers own kid conceived in a petri dish]. Oh never mind.
  66. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by dan828 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Nice rhetoric, but the truth is, most of the people that are anti-abortion do support groups (with their $$$ and time) that aide young unwed mothers, providing health care and adoption services if needed. They get almost no press for it because, surprise surprise, the good that people do almost never gets covered-- the press prefers mean and nasty to helpful and compasionet.
    I'm agnostic and pro-choice, but I have friends that are christian and pro-life, and they, more than anyone else I've seen in the issue, put their money where there mouth is and actually try to help people. And adopting unwanted children that would otherwise grow up in foster care, is far from a small thing. And tell me, have you done anything as selfless as that?

  67. The soul resolves the paradox of seperation by spun · · Score: 1

    The soul, as a philosophical concept, was not primarily developed as a pacifier of the fear of mortality, I believe. It was developed to address the issue of good, evil, and karma. People got caught up in their mental models and started believing that their mental model of themselves was who they really were. That self-model is cut off from the universe, seperate, so people began to see themselves as seperate.

    If everything is one, and nothing is seperate, there is no need to place blame, no need for judgement, no need for the concept of good and evil. If the self is seperate, it raises the paradox of good and evil. In a just universe, why do good deeds go unrewarded and bad deeds unpunished? We have one of three choices: we accept that seperation is an illusion, we accept that the universe is unjust, or we create a kind of clearinghouse of judgement: the soul. As the first option is unacceptable to a person caught in their mental model (it feels like death!), and the second is unacceptable because our genetics cause most of us to desire and expect a just world (it's part of what makes us great cooperators) we are left with the third option.

    The soul accumulates judgement so that things may be evened out. If not in this lifetime, then in the next, either through the mechanism of impartial karma or through a divine Judge. Justice prevails. This, to me, is the primary purpose of the concept of the soul.

    As for me, I prefer to stare into the void with my eyes wide open.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    1. Re:The soul resolves the paradox of seperation by rts008 · · Score: 1

      What an interesting concept. This may or may not go against mine, but I find it highly worthy of further thought. Thanks!

      I always figured the concept of soul was formulated in our arrogance to further seperate us from the "animal world". I've seen too many references that either blatantly seperate humans from animals, or many more that imply the seperation. I don't subscribe to the seperation myself, as we are mammals, thus part of the animal world.

        When I may express this in conversation, I usually get some response along the lines of "they (animals) don't have souls, but humans do." How do they know this- is the concept of soul really valid, or just made up to enable us to "rise above the dumb animal" mentality?

      I mostly blame religion for this attempted discrimination, as I don't see any way in the near future to actually refute the hypothesis that "dumb animals" have no soul, or the means to prove that humans DO have a soul- to me, it's all conjecture, speculation, and FUD.

      The importance of having a soul or not seems to tie into religion too much for me to even worry about it, maybe I will find out for sure when I die, maybe not- not wanting to cross that bridge just yet.

      --
      Down With Slashdot BETA!!! I've been around the corner and seen the oliphant; you can only abuse me from your perspecti
    2. Re:The soul resolves the paradox of seperation by FuzzyDaddy · · Score: 1
      The soul accumulates judgement so that things may be evened out. If not in this lifetime, then in the next, either through the mechanism of impartial karma or through a divine Judge. Justice prevails. This, to me, is the primary purpose of the concept of the soul.

      A reading of the Bible (I'm Jewish, that's the Old Testament to Christians) doesn't reveal any mention of an afterlife or souls - at least not the first five books. One theory I've heard is just as you describe it - that the concept of an afterlife was deduced by early thinkers from the premise that there must be justice in the world, and it explains why sometimes good people suffer and evil people prosper. I am not nearlty knowledgable to be sure if this is true, perhaps there are some talmudic scholars out there?

      I personally take the view that whether or not there is an afterlife doesn't affect how I should act, so it's not something to worry about too much.

      --
      It's not wasting time, I'm educating myself.
    3. Re:The soul resolves the paradox of seperation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you relate "karma" to Hinduism and not Buddhism, because the Buddha taught that there is no permanent entity (i.e. "soul").

  68. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1
    I don't think any truly advanced society should have a place for abortion; education, contraception, and societal support for young mothers should completely remove the need for any such thing.

    Unless you were being sarcastic, there are other valid reasons for abortion, like medical -- for either the mother or child to be or, arguably, cases of rape, incest, etc...

    --
    It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
  69. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Surt · · Score: 1

    Which is all not to mention victims of rape and incest. Do they get the abortions or not?

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  70. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Mattintosh · · Score: 1

    The kids are in a cage. You either carry them all + a huge chunk of steel, or you leave with none. It's something to contain them like the freezer does for the embryos. Note that embryos can't run, whereas kids could... if they weren't in a cage.

  71. Re:War Protests by Dorothy+86 · · Score: 1
    What about those that are joining the military currently? Surely they aren't ignorant about the current war and are joining knowing that they'll most likely be sent over...

    Should we be outraged about that, too?

  72. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Mattintosh · · Score: 1

    The point is that the kids in that daycare are very much alive at the time you allow their death, and yet the decision you claim you would make hasn't changed. It invalidates your argument that your friend is worth more because embryos are "not real people". You'd make the same decision even if the alternative is a group of real people.

  73. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 1

    I'll have you know that I plan on, and know many "right wing right-to-life zealot's" that plan on, or already have, adopted.

    Are you adopting a real macroscopic kid who needs parents, or a clump of frozen cells?

  74. You what? by JoshDM · · Score: 2, Funny

    Anonymous Coward wrote: I flush viable human genetic material away all the time.

    There is such a thing as TOO MUCH INFORMATION.

  75. Isn't each part of the embryo a separate person-NO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you're equating skin cells with embryonic cells? What do they teach you in school?

  76. Re:Isn't each part of the embryo a separate person by tjw · · Score: 1
    If you split cells off of an early embryo, aren't they also viable embryos in their own right? Isn't this what creates identical twins?
    The whole pro-life religious argument is that fertilization creates a soul. By this argument, all identical siblings are either possess only a fraction of a soul or God has given the additonal natural clones a bonus soul. The latter is the acceptable choice since sharing souls doesn't fit the afterlife scenario very well. Human interference is the key factor (e.g. taking a drug that makes your uterus reject the fertilized egg is killing souls). Therefore if a human creates identical clones they have no souls and therefore can be destroyed without eternal damnation. QED.
    --

    XJS*C4JDBQADN1.NSBN3*2IDNEN*GTUBE-STANDARD-ANTI-UB E-TEST-EMAIL*C.34X
  77. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    American Right to Life, you're correct. Roman Catholic Seamless Garment of Life, well, that's a different animal.

    Ok, so this actually does address the Pope's main concern, and reduces stem cell donation to no different than kidney donation. Thus, as a Roman Catholic, I'm ethically satisfied. But the science half is still dissatisfied: What, exactly, does this get us? As we've been arguing all along, unless by some chance you have an exact DNA, RNA, and Mitochondrial match with a living human being who has a disease, the embryonic stem cell is likely to turn into tissue rejection upon growing & implantation. Where Adult Stem Cells don't have that problem. And now that we've even got brain neuron regeneration from adult brain stem cells in the pipeline, exactly what is this discovery good for again?

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  78. Re:War Protests by Dorothy+86 · · Score: 1

    hear hear.

  79. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "But you know what? The same right wing that preaches so hard against abortion, also preaches against practical sex ed, available contraception for minors, and social services for unwed mothers...not to mention the moral stigma they attach to young unwed mothers."

    Ok.... here's practical sex ed.: Don't want a child? Don't have sex. Drive that home and the rest takes care of itself and there will much less financial burden and less need for the hand wringing of those who seem to be unable to make the connection between increased promiscuity and increased in unplnned birth rate growth.

    Yeah, that takes all the fun out things but who said personal responsibility was about fun?

  80. Skin Grafts by pete-classic · · Score: 1

    Can we start harvesting skin grafts from coma patients now too?

    This might (or might not, depending on risk) eliminate the "murder" question, but it certainly isn't a morally unambiguous practice.

    -Peter

    PS: I'm an athiest.

    1. Re:Skin Grafts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I'm an athiest."

      Nah... you just think you are

    2. Re:Skin Grafts by pete-classic · · Score: 1

      What is there to being an atheist besides thinking one's self an atheist?

      -Peter

    3. Re:Skin Grafts by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1
      What is there to being an atheist besides thinking one's self an atheist?
      Well, I had to fill out a form, sort of like a dog license. Then there are the weekly meetings, and membership dues. A subscription to Skeptical Inquirer and Free Inquiry clinches the deal!
      --
      Man, you really need that seminar!
    4. Re:Skin Grafts by geekoid · · Score: 1

      freedom of the mind.
      freedom from fear.
      Rational thought.

      just to name a few.

      And no, believing in invisible friends do not make you more moral or ethical.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:Skin Grafts by pete-classic · · Score: 1
      freedom of the mind


      Are you suggesting that my mind isn't free because I don't fall in, lock-step, with what atheists are supposed to believe? In a way, I hope that is what you are saying, because it would be so deliciously ironic.

      And no, believing in invisible friends do not make you more moral or ethical.


      Um, did you miss the bit about me being an atheist?

      -Peter
  81. Off topic, but... by Cynonamous+Anoward · · Score: 1

    this gives me an idea...Someone should start a news show that is ONLY allowed to report on GOOD things that have happened. Peace accords, people helping each other, non-controversial life-saving medical breakthroughs. Happy nice things. I wonder if anyone would watch the show. Is is the news that is pushing bad events, or does the news show bad things because that's the only time all of us hypocrits watch the news?

    --
    "The GPL is viral by design, like any good religion."
    1. Re:Off topic, but... by dan828 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      happynews.com

    2. Re:Off topic, but... by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

      the big problem is that old chestnut about headlines
      [humungo font]IF IT BLEEDS IT LEADS [/humungo font]

      Blade gets more hits than Mother Terresa ie
      Blade goes and ashes 200 Pure Bloods Mother Teresa goes and feeds 200,000 children (hand wave neither will actually do anything since both are currently noncorpreal)

      Balde will be on the front page (with bonus points if he ashes the building)
      MT might be in the paper somewhere maybe

      --
      Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
  82. Takeing a little time to understnad by DarkOx · · Score: 1

    I was very much against embryonic stem cell research for ethical reasons. I still have real concerns over then entire set of processes around artifical conception and such but this is great news. These cells do have the potential to be of great help to some people. I think its wonderful that we might now know how to get them without having to do serious harm to someone else.

    That said this is a clear case where more caution should have been observed. In the scheme of things this discovery did not take long to come about at all. Had we waited to better understand we might have avoided doing a great deal of harm and at the same time only lost a decade or so advanceing other areas of the science.

    Lots of folks like me get dismissed here on Slashdot as fundies or luddites which is very unfair. I and those like me are as excited and interested in new advances as anyone here we just want to take time to look around were we are before plodding blindly forward in a mad rush to some unkown ends.

    --
    Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
  83. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What part of "pro-choice" was unclear to you? I'm not in the business of telling anyone what to do with their body. I think abortions have a negative moral component, but I think a lot of things have a negative moral component, and I'm generally not in favor of frivolous laws governing behavior that is not detrimental to society.

    And, for the record, screaming "Rape and Incest" in a discussion about abortion, is like screaming "Nazis" whenever you're talking about war. You're not adding anything to the discussion.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  84. Heathy Debate by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Insightful

    the grandparent poster's parody script (which was quite funny IMO)

    Actually it was meant to explore the issue and it has fostered a debate of sorts. The problem, from where I live, is a community crammed with children where social programs have been slashed, education is underfunded and the cost of living is very high. People who do insist upon populating the earth and saving every embryo need to do more than just adopt, they need to do ensure society has a place for them and has the necessary services in place, otherwise they will be debating where the build the next prison to house them as adults.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Heathy Debate by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 2, Insightful

      People who do insist upon populating the earth and saving every embryo need to do more than just adopt, they need to do ensure society has a place for them and has the necessary services in place, otherwise they will be debating where the build the next prison to house them as adults.

      I take it you read "Freakonomics?"

  85. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No they don't want to give homes to the 3-16 year olds who really need them, they want their own baby. They will spend untold tens of thousands of dollars and extensive medical procedures to have the child that God does not intend them to have, and will begrudgingly admit after extensive failures that they will adopt and infant, but most will not consider the tens of thousands of non-infant children in temporary foster care. They also buy purebred dogs and cats instead of visiting the local shelter. Oh, and they're pretty likely to vote against any long term public assistance to help single mothers raise children.

    Hey while I'm at it, bashing the right, I might as well say it: if you want to defend marraige, you should outlaw divorce. Once the divorce rate of heterosexual couples drops to zero, then you can deny gays the right to marry.

  86. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Gospodin · · Score: 1
    And you're working to reduce the social/societal consequences on young unwed mothers who carry children to term?

    I don't really want to step into this debate, but just as an aside: It's not inconsistent to disapprove of abortion and to disapprove of out-of-wedlock childbirth. Reducing the consequences of the latter would not be a priority for people who held both beliefs, since such a reduction would reduce the disincentives to out-of-wedlock childbirth.

    I will grant you that there is some tension between the two beliefs, since an unmarried woman who becomes pregnant must do something that the hypothetical right-winger disapproves of. In this case I believe any true right-to-lifer would opt for the birth.

    (Note that the statements above do not necessarily represent my own beliefs; I'm just stating the beliefs of the right-to-lifers as I understand them.)

    --
    ...following the principles of Heisenburger's Uncertain Cat...
  87. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    So you guys are stepping up and adopting all the unwanted babies? And you're working to reduce the social/societal consequences on young unwed mothers who carry children to term?

    There are lots of us who are. However, I'd point out:

    I'm pro-choice, but I do think there is a negative moral angle on abortion. I don't think any truly advanced society should have a place for abortion; education, contraception, and societal support for young mothers should completely remove the need for any such thing.

    There are two situations where abortion would still be neccessary, in any caring society: Physical health of the mother (abortion, for instance, remains the *only* treatment available for ectopic pregnancy), and mental health of the mother (where, due to incest, rape, or mental retardation the mother is simply unable to do what it takes to carry a child to term). Maybe someday prenatal adoption will replaces even these two situations- but not yet, we're simply not that advanced medically.

    But you know what? The same right wing that preaches so hard against abortion, also preaches against practical sex ed, available contraception for minors, and social services for unwed mothers...not to mention the moral stigma they attach to young unwed mothers.

    Why would you need contraception if you had good sex ed and UDHR Article 26 rights for women and children? That's the sticking point for me. After all, the best birth control I know of is Abstinence- this from the father of a three year old that we made the mistake of not introducing to the crib before 3 months. We want another one of our own- but may end up adopting merely because sex becomes impossible if the little monkey wakes up and decides riding on your back is a fun idea.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  88. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Gogo0 · · Score: 1, Informative

    Its a self-imposed "requirement" that they met simply to recieve federal funding.
    Evil, malevolant Bush never decreed from his mountain that harvesting stem cells from embryos were banned, or sent you to prison, or damned your soul to eternal torment. There is simply no federal funding on the stem cell research when harvested from an embryo.
    Scientists actually made new discoveries and made their methods more efficient because of the legislation! Imagine if there were restrictions placed on oil research back when it was first discovered as a fuel source. Either people would have researched other solutions or private investors would have furthered the original research.

    Science doesnt come to a complete halt when the US government decides not to pay for it.

  89. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by thesandtiger · · Score: 1

    It is also amazing that we make them work through the requirements at all. It would also be amazing what they could have done if their work had not been bureaucraticly retarded for how many years now? At least they did manage to do it. Give thanks.

    This was NOT a matter of bureaucrats thwarting research with red-tape and bullshit forms to fill out. This WAS a case of a significant number of people voicing moral objections to what many of them considered wholesale murder.

    Whether or not one agrees with those objections (I, personally do not, but I can understand them), surely examining the morality and ethics of aresearch technique before proceeding blithely ahead is a good thing?

    While I certainly don't think stem cell researchers are murderers or monsters, there ARE a significant number of people who do believe that certain kinds of stem-cell research are as bad, or worse, than what Josef Mengele did back in WW2.

    In this case, the objections aren't to the research itself, it was to a way that the research was being performed, and a workable solution that addresses the needs and desires of all sides was found. If people opposed to this research previously on the ground that it "kills babies" *STILL* bitch and moan, NOW we can dismiss them as zealots and idiots who're retarding progress for nothing more than some stupid and inconsistent belief system.

    --
    Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
  90. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Nice rhetoric, but church-funded social services are not the answer, they are part of the problem.

    This is an area where secular services are needed...We know the churches views on contraception ("Abstinence is good enough for anyone"), sex education ("Don't have sex until you're married, and don't enjoy it or you'll go to hell"), and on adoption ("Even though you're a slut and a whore for having this baby, we'll be willing to take it away from you and raise it to be the sort of kid that you're not").

    Frankly, what this issue needs more than anything else is for the goddamn moralists to take a step back. This is a practical problem: women are getting pregant who don't want to be pregnant. There are practical solutions: help women not to get pregnant unless they want to be pregnant. This means education, and healthcare, and a whole bunch of things that the chruch cannot and will not provide.

    If we provide these things, the numbers of abortions will decline, and isn't that the fricking point?

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  91. Bush isn't so much against taking life by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So much as he's against anyone with an IQ over 50. They make him feel stupid I suspect. Tragically, it's a state of mind for him.

    His administration has managed to make SCIENCE a dirty word, something I hoped never to see in my lifetime. Science is the evil ogre, until they need their lives saved, then they don't mind the research that went into it, to they? As soon as they are well however, back to the same old routine.

    Science and reason aren't incompatible with religion, only with lunacy, a brand of religion practiced here in the states, and in most religious states.

  92. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Surt · · Score: 1

    Frankly I just thought it was rather convenient ignoring the strongest claims on abortion when discussing how a civilized society could do without them. If you want to try to make a case that they're immoral in general, don't go after the weakest cases.

    Here's a hierarchy of abortions (I think most people will agree with this, at least roughly):

    Most moral:

    Incest
    Rape of a minor
    Rape
    Life of the mother
    Long term Health of the mother
    Short term Health of the mother
    Life threatening birth defects
    Misery causing birth defects
    ------ Your proposal stops here, at best
    Early Reproductive Control
    Late Reproductive Control
    Enjoys killing fetuses

    As you can see, you really haven't covered much ground, morally.

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  93. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by dhasenan · · Score: 1

    A truly advanced society would have eliminated rape and achieved a high enough standard of medicine to eliminate the need for medical abortions.

    Societal support might go a ways toward eliminating rape, and contraceptives could be supplied to prevent pregnancies in such emergencies. Incest...well, that's a matter of choice.

  94. Re:War Protests by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    25% plurality, if you could get all Catholics to vote the same way- which is why the Constitution Party was created.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  95. Do souls really exist? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am agnostic, therefore I don't believe in a "soul". If I had the option to have a clone because lets say my heart or liver is bad, I think I should have that FREEDOM. The beliefs of those in office should not be forced onto the rest of us. I thought church and state were supposed to be separate... I guess as long as we have a dictator in office common sense is a thing of the past.

  96. Still likely to be frowned upon. by BigGar' · · Score: 1

    A few things:
        1) How many cells can you harvest before harming the embryo?
              a. What's the margin of error?
              b. Risk of overharvesting.
              c. Likelyhood that all harvestors will use the most conservative approach.
                    The possibilty of risking even one embryo is cause to abort the whole thing.
        2) Getting tools close enough to an embyro to harvest stem cells sounds inherently dangerous.
        3) No amount of safety will satisfy some as they're just against the whole concept.
        4) ..... many others.

    --


    Shop smart, Shop S-Mart.
    1. Re:Still likely to be frowned upon. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I heard a guy talk about it on NPR. The procedure of taking a cell from the embryo is already being done in some cases to test for some deceases. What the guy was saying they could do is after taking the cell for testing, they wait a couple hours and if the cell splits harvest one and send the other for testing (original purpose). All this assumes parents permission ofcourse.

  97. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by grub · · Score: 1

    It doesn't invalidate my claim at all. I was referring to the RightToLife kooks who say all embryos are people. They're the ones who'd leave the cooler of hundreds of "kids" to "die"

    --
    Trolling is a art,
  98. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by MadUndergrad · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What part of "practical" do you not understand? You'll never be able to keep everyone who doesn't want a child right away from having sex. The closest you can get involves a lot of repression, social stigmas and a host of other side-effects. That's where the whole practical thing comes into play. It is IMpractical to try to force behavior onto people when it goes against one of their most fundamental drives. Witness Catholic schoolgirls and the failure of abstinence-only sex ed.

  99. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by dhasenan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    There are other means that are much more effective. Supposedly fifty percent of teenagers who take an abstinence vow have sex within the subsequent year.

    The choice isn't between pregnancy and abstinence. It's between pregnancy, spending a bit of money on contraceptives, and abstinence. But if people don't know where to get contraceptives, they will not have the third option.

    So now it's the teenage "live-forever-no-consequences" instinct against the prohibitions instilled by their parents, who quite obviously had sex. How do you expect it to turn out? And do you want one mistake to dominate a person's whole life? Or even simply derail it for a year? Because you don't want people to wear a piece of rubber?

  100. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by thesandtiger · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Right. Cause screaming "ABSTAIN! ABSTAIN!" has worked OH so well so far.

    How about a realistic approach? How about telling kids "Abstinence is the only 100% effective way to prevent pregnancy and STDs, and it'd be great if you practiced it. However, that's probably unrealistic, and so here are some ways to protect yourself if you do choose to have sex."

    Because, you know, many of them WILL choose to. And which would you rather have? Pregnant teenagers with untreated STDs because they don't know fuck-all about protection and are too ashamed to go and get treatment when they get sick, or teenagers who're at least armed with the information to make an informed choice, and who might avoid some heartace (or worse)?

    Abstinence is great, but teaching abstinence only does NOT work.

    --
    Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
  101. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by ArmyOfFun · · Score: 0, Troll
    Ok.... here's practical sex ed.: Don't want a child? Don't have sex.
    That's not education. People already know how to not have sex. Abstinence should be promoted, it should be made clear that abstinence is the only 100% way to avoid getting pregnant or an STD. That doesn't solve the problem that a sex drive is innate and not all people, despite all the indoctrination society can muster, will be able to supress or ignore that urge.

    So, given that some people will succumb to their natural desires at some point, what is the better choice, that people have knowledge and easy access to the tools to help mitigate or avoid the negative consequences or that people have none of those tools?
  102. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by lysergic.acid · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What is the negative moral angle? A truly advanced society shouldn't be basing its moral imperatives on rhetoric which doesn't distinguish between various stages of life, such as gamete/embryo/fetus/child (much less the various stages of embryonic development). This "negative angle" which you conceive of is merely the result of a group of ignorant fanatics attempting to put undue guilt on women who are faced with the already difficult choice of whether or not to fully carry a pregancy to term.

    The fact that pro-lifers often equivocate abortion to murdering children, and paint pro-choicers to be pro-abortion, or advocating abortion, should show that their argument is fundamentally flawed. If you concede that aborting a pregancy is morally wrong, then what of morning-after pills as a contraceptive option which prevents a pregnancy even after the egg has been fertilized? And what about masturbation? When you carry the logic further based on their false premises, you can come to all sorts of absurd conclusions. Accidents will always happen no matter how advanced a society is. And the fact is, having a child should be a planned out decision, and a woman should have the right to abort an unplanned pregnancy if she has no desire to bear a child.

    What is immoral is persecuting women who make a choice about what to do with their bodies realizing that bearing a child is a life-changing event that can't be undone. This persecution can be as extreme as blowing up abortion clinics, or it could be in the form of taking away access to contraceptive drugs, or it could even be passive persecution in the form of placing guilt on young women who have abortions or have ever considered having an abortion. This guilt leads a lot of women to make choices that are not in their best interest and create more social problems that arise from these poorly made decisions. Thus, calling abortion immoral has the same consequences as relating it to murder.

  103. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by dhasenan · · Score: 1

    When it gets its first doctorate.

  104. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by dan828 · · Score: 1

    Care to explain how, exactly, that church funded social services are "part of the problem"?

    Sure you get plenty of moralizing on both sides of the issue, but the stereotypes you've resorted to are pretty damned far from the truth of the situation. Demonizing people on one or the other side of a particular issue isn't particularly helpful. I'm not against any of the remedies you've suggested, but church funded groups can and do provide decent solutions for people that want them. Private charities are not the be-all end-all, and I'm certainly not suggesting that, but they do tend to spend their money a bit better than the government has EVER managed to do.

  105. How very clever by inviolet · · Score: 1
    Asked if he expected the advance to satisfy President Bush, Dr Lanza said: 'Well, as you know, the President objects to the fact that you would be sacrificing one life to save another, and in this instance there is no harm to the embryo.''

    Lanza just pulled off quite a clever little begging of the question. And for a good cause, too. :)

    To wit: We are nowhere near the point where the stem cells from one embryo can save one life. We are still in the research stage. But, if we can publicly circulate the idea that one embryo can be traded for one adult life, then the misguided resistance to stem-cell research will wither.

    --
    FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
  106. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by rossifer · · Score: 1
    Your friend is working in a daycare. The place catches fire. Do you save your friend or the cage full of screaming toddlers? Most pick the friend.
    Bullshit. The previous poster's statement was based on an actual study of hypothetical behavior. Your statement was pulled directly from your anal sphincter without leaving any time to dry.

    Rabid right-to-life advocates claim that all lives are equally valuable. In the theoretical universe of their minds, perhaps. In reality, they're not. People make judgements about differing value of life every day, and those judgements make sense to those of us who choose to use our rational minds to understand the world around us.

    Regards,
    Ross
  107. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

    Ok.... here's practical sex ed.: Don't want a child? Don't have sex.

    Here is why that isn't practical. First, this occurs with people who have not yet fully developed and are often incapable of making responsible, rational decisions. Second, this is fighting against the single, strongest instinctual drive hard-wired into our brains. Anyone who thinks copulation is a way for us to reproduce if fooling themselves. Copulation is how DNA retransmits itself and everything we think of as "us" including our consciousness, feelings, instincts, and body parts are just adaptations that have evolved to make that more likely. Anything you do to lessen that is simply the process weeding you out of the gene pool because you're defective.

  108. That too is misleading. by pavon · · Score: 1

    Clinton tried for years to open up stem-cell research using embryos from pregnancy clinics, but the Republican dominiated congress ammended or voted down any law he put forth. People are right to place the blame on the republicans (and religious right) for the lack of funding for stem-cell research. Putting it all on the current "head" of the party isn't exactly correct, but not completely off base.

    PS - sorry for using wikipedia as a reference, I'm at work and don't have time to look up a better one.

    1. Re:That too is misleading. by amabbi · · Score: 1
      Clinton tried for years to open up stem-cell research using embryos from pregnancy clinics, but the Republican dominiated congress ammended or voted down any law he put forth. People are right to place the blame on the republicans (and religious right) for the lack of funding for stem-cell research. Putting it all on the current "head" of the party isn't exactly correct, but not completely off base.

      Clinton signed into law the Dickey amendment. He could have vetoed the bill, or even decided not to sign it (which would have made it into law but would have at least shown that he disagreed with the premise). He did neither. In his subsequent 5+ years in office, he did nothing to reverse this.

      Whatever Clinton's feelings are now, or what he says now, is irrelevant. The irrefutable fact is that Bush opened up more opportunities for embryonic stem cell research than had existed when he entered office.

    2. Re:That too is misleading. by Lars+T. · · Score: 1

      So Clinton is evil for not vetoing a bill, but Bush proves he's for "open[ing] more opportunities for embryonic stem cell research" by vetoing a bill that would actually do so? Sure.

      --

      Lars T.

      To the guy who modded me down from perfect to terrible Karma - Apple haters still suck

  109. Totipotent vs. multipotent, and the Hayflick limit by Freedom451 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Cells from the Blastocyst are totipotent, they can become any other cell. "Stem" cells from an adult are multipotent, the types of cells they can become are more limited.

    There is also the issue of that ol'Hayflick limit, cells from an adult are 'older', they have a more limited number of times they can duplicate themselves before errors start showing up. Each time an adult cell divides, it's telomoric DNA gets shorter, and short telomeres lead to increases in copying errors (aka somatic mutations). Cells from the blastocyst ("embryonic cells") still make telomerase, which repairs the telomeres. Adult cells don't (unless they are cancerous, but we don't want them8-0).

    This is one big problem with adult stem cells as cures for older folks, older folks have cells that have been duplicated many more times than younger adults, their 'stem cells'; if you grow their cells outside of their body to make new organ tissue, the resulting organ tissue is even 'older' (has been duplicated more times) than the patient's original organ tissue. Thus a new heart grown from an adult's stem cells will likely have a shorter lifespan than the person from whom the stem cells came.

    --
    When the country falls into chaos, politicians talk about 'patriotism'. Lao-Tzu
  110. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by beanyk · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Without committing myself to a particular level of pro-[choice|life]-ness, I would disagree with the upper ("more moral") end of your chart for a few reasons:

    (1) Hair-splitting: Incest shouldn't be a separate category here. Either it's Rape of a Minor, assuming one of the parties -can't- consent, or it's Rape if one of the parties -doesn't- consent, or it's just icky consensual brother-sister stuff. I never understood why it's always trotted out like it's a whole new category.

    (2) Life of the mother, in my opinion, is a much more compelling reason for termination than anything to do with rape (assuming the two don't overlap).

  111. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by inviolet · · Score: 1
    Whether or not one agrees with those objections (I, personally do not, but I can understand them), surely examining the morality and ethics of aresearch technique before proceeding blithely ahead is a good thing?

    Not necessarily. These examinations cost much time and other resources.

    Suppose that you are currently in pain or dying. Some random breakthrough will save you. But then a bunch of religionists insist on a delay while they satiate their fear of complexity.

    You wait, in pain, while these fear-driven blowhards march in their demonstrations and gleefully soak up each others' sermons.

    You die, in pain, because the cure did not come in time.

    --
    FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
  112. Finaly by xstaytruex · · Score: 1

    So the president is dead and so are all his conservative friends and followers...wait no there he is on tv trying to ban evolution in schools. And i thought this was new hope

  113. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

    The transition from a fetus to a human being is a gradual process not an instanteous divine act. But if you had some background on biology and neuroscience you could choose much more rationally at which point should a line be drawn.

  114. Destroying one life for another? by Jerk+City+Troll · · Score: 0, Troll

    When you harvest stem cells from an embryo, you are not destroying a “life” in the same way you do not destroy a life when you trim your fingernails. An embryo, at the stage stem cells are collected, is just a small cluster of cells. No nervous system, no heart; the thing is far from human. Can we stop letting religious fundamentalists who do not have an ounce of scientific understanding (or deliberately practice ignorance) on the matter frame the debate? There is nothing magical or spiritual about fertilization and the cells which result. The transfer of genetic material does not mean the ovum is suddenly imbued with a “soul.” You might as well get upset over the deaths of the millions of sperm and monthly wasted ovum that do not result in a zygote.

    1. Re:Destroying one life for another? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some people do.

    2. Re:Destroying one life for another? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Swallowing is cannibalism!!!

    3. Re:Destroying one life for another? by Xeger · · Score: 1

      A sapling does not bear fruit, provide shade, or blossom in the springtime. But a sapling, left to its own devices in the environment it is most suited for, will eventually grow into a mature tree that carries out all the functions of a mature tree.

      A sapling represents the *potential* for a future tree. Similarly, an embryo is a *potential* future human. If you destroy an embryo, it is provable that the embryo does not feel pain. It is debatable that the embryo has a soul (or indeed that *anybody* has a soul. However, it is unquestionably true that by destroying the embryo, we reduce to zero the probability of its ever developing into a living, breathing, productive human.

      I should note that I myself am pro-choice but anti-abortion. I think an abortions at *any* stage of pregnancy are a terrible thing, and should not be used as a substitute for responsibility or forethought (contraceptives, anyone?!?) However, I freely acknowledge that:

      a) there are cases where abortion becomes a medical or ethical necessity, and

      b) since the mother is carrying the fetus, it is her right to choose the baby's destiny and I have no say in the matter.

      For both of these reasons, I am pro-choice.

    4. Re:Destroying one life for another? by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

      I am not a religous fundamentalist, but I don't think your position is sustainable. First off, a dead embryo is no good for harvesting stem cells, it has to be living and multiplying, so by definition, it must be life. Having a nervous system, heart, etc, have nothing to do with whether or not there is life.

      Next, we know, if the embryo is allowed to continue to live and progress through all of the devopmental stages that it will eventually be, not a horse or a pig or a bird or a cow, but a human. That is all it can be.

      So, by definition, the developing embryo is alive and what kind of life? Human life.

      Now, whether there is a soul and all of that, that is for the philosophers and theologeans to debate, but you cannot get around the fact that a developing embryo is human life (not necessarily sentient, but human).

      The real question is the same moral question we are faced with time and time again. Which life is worth more. Just like the question of who are you going to through out of the lifeboat, it is a value judgement. Society for the most part values human life more once it is outside the womb or at least close to be outside the womb than it does at the beginning stages (or end stages, for that matter).

      However, at some point between fertilization and birth, that human life does take on enough value for most people that it should be protected to some extent (even the majority of Americans are against abortion on demand for late third trimester abortions).

      You state that the embryo is just a cluster of cells, which it is. But that does not mean it is without value. A heart is also just a cluster of cells, albeit a lot bigger. And yet, most people are opposed to cloning a fetus, just to harvest it's organs, even if those organs could save another life.

      The whole debate over embryonic stem cells is not about science or faith. It's about basic moral values. It's the same basic question as with abortion. However, this time, instead of being a private issue between a woman and her doctor, people's money (taxdollars) are being used (at least that's what the researchers want) to pay for something that many may be opposed to. In short, the embryonc stem cell debate is about whether the government should force people to pay for research (through taxation) for something they are morally opposed to?

    5. Re:Destroying one life for another? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      ". First off, a dead embryo is no good for harvesting stem cells, it has to be living and multiplying, so by definition, it must be life."

      he didn't say anything about dead, he said discarded. All embryos used in stem cell research is used from embryos that where removed for artificial insemination, and they already have taken the ones there going to use.(the get around a dozen)
      If they don't go to stem cell research, they go into the trash.

      In fact, if you find sten cell research unethical, you MUST find artificial insemination unethical.
      Thats fine, but I don't see a whole lot of people being against that.

      "
      So, by definition, the developing embryo is alive and what kind of life? Human life."

      by your definition, hair is l;ife and we chouls shut down all barbers.
      It is not human life. It is cerianly not sentient life.

      "And yet, most people are opposed to cloning a fetus, just to harvest it's organs, even if those organs could save another life."

      that's not true.

      "In short, the embryonc stem cell debate is about whether the government should force people to pay for research (through taxation) for something they are morally opposed to?"

      sure.

      I note that the loudest oppents of stem cell research have no issue with sending people to kill others.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    6. Re:Destroying one life for another? by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      Similarly, an embryo is a *potential* future human

      Similarly, a spermatozoid is the half of a *potential* future human. Sould I be convicted for genocide for killing millions of potential future humans on a daily basis?

      You can also say that there are as many actual potential future humans (after all potential doesn't mean "in production" or anything) as ovules, that's about 25 billion potential humans a year that don't make it. A chance we don't consider them as such, because after all if you isolate a spermatozoid and an ovule, even if you don't make them meet each other you still have a potential future human with as much potential as an embryo ;-)

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    7. Re:Destroying one life for another? by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1


      he didn't say anything about dead, he said discarded. All embryos used in stem cell research is used from embryos that where removed for artificial insemination, and they already have taken the ones there going to use.(the get around a dozen)
      If they don't go to stem cell research, they go into the trash.


      It is true he didn't say anything about dead embryos, however, he did say they weren't alive. If they aren't alive, what is multiplying in the petri dish that they are harvesting the stem cells from?

      In fact, if you find sten cell research unethical, you MUST find artificial insemination unethical.
      Thats fine, but I don't see a whole lot of people being against that.


      I thought the discussion was on whether embryos are alive or not, not on how they are created. However, isn't artifical insemination where the sperm is injected into the vagina? I believe you are meaning invitro fertilization where the egg is fertilized outside the body. In and of itself that shouldn't be considered immoral (unethical really wouldn't apply). I believe the people who are opposed to it, however, aren't opposed to the concept but the fact that multiple embryos are created but only a few are used. It's not the process of fertilization and implantation that would be immoral but what happens what happens next to all of those embryos, or so the argument goes.

      "
      So, by definition, the developing embryo is alive and what kind of life? Human life."

      by your definition, hair is l;ife and we chouls shut down all barbers.
      It is not human life. It is cerianly not sentient life.


      Well, if we let a hair folicle continue to grow and develop, it will always be a hair folicle. If we let an embryo continue to grow, it will develop into a full adult one day. So, just as a baby becomes an infant who becomes a todler who becomes a child who becomes a teenager who becomes an adult, following various developmental stages, isn't the embryo and then fetus, just early points along that developmental process? If not, exactly at what point in the womb does it occur that there is a human being growing in there today, but not yesterday?

      "And yet, most people are opposed to cloning a fetus, just to harvest it's organs, even if those organs could save another life."

      that's not true.


      Well, according to the USA Today and the NY Times polls they are, but maybe you have other data.

      "In short, the embryonc stem cell debate is about whether the government should force people to pay for research (through taxation) for something they are morally opposed to?"

      sure.


      The sad part is that there are other researchers already dismissing the technique used in this original article saying that it isn't efficient enough. However, it has already produced as many viable stem cell lines as what are usuable from the allowed pool that Bush authorized. Personally, we, at my research centre, are waiting to hear from legal as to whether this new technique can be used to get around the government funding issues and allow us to access to new cells for research. If so, it doesn't have to be the most efficient method around, it just needs to be around.

      note that the loudest oppents of stem cell research have no issue with sending people to kill others.
      I assume you are meaning the war in Iraq. Again, I thought the discussion was on whether embryos were human life or not. I haven't seen any data correlating peoples views on embryonic stem cell research vs war, it might prove interesting, but I don't see how it is related to this topic.

    8. Re:Destroying one life for another? by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

      Can we stop letting religious fundamentalists who do not have an ounce of scientific understanding (or deliberately practice ignorance) on the matter frame the debate?

      Not if they keep managing to get elected to high office, no.

    9. Re:Destroying one life for another? by Xeger · · Score: 1

      If you leave a spermatozoid alone in its environment (the testes) , it will not grow into a human. Similarly, neither will an unfertilized ovule. In both cases, some preconditions for have not been met, and so the cycle of mitosis and cell differentiation cannot commence.

      But -- combine that sperm with an ovule in the right place (the uterus), allow it to implant itself in the wall of the uterus, and *then* you've got a potential human. The host environment provides nutrients, and the embryo grows on its own.

      You can introduce a sperm to an egg in another environment (say, a petri dish) and if the conditions are right, the meeting will result in an embryo. But -- you must quickly transplant the embryo into a suitable host (a uterus or something similar) or it will quickly die. So, a fertilized embryo in a petri dish does not meet all the preconditions for a potential human.

      It occurs to me that the embryo alone is not a future human. In fact, the mother-embryo *system* has the potential of a future human -- but if the does not mother continue to provide nutrients and act as a host, the fetus will die. Therefore, we can justify the mother's ability to choose abortion -- she is part of the system, after all.

  115. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by inviolet · · Score: 1

    Word.

    We computer geeks already possess the solution:

    Fertility should be off by default.

    Put something in the water supply to turn it off, and then hand out free pills for anyone wishing to turn it back on.

    Better: the pills can be engineered to require 30 days' continuous dosing in order to enable fertility. That way there will be no accidents.

    Even better: both male and female will need to take the pills.

    Best yet: the pills can be engineered to cause the user's armpits to turn polka-dotted. That way there can be no failures-to-disclose.

    --
    FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
  116. Re:mod parent underrated, lol by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

    Pro-choice is not the same as pro-abortion. Being pro-choice means you support the right to making either choice and doesn't say whether you advocate one choice over the other. My girlfriend and I are both pro-choice. However, she had an unplanned pregnancy when she was 17 and chose not to have an abortion at that time, and we're both extremely happy with the decision that she made.

    Frankly, people who can't make the distinction between a gamete/embryo/fetus/child should really have no say in the argument until they get some basic background in biology.

  117. Re:Isn't each part of the embryo a separate person by LunaticTippy · · Score: 1

    Wrong. A human embryo starts out as one cell. One cell is all you need to hatch an earthling.

    How do you think identical twins are formed? 2 eggs and chance?

    --
    Man, you really need that seminar!
  118. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Gospodin · · Score: 1

    What does the number of categories have to do with anything at all? I can change your categories to make it look more appealing the other way in this manner:

    First-month Reproductive Control
    Second-month Reproductive Control
    Third-month Reproductive Control
    . . . Ninth-month Reproductive Control

    Now OP has covered "more ground" according to your scale. Ridiculous, isn't it?

    What makes more sense is to look at what's more common and frankly, I don't think a really high percentage of the abortions in the U.S. are due to health or rape. Some of them are, yes. But if you look at some statistics, you'll see that out of the 1.31 million abortions in the U.S. in 2000, only 8.2% were for reasons in the "moral" categories, leaving 91.8% in the "not much ground covered" category.

    The situation surely differs in other countries, of course, but I suspect it is similar in post-industrial Western countries, at least.

    --
    ...following the principles of Heisenburger's Uncertain Cat...
  119. Abstinence - BEWARE OF SIDE EFFECTS by Shihar · · Score: 0

    After all, the best birth control I know of is Abstinence- this from the father of a three year old that we made the mistake of not introducing to the crib before 3 months.

    While abstinence certainly drop the chance of accidental pregnancy to near zero, it also drops you chances to scoring to absolute zero. For most sane humans, this side effect can include damage to normal social life. People who have tried abstinence as a form of birth control have reported depression, compulsive masturbation, a dramatic increase in dull and/or fanatically religious significant others, no significant others, and feeling like a looser for being a 35 year old virgin.

    I have found the best form of birth control is a combinatorial treatment that does NOT include abstinence. Liberal condom usage and/or birth control pills with abortions as a final backup has proven to be extremely effective to the point of rivaling abstinence. As an added bonus, these methods of birth control have been shown to have dramatically less side effects and result in far more play.

    There are a variety of choices of birth control out there. Like any treatment plan where you have many options, I suggest giving them all a shot and deciding which one fits you the best. For catholic priests, the abstinence option has proven to be effective and provide minimal interference. For those of us who don't want kids yet don't feel like being 40 year old virgins, some of the other anti-pregnancy options might work better.

    1. Re:Abstinence - BEWARE OF SIDE EFFECTS by Shihar · · Score: 1

      Only if you're lucky enough to avoid the 00 on the roulette wheel of life. Unlike Abstinence, none of your methods exceed 99% effective rate- even when used in combination. And their side effects are much worse than you've been told- hormonal birth control and abortions have been shown to cause death at about 3 times the rate of pregnancy, and the condoms available at Planned Parenthood and free on college campuses were shown by Consumer Reports to have a dismal 65% failure rate.

      Tisk tisk. Someone skipped their stats class to go to theology class. Using two forms of 99% birth control put your chance of birth control failure at 1 in 10,000. Assuming that your girlfriend in question is fertal 1 week out of 4, that further drops your chance to 1 in 40,000. Further, "failure" of a condom does not mean that you get a full load of semen blasted into your significant other. "Failure" means that it failed is a STD control device. It is rate of failure is actually much lower then 99% as a birth control device if it is properly used. Finally, there is the old stand by of simply aborting should the stars line up despite proper birth control usage.

      There's this institution that solves all of the above, called Sacramental Marriage. You should check it out sometime.

      Lets go over my check list and see what sacramental marriage solves.

      Effective form of birth control? Hell no. It is in fact by far one of the worst forms of birth control. It actually tends to produce babies at an alarming rate. If you don't want babies and but do want sex, sacramental marriage is almost certainly NOT what you want.

      Feeling like a looser for being a 35 year old virgin? I don't know about you, but if I had a single shot at selecting a single woman from the tiny pool of women that make up the number of people that want to enter into a sacramental marriage, I would take my time. Only an idiot would pledge their life to someone for the rest of their life on anything less then a few years of knowing that person. I would also be damn picky as it is supposidly a one shot deal. If during this selection process you are not allowed to live with or have sex with any woman whom you are dating, I could very easily see 35 year old virgins. Anyone who enters a sacrimental marriage when they are still relativly young is either very lucky, very stupid, or very horney.

      No significant others? See above.

      Compulsive masturbation? If I was still 35 and not getting any, I would probably have built up a very strong right arm.

      A dramatic increase in dull and/or fanatically religious significant others? People that refuse to have sex until they are married make up a very small pool of people. Of these people, almost all are to some degree religious fanatics. Either that, or they are very boring. Either way, enterting into a sacrimental marriage will NOT solve this side effect.

      Depression? I don't know about you, but if I was not getting any sex at all until I was married and I actually took getting married seriously to ensure that I am not miserable for the rest of my life, I would be pretty damn depressed.

  120. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You have to have available birth control because a percentage of young people will gleefully start having sex as soon as their hormones kick into gear...No amount of education will stop this. This will also help adults make intelligent decisions about reproduction.

    And when I say education, I mean education. I don't mean "teach abstinence". I mean "this is sex, this is what goes on, this is what you can catch, and this is how you can do it safely." I'm talking a significant course here, not just a day out of gym class.

    The only way to help people make the right descision, is to make sure they have access to all the information. They may go through the whole class and not learn a damn thing, but they have a much better chance than if you'd tried to keep them in ignorance all along.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  121. Ghost in the Machine by badboy_tw2002 · · Score: 1

    So do you honestly believe there's a little man running around inside your head pulling levers? What part of your head isn't defined by neurons? When exactly in the fertilization process does the "soul injection" happen? If you broke down the fertilization process into its purest chemical states, is there a specific spot where "life" happens? What if we were able to control the process down to the last molecule and then hold off on the final chemical reaction. Is that not life anymore? How much has to be complete for the soul injection process the finish? Just wondering.

    1. Re:Ghost in the Machine by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      When you have a biological object that if left alone will multiply and become an organizm then you have life. So you have life at fetilization. Yes, the embryo needs a uterus to survive. However the embryo didn't ask to be fertilized in a dish instead of in a fallopian tube.

    2. Re:Ghost in the Machine by badboy_tw2002 · · Score: 1

      The embryo cannot ask anything because it doesn't have any mental facilities and is just a bunch of cells. I can rip my skin out, drop it in a petri dish, and it will multiply. Is that an organism? But I'm still not seeing where the soul injection process happens to make this guy an official grade A human.

  122. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by thesandtiger · · Score: 3, Informative

    I addressed this in my post at the end of it.

    Objecting to unfettered experimentation on human subjects by researchers without any concern for the well-being of the subjects? Perfectly valid, and I'd be one of those shouting against such research.

    Superstitious objections based on "My holy book says you can't use the color red" and similarly flimsy/absurd arguments? Should be ignored.

    There's a middle ground between these two extremes, however, where the line is not so clear. At that point, discussion and debate and inquiry need to take place. And yes, while that discussion and debate and inquiry happens, some people will die, and that's very unfortunate. However, I think it would be much more unfortunate for humanity to completely abandon any sense of ethics in the pursuit of progress.

    How many lives can be saved by having a treatment come a little sooner? I don't know. How many lives would be spent if we had a society hell-bent on progress with no regard for human life? I don't know, but the 20th century gives us some pretty damn good estimates...

    I disagree with the notion that embryo == full-fledged human being, but as I said in my previous post, disagreeing with someone does not mean that I cannot understand and respect their views if their views are sensible, self-consistent and based at least somewhat on reality. I will not dismiss someone as an idiot if they say they have a moral objection to destroying embryos during research. I would dismiss someone as an idiot if they say "Well, you're not killing babies anymore, but now you're playing god, so stop it!" I would also dismiss someone as an idiot and a monster if they were to say that *ANY* restrictions on research should be removed.

    --
    Since I can't tell them apart, I treat all ACs as the same person.
  123. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Surt · · Score: 1

    On #1, I think incest is usually separated out because the victim is seen as even more vulnerable. The force involved in the rape tends to be of a different nature. In addition, the resulting pregnancy is fraught with risks due to genetic disease factors.

    For #2, that is certainly debateable. In the rape of a minor and incest cases, a risky pregnancy is guaranteed, so life of the mother is an automatic background fact. Rape of an adult woman by an unrelated man vs risks to life of the mother is a more debateable case. Forcing a woman to carry will carry risks (mental health, and others) that at least make that strongly comparable to other health of the mother issues, and of course every pregnancy carries a not insignificant risk of death to the mother, so you have to ask at exactly what life risk level it becomes acceptable to force a woman to carry a child to term.

    --
    "Who is the Journal of Quantum Physics going to believe?" --Stephen Hawking
  124. Re:mod parent underrated, lol by rossifer · · Score: 1
    I can imagine a whole lot of pro-choicers refusing to have these stem cells because no embryos were destroyed. They're utterly obsessed with aborting something, anything.
    You may be able to imagine that, but luckily for those of us who live in the real world, those people are only in your imagination.

    Nobody wants to kill babies. It's the definition of the start of "humanhood" that's the ultimate core of each side's argument, and for all of the attempts to draw firm black/white distinctions by both sides, what is actually a human being, with all of the rights and responsibilities of that label, has a very fuzzy start with lots of shades of grey.

    A scenario: A couple has trouble conceiving. A doctor harvests eggs and sperm and fertilizes eight embryos, which are then frozen. Over the next three years, the doctor attempts to implant four embryos, and two children are born. The delighted couple stops trying to have children and move on to raising their family.

    A question: What should happen to the other four embryos? They are the genetic and actual property of the couple. But the couple have no intention of using them and don't want to pay for indefinite storage. The couple also don't want other people to bear their genetic children.

    But they are post-conception embryos, and therefore are full human beings according to the right-to-lifers. So what does that mean? Who should pay to keep them frozen? If the electrical system in the storage fails, can the maintenance company who flipped the wrong switch be charged with the manslaughter of more people than were killed in the holocaust?

    The right-to-life crowd have far too simple a worldview for the real world. Their morality just doesn't resemble the realities of the world in which we live. That square-peg/round-hole mismatch might be quaint and entertaining, except when those people try to force their broken moral decision making on others, right when their morality is at it's most clearly ridiculous.

    The future will certainly be interesting.

    Regards,
    Ross
  125. middle ground by gsn · · Score: 1

    Theres always going to be some people who do not agree with embryonic stem cell research and perhaps rightly so because these issues do raise difficult questions about life and its value. You don't have to be religious either to recognize this. I think most scientists would admit there are very touchy phlosophical questions here. I think most would admit there are touchy issues with cloning and late term abortion too.

    This is what seperates these issues from the science vs religion issues dating from heliocentric/geocentric to evolution vs creation/ID or old earth vs young earth today. Essentially those are only issues if you are religious - or in fact Christian because there are a whole bunch of other religions out there for which these "debates" don't matter one whit. Science did not care what the general opinion on heliocentric vs geocentric models are and it certainly ignores the ID/creationist arguments.

    That is the distinction and it makes all the difference even if it isn't much of one.

    Science does not take values into consideration because there isn't an right and wrong in science and it isn't a democracy. Scientists do though. This developement is great - it effectively sidesteps a lot of thorny issues of when life begins, and what value it has. It will satisfy a lot more people who were queasy about embyonic stem cell research though not necessarily because of religious arguments. I think it will satisfy a lot of people who opposed it on religious grounds but are perhaps more moderate. Hopefully there will be some beneficial research that will come out of this.

    Sure there are going to be arguments about the sanctity of the soul in a process like this one. I'd suspect most scientists will ignore them.

    --
    Reality must take precedence over public relations, for nature cannot be fooled.
  126. Interesting, but not quite there... by posterlogo · · Score: 1

    The research group has succeeded in generating stem cell lines for study from a single cell in an embryo while leaving the rest of the embryo to develop normally. Do not be fooled into thinking this answers all the ethical questions! The embryos from fertility clinics that go unused will still be destroyed, no matter how successful this procedure is (currently, however, it is still not as efficient as using the whole embryo). Thus, it STILL makes much more sense to use those fertility clinic embryos for research -- they will never be implanted, and they WILL be discarded already. The arguments that the Bush camp and the so-called pro-"life" camp are putting forth are total BS in this respect -- failing to fund stem-cell research has absolutely NO impact on destruction of embryos. It is simply a political maneuver into fooling the conservative base into thinking that scientists are rampantly killing little babies.

    The recent research is most promising as a source of patient-specific stem cells for that particular baby when it grows up and gets diseases. As a source of stem-cells for research, it is highly doubtful that most fertility clinic clients would allow the embryo that they are IMPLANTING to have a cell removed from it. It is much more likely that UNUSED embryos would be donated to science. Even this method of generating stem cell lines is NOT ELIGIBLE FOR FUNDING! It will continue to be like this until Bush is kicked out or congress gets a spine and/or a brain.

  127. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not demonizing anyone.

    However, I do believe that the bulk of our societies sex issues have a religious root, and I don't think that adding more religion is the answer, especially since their method of dealing with the problem is basically to deny it exists until a child is born.

    The first step is to slow down the number of unwanted pregnancies, and that takes education, and that takes contraception, and since the church is anti-sex ed, and opposed to providing any form of contraception, and only promotes the use of abstinence/"Please god don't let me get pregnant", I don't see how getting them more involved is going to help in any way.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  128. That's not a fact, Jack by bugnuts · · Score: 1

    Dr Lanza said: 'Well, as you know, the President objects to the fact that you would be sacrificing one life to save another, and in this instance there is no harm to the embryo.'

    If this was indeed a fact, I too would object to it.

    But referring to destroying an embryo as factually "sacrificing a life" is really scary to hear coming from a stem-cell researcher. Clearly it was not intending to get into the right-to-life arguments, but that's how it could be taken out of context.

    Dr Lanza probably meant to say "The President objects to the belief that destroying an embryo is destroying a life, and in this instance there is no harm to the embryo."

    Despite this advancement and satisfying certain ethical quandaries, this will not satisfy the anti-science anti-stemcell nitwits any more than anything short of prohibition will satisfy certain members of, e.g., MADD. Mark my words, the people who are celebrating the Earth's 7000th birthday don't give a crap about ethics.

    I hope our fine president doesn't eat eggs for breakfast.

    1. Re:That's not a fact, Jack by Xeger · · Score: 1

      I'm sure our magnanimous and fearless leader eats eggs for breakfast every morning. "Alive" is an adjective that only applies to people (and only to some people).

      Chicken, cattle, and their ilk are lesser beings by virtue of lacking a soul, and hence cannot be "alive" by the President's definition. Given the behavior of the current administration, I'm pretty sure that qualification extends to convicts, poor people and Arabs as well.

      See? Doesn't it all make sense?

      (NOTE TO MODS: If you are the observant sort, you will note the presence of a certain amount of sarcasm in this post. Before hitting that "moderate" button, take a deep breath and, on the exhale, chant "I ... have ... a ... sense ... of ... humor.")

    2. Re:That's not a fact, Jack by geekoid · · Score: 1

      (NOTE TO MODS: If you are the observant sort, you will note the presence of a certain amount of sarcasm in this post. Before hitting that "moderate" button, take a deep breath and, on the exhale, chant "I ... have ... a ... sense ... of ... humor.")

      it's not that they don't have a sense of humor, it's that your not funny. ;)

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  129. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    There is always another exception to the rule. Frankly, I'm not into their being a rule at all. I think abortions are a bad thing and I think they're a symptom of a problem in our society that we need to deal with. I would like to see the symptom go away, but I don't think that's going to happen until we deal with the problem.

    Trying to stop the symptom, without adressing the problem is madness. Let people get abortions, but try to reduce the need for them...Trying to reduce it to moral and immoral abortions is absurd.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  130. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by cmpalmer · · Score: 1

    Who the hell locks babies in heavy steel cages at a daycare?

    --
    -- stream of did I lock the front door consciousness
  131. I think you got that last line wrong... by ebyrob · · Score: 1

    Right Wing Right-to-Life Zealot: "Absolutely not!!! I insist they not be murdered, but I'm no charity, go find someone else to raise it!"

    Should read:
    Right Wing Right-to-Life Zealot: "Absolutely not!!! You mixed the sperm and egg to create that embryo, you're responsible for it!"

    Or at least, I think that's a scenario a lot of us worry about. Embryos being created specifically to be harvested and then discarded as medical waste. Sure, scientists may throw out a lot of fancy terms to explain why that isn't what's actually happening, but by and large that's exactly what is likely to happen because it's the cheapest and easiest.

  132. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 0, Troll

    You have to have available birth control because a percentage of young people will gleefully start having sex as soon as their hormones kick into gear...No amount of education will stop this.

    Not true at all. If you bother to tell kids the TRUTH about sex (that it has a specific purpose, procreation of the species, and that when done sucessfully it takes about 20 years, give or take 5 or ten for maturity levels of parent and child) then there's no problem with self control of hormones. For those who choose it, you simply marry them to their significant other, and no divorce allowed until the children are adults.

    And when I say education, I mean education. I don't mean "teach abstinence". I mean "this is sex, this is what goes on, this is what you can catch, and this is how you can do it safely." I'm talking a significant course here, not just a day out of gym class.

    Implying that it can be done "safely" is a lie at best. But the rest I most certainly DO agree with- just be sure to tell the WHOLE truth, not just the recreational half-truth that sex is just intercourse and only takes sleeping together and one night stands.

    The only way to help people make the right descision, is to make sure they have access to all the information. They may go through the whole class and not learn a damn thing, but they have a much better chance than if you'd tried to keep them in ignorance all along.

    Completely agreed. And when you have laws that back that up; requiring people take parental responsibility, then there's no need for birth control at all.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  133. Prove it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry, I couldn't help but make fun of these people on here :)

  134. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by inviolet · · Score: 1

    :golf clap:

    Good answer.

    :)

    --
    FATMOUSE + YOU = FATMOUSE
  135. No, for a number of reasons by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    First, most people that object to stem-cell research also object to the destruction of embryos via IVF. The vast majority (95%) of embryos are frozen for later implantation/research/adoption, and will eventually become non-viable due the freeze/thaw process or simply the ravages of time. The are rarely "thrown in the trash" while still viable and never need be. In any case, the number of excess embryos has steadily been declining and in some countries has been mandated to be zero.

    As this new research shows, the intentional destruction of human embryos is nothing more than laziness.

  136. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Ruvim · · Score: 1

    Can't use amoeba for a pet! It will eat the (so-called) baby!

  137. hypocrisy? by Ksisanth · · Score: 1

    That is like the question asked of animal rights supporters who claim an equivalence between humans and other animals: If you can only save one from drowning, would you save the child or the dog? If the person says he would save the child, he's called an hypocrite, while if he chooses the dog, he's a monster. But neither answer would show that he would be happy to let the other die, or that he's actually supporting the deaths of dogs or children (or that he shouldn't oppose it lest he be tagged an hypocrite).

    Likewise, even if a "right-to-life kook" chose his friend in that scenario, that would not suggest that he's an hypocrite for being opposed to the deliberate destruction of embryos. It calls into question only whether he truly believes the equivalence argument. But what if the scenario involves two strangers, alike in all respects? Would choosing to save one over the other suggest an inconsistency to believe their worth equal? Or must he be Buridan's Ass?

    1. Re:hypocrisy? by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      It would seem, though, that this scenario is exactly what we are presented with. The question is whether to do stem cell research, presumably sacrificing embryos to save diseased child and adult lives, or to refuse to do stem cell research, presumably saving some large number of embryos, but condemning some number of diseased children and adults to death. This strikes me as more or less identical to choosing between saving a drowning child, or some large number of embryos. The only difference is the emotional context- when we talk about stem cell research, the embryos seem most real while the diseased seem abstract and hypothetical (even though they are just as real). Examples like the GP post draw attention to the fact that the diseased are real, and to the fact that to decide to save the embryos, whether it is from research or the fire or the river, requires what is essentially a conscious decision to ignore the reality of the dying adult.

    2. Re:hypocrisy? by Ksisanth · · Score: 1

      The question is whether to do stem cell research, presumably sacrificing embryos to save diseased child and adult lives, or to refuse to do stem cell research, presumably saving some large number of embryos, but condemning some number of diseased children and adults to death.

      A choice between saving embryos and saving people who are suffering from diseases presumes that the research would indeed save lives. Just as in the other example, it becomes a question of one's commitment to a belief that the potential and the actual are of equal value rather than hypocrisy for making one choice over the other.

    3. Re:hypocrisy? by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      But certainly we can agree that there is a chance that embryonic stem cell research will lead to actual treatments. Maybe that chance is only 1/100. Then if we must destroy 1000 embryos, we must weight 100,000 destroyed embryos versus the number of people who would be saved if the treatment worked. I think the actual number of embryos tends to be considered unimportant to the example, which implies that it is not the chance that a particular cure will be discovered (or rather be discovered faster than through some other avenue of research) is not really why the example is so effective. If that were it, then one could increase the number of embryos- at 1 million say, vs one person, then it would be easy to decide to save the embryos- and resolve the problem. Instead, what is important is that the to-term person (adult or child) is directly weighed against the embryo in a context that is easier to relate to emotionally.

    4. Re:hypocrisy? by Ksisanth · · Score: 1

      There is a chance, yes. There is also a chance that any one of those embryos, if it were implanted in a womb and allowed to grow into a full human being, could become a person who goes on to save many lives. Potential vs. potential. There's way too much hype, but that's nothing new. Just like the cure for diabetes is always "just around the corner". It's a rather long corner.

      Personally, I wouldn't be bothered if 100 million embryos were sacrificed to save one person, or even for the chance to save one person. An embryo (assuming it's outside of a womb) has no more value to me than gametes--few people would think twice about wasting those for much less noble cause. I recognize that I'm not the only person entitled to an opinion, though, and I would be loathe to dismiss someone as a "kook" or hypocrite on the basis of a trite hypothetical that simply doesn't support that conclusion.

    5. Re:hypocrisy? by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      It is a good point that one of the embryos could grow up to cure cancer much earlier than would otherwise be done, say, although my understanding that the chance of one of the IVF embryos becoming a person is more or less zero. But then, one of the saved diseased persons could him/herself cure cancer, or one of his/her children could. Alternatively, one of the fetuses could be the next Hitler, and aid in the deaths of millions. In physics, we would call these sorts of probabilities "second order effects," which simply means that these chances are getting so small that it is too much work to worry about them. No, I think that mainly, when we argue over this issue we are comparing only two different kinds of potential - potentially saving actual lives versus actually saving potential lives. (Although my understanding that the chance that one of the IVF embryos becoming a person is more or less zero.) The conservative argument tends to be that a potential life is the same as an actual life, in fact IS an actual life, so that we should choose actually saving the potential life over potentially saving the actual life. Again, it is the reality of this choice that is given an emotional context in the example. i agree with you though that dismissing someone as a kook or hypocrite is uncalled for, and comes off as a bit childish, so I don't agree with the tone of the original post, so I agree with your original sentiment. Also, I liked your post because it referred to Buridan's Ass, which I hadn't heard of before.

  138. as of the last comprehensive zogby poll... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...roughly 90% of the military forces in Iraq think they are there avenging 9-11 because saddam hussein was part of the conspiracy. It's around 30% for people inside the US in general terms now, although at one time it was incredibly high, but never close to 90%.

    Yep, that's the data. Sad isn't it? Yes, they are that brainwashed, and they have been deliberately lied to, to encourage that mindset, and they are forced into demonization of muslims in general to make it easier to kill them without suffering natural remorse.

    The military goes way out of their way to encourage rote order following, without any pretext of following their own laws, such as "it is illegal to follow an illegal order". They skew all the data-lie constantly in other words- to encourage a near genocidal mindset. They offer only a black and white view of the world, and "superiors" are always correct-even when they aren't. They insist that all of their troops follow orders of the commander in chief, but neglect to enforce following the oath to the Constitution and they have no provision for action when the commander is obviously a totally insane and megalomaniacal monster who actually believes his own lies.

    If you ever wondered how it is even possible for various dictators to stay in power, you don't have to look any further than the US military and paramilitary "civilian" police forces, they act exactly the same as any of those foreign forces under their "leaders"..

  139. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by ebyrob · · Score: 1

    Perhaps there exists an untapped market in teeny tiny baby supplies for these really small children. A playpen made out of a ring of hydrogen atoms and an amoeba for a pet.

    Are you daft? What do you think Pre-implantation Genetic Diagnosis (PGD) is??!!

  140. Re:mod parent underrated, lol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    murder = evil
    abortion = murder
    abortion = evil
    Q.E.D.

  141. Just to Clarify by CustomDesigned · · Score: 1
    There's a rational idea in there -- that eating too much of the wrong things is harmful, that entering into sexual relationships irresponsibly can be harmful -- but the extreme thinking that says that any non-nutritional food or sex without making a baby is immoral is actually more detrimental than it is helpful. Like most extreme thinking, it causes the very problems it claims to abhor.

    That is why the Catholic teaching provides for "Natural Family Planning". There is a "logical possibility" of procreation, so in their view it isn't separating sex from procreation like "artificial birth control". But the method effectiveness of NFP is better than that of condoms (as opposed to the user effectiveness which varies) and satisfies your criterion. Note that modern NFP is *not* the "calendar method" but involves observing multiple symptoms of ovulation: basal temperature, mucous, cervix.

    I'll be vulnerable here and share my actual experience with NFP. I am not Catholic, but my wife and I gave it a try, and are still with the program after about 8 years (since the birth of our youngest). Before that we used mostly barrier methods to space babies. We of course always avoided methods that work via spontaneous abortions.

    All the artificial methods put some kind of barrier between us. In some cases a physical barrier for the barrier methods. Even the pill (which we used for a while) causes subtle emotional changes. Over all, the physical barrier methods (condoms, diaphrams) were least objectionable. The NFP program brought us closer together. I became intimately aware of her cycles. As the first green day day approaches, anticipation builds. You get several days warning, giving time to plan a special day. There are no barriers. Thanks to the "breaks", you don't get burned out or bored with sex. In short, quality more than makes up for reduced quantity.

    1. Re:Just to Clarify by Creedo · · Score: 1

      We've used NFP for years, and had no problem regulating pregnancy. No hormones, no chemicals, no barriers. Oh, and it costs zip once you start. 99% effective or more, with little training. Plus, the most common method has several layers of built in redundant checks. For the cost of a thermometer and a few hours of training, you can give a woman effective control of her reproductive capabilities for life. Even from a strictly secular point of view, it makes sense. You don't have to hook them up with a lifetime of hormone therapy or a perpetual supply of condoms or diaphragms.

      --
      All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
    2. Re:Just to Clarify by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Well, it sounds like you have a healthy relationship and I'm not about to criticize you for your choices in that regard.

      But there's a "logical possibility" that a condom will fail and pregnancy will result that anyone using this method has to take responsibility for. I don't see the fundamental difference, in that you're having sex while taking deliberate steps to make sure it doesn't result in pregnancy. Sounds like sex for the sake of pleasure to me. The rhythm method is birth control, just like a condom is. I appreciate not wanting to not have any barrier between you, so to speak, but if that's the line where morality is drawn then it seems to have moved. Which if that's what you've decided for yourself, then that's fine.

      The kicker is when this Catholic philosophy is applied to others. Teaching abstenance to teenagers -- the one method guaranteed to work, and the one method guaranteed not to be used! Which is one thing. Another altogether is what would otherwise be fantastic Church outreach programs in places like Africa. Any method of combating AIDS in Africa which doesn't involve distributing lots and lots of condoms is an ineffective, and dare I say it, insincere method. They're requiring that people adopt their moral code not to save their souls, but to save their lives. And that irks me.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    3. Re:Just to Clarify by CustomDesigned · · Score: 1
      But there's a "logical possibility" that a condom will fail and pregnancy will result that anyone using this method has to take responsibility for. I don't see the fundamental difference, in that you're having sex while taking deliberate steps to make sure it doesn't result in pregnancy. Sounds like sex for the sake of pleasure to me.

      To flog the food analogy again, there is a difference between losing weight by eating less, and attempting to lose weight while eating the same amount by eating artificial non-nourishing food. If limiting pregnancy were no concern, you could partake throughout each cycle (except perhaps during menstration - especially if you're Jewish). To limit pregnancy, you abstain for more of the cycle - partaking less. With birth control, you continue to partake throughout the cycle of something that is artificially sterile.

      Teaching abstenance to teenagers -- the one method guaranteed to work, and the one method guaranteed not to be used!

      It worked for me, and for all my friends (as far as I know, of course). What makes it difficult for many teenagers today is the culture and peer pressure. To swim against the tide, you have to have like minded friends to walk alongside - and a determination to do so from the start. You need to give up things that cause undue temptation - this varies with the individual. For instance, as a teenager, bikini beaches were too much for me (made me cry with frustration) - so I avoided them. (Not saying they are wrong - just that it was not helpful for me at the time.)

      The condom strategy fails for several reasons. First, the user effectiveness of condoms among teenagers is abysmal. For that reason, it is no real protection. Second, it exacerbates the underlying cultural problem. Third, even when used properly, the chances of disease transmission are reduced by 95% or so (pick your number). But sex is something you do many times once you start - so after a dozen encounters, that 95% effectiveness is a 54% effectiveness (.95^12). The promised protection is an illusion.

    4. Re:Just to Clarify by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      For instance, as a teenager, bikini beaches were too much for me (made me cry with frustration) - so I avoided them. (Not saying they are wrong - just that it was not helpful for me at the time.)
      I find this part of your post telling. In your "adopt an embryo" post, you stated:
      the attempt to repeat the pleasure of sex beyond the needs of procreation (birth control, gay lifestyle, etc) has generally bad results - physical, emotional, and spiritual.

      Now, please tell me, what was emotionally healthy about putting yourself in a mindset where you cried from frustration?

      I'm quite serious here. Human being have an instinctive drive to mate, the consequence of several hundred million years of evolutionary pressure. Repressing that urge causes enourmous emotional and psychological problems. People may say that "builds character", but in my experience usually those who subject themselves to chronic frustration develop serious long term side effects, none of which are positive.

      Masochism in the name of religion may have worked for you, so you say, but I find it telling that you remember such pain and would seek to subject an entire generation of teenagers to the same. You honestly seem to want to make them involuntarily go through what you went through by choice, and this in spite of the fact you obviously remember that pain well.

      That is what I cannot agree with. Subjecting yourself to misery is your own damn business. Subjecting your kids to it is a grey area, though in this case I'd defend your rights as a parent (assuming you have kids). But inflicting that upon others, in the name of your religion - I find that morally reprehensable.
  142. Re:mod parent underrated, lol by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    The problem with your approach, as with all approaches that start with conception is that people will never agree when life begins. Is that fertilized egg human life? What about at the embryo stage? When we start from a state of non-life a sperm and an egg and try and determine when life begins, it's anybody's guess.

    However, start at a point when we all agree there is human life, say a 1 day old baby and work backwards and see what happens. Is it still human life at 1/2 day? What about just outside the womb? How about coming down the birth canal? What about 1 day prior to birth? Two? Three? So far, most people would all agree with yes.

    However, with agreement that even before birth, we have human life, but continuing to work earlier and earlier in the development of that life, it becomes very difficult for people to decide at what point we went from having human life to not having it (much earlier, it turns out, than going the other way from non-life to life). It all depends on the perspective one takes (kind of like a glass half empty or half full).

    So maybe those people aren't trying to force their broken moral decision making on others, but instead have a different perspective of things. Who's to say their morallity is any better or worse than yours or mine? It's just different.

    As for them forcing their moral decision making on others, how is that any different, at least from their perspective, with the pro-abortion view?

  143. Like this chap? by Jamie+Lokier · · Score: 2, Informative
    pro-lifers ... who ... adopt kids
    I just have to mention this chap, seeing as he's a pro-lifer who adopted kids when it suited his politics, but then disowned them (both!) when it didn't. Grr. Personally I favour the logic of pro-both. The idea that you have to be anti-freedom-for-the-mother or anti-life-for-the-foetus is as nonsensical and divisive as "you're with us or you're against us". -- Jamie
  144. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

    Excellent post. Very few people get that abortion isn't the problem, it's merely the symptom of bigger, more important problems.

  145. embryo still discarded by peter303 · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately any sane potential parent would consider an embryo with even a single cell taken and its outer membrane penetrated not to be as good as untouched embryo and not use it.

    This method has been proposed for very early genetic screening. In practice a missing cell is not noticed in an embryo.

  146. missing penis or brain cell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What if the cell taken is the one that whould have become part of your brain? Or your genitive organ?

  147. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Kelson · · Score: 1
    And when you have laws that back that up; requiring people take parental responsibility, then there's no need for birth control at all.

    I take it you're of the opinion that all marriages must have children, and as many as possible? There are people who want to marry and stay with one partner, but not have children. Or who want to have children, but limit themselves to one or two, rather than keep going until biology calls a halt.

    I can guarantee you, people of those opinions will still see a need for birth control.

  148. Re:mod parent underrated, lol by mantar · · Score: 1

    You started with some good comments... however: Frankly, people who can't make the distinction between a gamete/embryo/fetus/child should really have no say in the argument until they get some basic background in biology. I guess before I comment, I'll validate my right to argue (wouldn't want you accusing me of ignorance): Gamete = Seperate germ cells from male and female genetic donors (egg and sperm) Zygote = Meiosis has transformed gamete from male and female into a zygote (unique DNA from both donors at this point) Embryo = Zygote split at least once... mitosis has occurred Fetus = Major structure and organs are formed... continuing development Child = Fully developed organism, capable of sustaining itself outside of the womb with little or no assistance Notice that after meiosis, and before mitosis we have a cell with completely distinct DNA from both donors? This is a compelling argument for pro-lifer's, but if science were cut and dry, there would really be no argument, would there? Understanding that all points of view (pro-life, pro-abortion, and pro-choice) make assumptions and render seperate interpretations of the same science is a good step towards fully comprehending the issue. Too many people on /. think that science paints a black and white picture, and themselves become as narrow minded in their interpretations as the right-wing ultra-zealots. Ambiguous science only becomes valuable when it is properly interpreted... more so in cases such as this where ethics play a role. The real issue isn't the science... it's the interpretation of the results within one context or another. BTW... people with little or no background in biology should comment... they might learn a thing or to from the impassioned responses they invoke.

    --
    # man tar
  149. Re:mod parent underrated, lol by mantar · · Score: 1

    Argghhh... sorry if it's hard to read... forgot the line breaks. :-)

    --
    # man tar
  150. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by dhasenan · · Score: 1

    Right on all counts, except for the case of men with hairy armpits. That's unappealing, though, so call for all men to shave their underarms! I already do my part.

  151. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Trelane · · Score: 1
    The fact that pro-lifers often equivocate abortion to murdering children
    How is ending a pregancy by killing the fetus not the willful ending of a human life? It is definitely alive, and definitely human. What other attributes do you require for something to be considered human?
    women who make a choice about what to do with their bodies

    How is the fetus the woman's body? It's certainly not genetically hers, nor would a worm living in her gut be considered her.

    --

    --
    Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
  152. Great move forward by saildude · · Score: 1

    Bought ACTC this morning at .90 and have already doubled my money. The market is excited about this development. Its not often you see a stock more than triple in a single day.

  153. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

    A cluster of skin cells or brain cells is living human tissue as well, but that doesn't qualify it as a human being. An embryo, or even a fetus in its early stages of development, does not possess any form of consciousness, so equivocating the abortion of a pregnancy during the first two trimesters to murder is simply being ignorant of the human reproductive process. You might as well say masturbation is mass murder because gametes have human DNA and demonstrate the characteristics of life as well.

    And how is whether or not to bear a child not a medical decision that should be up to the woman? Who's choice should it be then? Do you think a pregnancy has no effect on a woman's body? An embryo/fetus is biologically attached to a woman, is produced by her body, requires her body to sustain life, affects her health and vice-versa, so how is it not a part of her? Are the gametes living inside of you separate human beings also?

  154. See? I would have modded that funny by StressGuy · · Score: 1

    but that happens a lot here... :)

    --
    A goal is a dream with a deadline
  155. There are also.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    ..those who could not, in good conscience, follow the Democratic Party with the strong pro-choice platform, and have been Republicans in great part due to this stance (even though ideals of the Democratic Party may be more relevant in most other areas). Defections of those would come in great amounts were a viable pro-life platform available in the Democratic Party (in all areas - the Democratic Party is very pro-life beyond the gestational period).

  156. Embryos are not the issue... by RecycledElectrons · · Score: 0, Troll

    This story shows that /. readers are too stupid to deserve to live.

    The issue with embryonic (totempotent) stem cells is that they cause cancer in the patient receiving the injection...EVERY TIME.

    If you can point to one patient who has survived 18 months after receiving an injection of embryonic stem cells, and does not have terminal cancer, I will pay you $100 (US.)

    The only reason embryonic stem cells are being pushed is to make abortion look like the cure for cancer or diabetes. (I'm a Type I diabetic.) I have giveun up home of a cure for diabetes in my lifetime, after knowing that one was only 3-5 years away. The reason I've given up is that the stem cell fundamentalists (pro-abortion NAZIs) have stolen all funding to cure diabetes, and misdirected it towards embryonic stemm cell "research." (Think Dr. Frankenstein, or a doctor at Treblinka in 1944.)

    Andy Out!

    1. Re:Embryos are not the issue... by Benzido · · Score: 1

      The point is that injecting stem cells into a live person is not the only reason to grow them.

      When you have an ES-cell line you can grow any tissue type you want, knowing that it will have a particular set of genes. Then suppose you have a virus, or a drug, which you are investigating - the ES cells allow you to see how that drug interacts with different types of tissue, while eliminating genetic and environmental variation.

      Basically, ES-cell technology has already accelerated our knowledge of disease and our drug technology by decades - even in the face of the bans emplaced by people like you, who think that scientists are all like Dr. Frankenstein.

      Maybe you should find out some more facts before you declare people 'too stupid to live'.

    2. Re:Embryos are not the issue... by Benzido · · Score: 1

      Another thing I forgot to mention:

      In the vast majority of stem cell therapies, you don't inject the embryonic cells. You use the embryonic cells to derive tissue stem cells, like liver cells, and you inject those.

      There are already a large number of successful transplants of these kinds of cells.

      You may ask, why not just harvest adult stem cells? Well, ideally you need 'autologous' cells - cells grown from your own lines - so that the transplant won't be rejected. Adult stem cells just don't exist in your body for every tissue type. For example, there are a few stem cells in your brain, but it would be very hard to get at them. The solution is to treat embryonic cells so that they differentiate into brand new neural progenitor cells, and inject those.

      The more differentiated a cell is, the less likely it is to form a tumour.

      So one value of totipotent cells (or 'totempotent' as you wrongly put it) is that you can derive non-totipotent cells from them which are otherwise unavailable.

      The moral of the story: don't get your scientific information from the church!

    3. Re:Embryos are not the issue... by Nowhere.Men · · Score: 1

      This research will be most usefull when you will be able to keep the stem cell line for 100 years.

      At conception, one cell of the embryo which will be you, is harvested. Then the embryo is implanted in you genetical mother or in your womb mother or in a canister.

      The cell is used to keep a stem cell line alive for the duration of your life.

      Later in life, when your liver die from all the vodka you drank. they can use the stem cell to grow you a new one.

      Later, you may loose other organs without too much worry, if you have the money.

  157. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by focoma · · Score: 1
    The first step is to slow down the number of unwanted pregnancies, and that takes education, and that takes contraception

    I think we might agree that proper education is enough for the first step. Also, I'm quite sure the Church (well, the Catholic Church, at least) doesn't mind teens knowing that having sex will most probably lead to pregnancy. Nor does the Church mind kids learning some basic Economics that should deter them from wanting to have babies too soon. So I'm pretty sure your anti-religious statements about the big bad church's "method of dealing with the problem" and how religion's "anti-sex ed" is part of the problem is just plain bullshit.

    It's not religion. It's just plain ol' White American reactionism, stupid.

    --

    - Francis Ocoma

    Please wait while Sig Request is being processed...

  158. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Trelane · · Score: 1
    A cluster of skin cells or brain cells is living human tissue as well, but that doesn't qualify it as a human being.

    Fair enough. So where do we draw the line, because a human is also a cluster of cells.

    An embryo, or even a fetus in its early stages of development, does not possess any form of consciousness

    Excellent. Now we're getting to some actual meat. Allow me to point out to immediately obvious objections: being unconscious, vegetative people are not people at all by your definition. Or at what point does consciousness count? Obviously, we're both conscious. Is a person unable to communicate with the outside world conscious, or non-human? Do we cease being human when we're knocked out or when we are just sleeping? How do you know how much consciousness a foetus does or does not possess? What is your metric?

    You might as well say masturbation is mass murder because gametes have human DNA and demonstrate the characteristics of life as well.

    Ah, but they don't. They have more or less half the full complement of DNA and do not reproduce in any stage of their cycle (save for the part where they form a zygote), hence do not have the full human gene complement, nor do they satisfy the criteria for life. So they are neither (individually) alive nor are they fully human.

    And how is whether or not to bear a child not a medical decision that should be up to the woman?

    If it can be shown to be a separate human life (which I currently belive to be the case) then it's obviously not solely up to the mother, no matter how inconvenient it may be. Nor may a mother kill her child once it's born.

    Do you think a pregnancy has no effect on a woman's body?

    Of course not. Are you daft, man?! Where did I claim such a thing?

    An embryo/fetus is biologically attached to a woman,

    So is any other parasite

    s produced by her body

    It most demonstrably is not, as women don't randomly get pregnant.

    requires her body to sustain life

    As does any other parasite

    affects her health and vice-versa

    As does any other parasite

    You also forgot to mention that it should also necessarily affect the father's life as well , but somehow this often gets missed in the discussion. The father should be as integral a part of the baby's life as he was in her initiation. If not physically and emotionally there, then at least monetarily. IMHO, if fathers were forced to be more involved in things, I suspect that the unwanted baby problem would be much less of one.

    how is it not a part of her

    Because it's demonstably not, as discussed above.

    Are the gametes living inside of you separate human beings also?

    No, as discussed above.

    Now, back to the question you attempted to side-step: How is the fetus the woman's body? It's certainly not genetically hers, nor would a worm living in her gut be considered her. You tried to turn it on its head, and now I've re-addressed your points (they were originally answered, no?) So, what are your criteria for claiming it to be a part of her body?

    --

    --
    Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
  159. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Evil, malevolant Bush never decreed from his mountain that harvesting stem cells from embryos were banned

    Actually, he did decree that harvesting stem cells was banned within the USA, since he believed it was murder and obviously murder is against the law. Get your facts straight, idiot. Bush said that they couldn't harvest new cells from embryos, but could experiment on previously harvested ones.

  160. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    Point your ire somewhere else. I am firmly pro-choice.

    I'm also a recovering philosophy major, and once upon a time I sat down and tried to work my belief in a woman's right to an abortion into a moral framework, and it doesn't fit.

    Toss all the rhetoric, okay. Here's my logic:

    If a human life has value, then, logically, a potential human life has value...You can't really get value from something that has no value. That doesn't make sense. Something may become more valuable, but there had to be something there to begin with (The pro-lifers would say God puts the value there...I think this is why they don't mind killing people from other religions).

    But aren't sperm cells potential life? Can sperm cells ever become life without intervention (e.g. an egg)? No, so no. By the same token an egg is also not potential life, because, left to its own devices, it's nothing.

    But sperm plus egg equals a mass of cells, that, left to its own devices (barring accident, intervention, etc), will become a human life. Therefore, if human life has value, then that little wad of cells must have value, and to take an active step to abort those cells is to destroy something of value.

    Therefore abortion has a negative moral component.

    The only weakness in the argument is that human life has value. I just assume that, and a number of atheistic materialists would say, "Life is just meat that moves, with no intrinsic value." I don't agree with this (I value being alive, therefore life has value q.e.d) but I can understand how my argument isn't really compelling if you hold that point of view.

    I'm sure, by this point, all the non-objectivists out there are losing their shit. Before you start composing irate replies, allow me to continue.

    I believe this, and I still think women should be allowed to have abortions if they so choose. It is not the governments role to protect the rights of potential citizens. It is not the governments role to make moral judgements in cases where there is no conflict between actual citizens. And this act, while having a clear moral component, is directed at a potential human life, and the concerns of a potential life are not sufficient to warrant any restriction of personal freedom.

    So, in a nutshell, the hard core pro-choicers comfortable assertion that abortion is without a moral element is questionable (assuming human life has value), and the pro-lifers view that potential life is the same as actual life is unsupported by practice, legal precident, or any actual evidence.

    In the end, both sides are trying to gain an ethical/moral high ground, and both sides are willfully distorting the issue in an attempt to make the other side into monsters. Abortion is not a good thing, but in our society, as it stands, it's a necessary evil, and we should all work toward a time when the only abortions are abortions of medical necessity.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  161. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    My opinions:

    1)Permanently vegetative people are no longer people...They are corpses being kept alive by technology.

    2)Fathers should have say in abortion when they can carry the baby to term (I am a father)

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  162. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Trelane · · Score: 1
    1)Permanently vegetative people are no longer people...They are corpses being kept alive by technology.

    How permanent of permanent? As evidenced by...?

    Furthermore, the discussion wasn't permanent vegatative state but rather mere lack of consciousness.

    2)Fathers should have say in abortion when they can carry the baby to term (I am a father) [ Reply to This

    Not at all what I was claiming, actually.

    --

    --
    Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
  163. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Julian352 · · Score: 1

    From my understanding of large amount of different research, the embryonic stem cells are rarely rejected. (Even post-embryonic cells from babies upto 7 days old have very low rejection. That is why the skin from circumcision is often used for skin grafts - very low chance of rejection.) Since the embryo has not developed an individual cell signature, the host's immune system completely ignores the cells. The embryonic stem cells have also been used in some research as "rejuvination" potion, by putting them into the damaged area and having them induce the local cells to heal.

  164. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Trelane · · Score: 1

    re-rereading my comment, I see your confusion. No, I was thinking more along the lines of child support and having to be there for children. Unfortunately, fathers can tecnically sire children and get off scot-free. I do not believe that this should be the case socially, unless abortion is allowed, in which case it becomes a thornier issue and I am heavily leaning towards it still being socially required. In fact, much more so, since in thinking about it, it should reduce male promiscuity (decreasing unwanted pregnancies), and it's not like the baby made itself, i.e. the man had a chance to make a decision to avoid having a child and still decided to go ahead with the procreative process anyway.

    --

    --
    Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
  165. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    The problem is when disapproval makes it into legislation, and budget allocations. On campus housing with daycare for young mothers who still want to go to college? Don't bet on it. Financial assistance to help you make it through what should not be (but is) the difficult of having a child? Not much.

    It's hard in this country to have a child out of wedlock, especially if you're young. No one makes it easy, and you take a lot of crap from holier-than-thou types who see that child as proof that you're some sort of moral faliure, and not as proof that you took the hard road and didn't have an abortion.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  166. Re: So now we submit? by Dudukain · · Score: 0, Troll

    I don't understand the point in this. Bush will still hate it because he's afraid of science, and the embryos that are "saved" will just be thrown away.

  167. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    Personally, I think his baby arguments were pretty crappy. Mine are all over this thread, so I won't repeat them, but the parasite and lack of consciouness arguments are pretty weak. Parasite doesn't wash...many people agonize over having an abortion, no one agonizes over having a tapeworm removed. Likewise, consciouness is way too nebulous to use as a standard for life...no way to prove anyone is conscious but yourself.

    I think I hold with the Catholics on the vegatative state issue...Sure you can hope for an eventual recovery, but there is no sin in allowing them to go peacefully if recovery is unlikely. I've put my money where my mouth is on that one, and I feel pretty strongly about it, but it's just an opinion.

    Same with the father issue. The woman has to bear the burdens, risks, and responsibilites of pregnancy/childbirth...It's not something she can avoid. If she feels wholly unequal to that, she should not be forced to go through with it just because the father is keen on the idea of having a baby. Again, just an opinion.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  168. Hu, intresting that. by S.P.B.Wylie · · Score: 5, Informative

    Technechly, all body cells have two sets, so should all cells be protected? I know that seems silly, but the issue I am pointing out is can you really call something a seperate organism if it cannot, in any way, live outside in another organism? If you remove an embryo from a mother, it would die, just like if it were skin cells you scraped off. Also, if the mother is not in good condition for some reason (injury, malnutrion, ect.), the body will get rid of it, causing a miscarrage. It is totally dependent, and therefore, IMO, it isn't a life yet, just another part of the woman carrying it.

    Also, no matter what you do, women will have abortions by inducing miscarrages, often in unhealty ways. By making it illegal, you are trading potential lifes for actually lifes of women everywhere.

    --
    I give bread to the poor, they call me a saint.
    I ask why the poor have no bread, they call me a communist.
    1. Re:Hu, intresting that. by Aceticon · · Score: 1

      Which kinda makes one think how one can be both a femininist and anti-(legal)-abortion.

      I come from a country where not that long ago abortion was illegal and i know of many situations in which low-means/low-education women had illegal abortions (and risked their lifes in the process) because they didn't want to bring a child to the world to live in poverty and/or be fatherless.

      It takes a real woman to risk her life for the sake of not bringing a child to live a life of poverty.

      It's all nice and prim for reasonably wealthy, well educated women (many of which past their fertile years) to do their best to deny other women the right to a legal safe abortion, all the while calling themselfs feminists - they are not the ones that have to, after a backbreaking 12 hour day of hard work cleaning somebody else's toilet's, go back to their tinfoil and wood shack and their dirty, snot-nosed 12 kids that have been left on their own the whole day to roam the streets (did i mention that some of those kids are girls which will grow up to be poor and uneducated single mothers, just like their mothers were?).

      Having seen real poverty up close, it's hard for me not to despise those who loudly proclaim their high-morals all the while trying to knowingly get laws to be such that the cycle of poverty is reinforced.

      PS: Doing charity work, no mater what your "Cristians for Helping the Poor" (or whatever other high-morals charity organization you belong to) pals tell you, does not in anyway excuse you from pressing for laws that pertty much guarantee that the children of those which are poor and uneducated people will be poor and uneducated themselfs.

    2. Re:Hu, intresting that. by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It is totally dependent, and therefore, IMO, it isn't a life yet, just another part of the woman carrying it.

      ...much as a coma patient is just another part of the hospital.

      Whether you agree with that or not, surely you can appreciate that the issue is more nuanced that you're putting forward.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    3. Re:Hu, intresting that. by RsG · · Score: 1
      ...much as a coma patient is just another part of the hospital.
      ...except that hospitals aren't organisms, they're institutions dedicated to caring for or curing those in need. By your arguments, if a women is to a fetus as a hospital is to a patient, doesn't that mean her only purpose is childbearing? Because I think you'll find that outlook doesn't really fly these days...

      Plus, a coma patient (or rather that patient's relatives, or the gov't in social helth care systems) are paying the hospital to keep the coma patient alive. They're not a burden on the hospital, rather the opposite - patients keep the doctors gainfully employed.

      I'd say the comparison is invalid. I'm not disagreeing with you on the nuanced point, but the analogy you're using to illustrate it is a strawman.
      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    4. Re:Hu, intresting that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So it's like a strawman in a hospital? Wait, this man's not in a coma!

    5. Re:Hu, intresting that. by S.P.B.Wylie · · Score: 1

      You missed the "potential life" part. I refuse to sacrifice the life of this mother for this potential life. Technechly, one could claim that the mother might comit suicide to save this child from a life of poverty. It still is her body. Once the child is born, though (or can be born), it is then the reponcibility of their parents, and the society above that.

      --
      I give bread to the poor, they call me a saint.
      I ask why the poor have no bread, they call me a communist.
    6. Re:Hu, intresting that. by Carpe+PM · · Score: 1
      Ah, only "potential life", and therefore more expendable than a recyclable can.

      I shall take the hint, find the nest of an endangered-species bird, take the eggs and make an omelet. Expendable, only potential.

  169. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Trelane · · Score: 1
    we should all work toward a time when the only abortions are abortions of medical necessity.
    I'll drink to that. Heck, if we ever meet, I'll buy you a drink too. I think we could have a pretty good conversation.
    --

    --
    Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
  170. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Preaching abstinence is not the answer. It doesn't work. They already know they're not supposed to be having sex...hell, that's probably one of the reasons they're doing it! And if you don't tell them anything besides "Don't have sex" you haven't taught them anything about how to be safe when they actually do have sex. And they will! It's a sad specimen that goes through life with no sex, and very few people wait until after marriage these days.

    And economics? To minors who think that money is something you ask your dad for more of? I don't think that'll be a compelling argument.

    I don't have problems with those things being taught, but they should be only a small part of the total lesson. Those kids should be taught about sex, they should be taught about rape, they should be taught about many different kinds of birth control AND HOW TO USE THEM. They should be taught about abortions, and how to make sure you don't need one. STDs, abuse, health issues, legal issues, the works, all the stuff that we had to learn the hard way.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  171. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    It is not the governments role to make moral judgements in cases where there is no conflict between actual citizens
    Wohoo, time to kill me some Mexican immigrants.
  172. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    Lol. Excellent counterpoint. I guess what I'm trying to say is, "Government should stay out of peoples uteruses."

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  173. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Rev+Snow · · Score: 1
    How about telling kids "Abstinence is the only 100% effective way to prevent pregnancy and STDs, and it'd be great if you practiced it. However, that's probably unrealistic, and so here are some ways to protect yourself if you do choose to have sex.

    Would you accept a revision to your proposal? Just drop the words in bold.

    Telling students they are likely to fail has the effect of actually making them more likely to fail. Drop the abstinence defeatest attitude, if you're really looking for a successful middle ground proposal.

  174. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by RobertLTux · · Score: 1

    A cluster of skin cells or brain cells is living human tissue as well, but that doesn't qualify it as a human being.

    Fair enough. So where do we draw the line, because a human is also a cluster of cells.
    ----
    easy answer to the whole where do we draw the line
    P L A C E N T A
    since the placenta is more or less a DMZ between the mother and baby (the baby's cells are used btw) that is where we draw the line

    oh btw i would say if you get a woman pregnent without consent:
    1 you are an adult and so is she---- you get to work in a prison farm
    2 you are an adult and she isn't ---- you get hung and your body gets sold
    3 you are not an adult she is --- shortish trip to a low end work farm
    4 you are not an adult and she isn't ---- income gets garnished and if you don't mantain a job see case 3

    --
    Any person using FTFY or editing my postings agrees to a US$50.00 charge
  175. The word "Microsoft". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Yeah, yeah, I know that's not the case, but in this day and age of bumper sticker sound bites, that's all people hear and they don't want to investigate further. They'll just jump to the first two-bit opinion that fits or the opinion that was given to them by a pundit and to hell with the facts."

    Let's do an experiment. MICROSOFT! *looks around* Yup. I'd say you're right.

  176. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Trelane · · Score: 1
    Fair enough. So where do we draw the line, because a human is also a cluster of cells.

    Indeed, as was my point. Sheesh.

    The criteria I put forward were: Genetically human A cluster skin cells or brain cells are human, is is the whole human organism Alive While the whole human is rather obviously alive, the skin or brain cells within the cluster may individually be alive, but arguably the whole is not an organism in and of itself (a failure of scope?). An embryo is also alive, as the cells are, and they also are the entire organism at its current stage of development.
    easy answer to the whole where do we draw the line P L A C E N T A since the placenta is more or less a DMZ between the mother and baby (the baby's cells are used btw) that is where we draw the line

    Interesting. Unfortunately, abortion would consist of killing the attached fetus, an invasion past the "DMZ" and hence a violation of the other side's rights. Also, why is attachment suddenly the differentiator? Is it a human after it attaches, but not before?!

    [Note to slashdot: is the Definition List broken in your CSS?!

    --

    --
    Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
  177. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Keebler71 · · Score: 1
    Lab Tech 2: "Would you like to adopt one?"

    Right Wing Right-to-Life Zealot: "Absolutely not!!! I insist they not be murdered, but I'm no charity, go find someone else to raise it!"

    I am what you would probably call a "right wing right-to-life zealot" if by that you mean someone who is a conservative Republican who also believes that abortion should be illegal. My wife is also a "right wing right-to-life zealot" although she has a little more perspective on the issue since she was adopted herself (thankfully) after being conceived by a 15 year-old girl. She was raised by a wonderful family whose conservativism makes me look like Joe Stalin so I guess that makes them "right wing right-to-life zealots" too. Our adopted son is 11 months old and sleeping upstairs right now. In about an hour, when he wakes up, I will be giving him a bottle and putting him back sleep. I don't know what his political leanings will be, but I have no doubt in my mind that when he grows up he will be a "right-to-life zealot" also.

    Maybe you should go out and meet some real people in the real world instead of just formenting your hateful, ignorant stereotypes of them by spending all your time reading dailykos.org, commondreams.org, and democraticunderground.com. What are you afraid of?

    --
    "It takes considerable knowledge just to realize the extent of your own ignorance." - Thomas Sowell
  178. Re:mod parent underrated, lol by rossifer · · Score: 1
    The problem with your approach, as with all approaches that start with conception is that people will never agree when life begins. Is that fertilized egg human life? What about at the embryo stage? When we start from a state of non-life a sperm and an egg and try and determine when life begins, it's anybody's guess.
    Is that my approach? Either I dramatically miswrote something or you dramatically misread something. Looking back at my post: you misread something. Take another look. I think you'll find that I do not assert that life begins with conception (or state any other conclusions about when life starts).

    The big hint ought to be:

    It's the definition of the start of "humanhood" that's the ultimate core of each side's argument, and for all of the attempts to draw firm black/white distinctions by both sides, what is actually a human being, with all of the rights and responsibilities of that label, has a very fuzzy start with lots of shades of grey.
    By the way, birth isn't an absolute either. Other cultures have argued that a baby doesn't have human rights until one or more days after birth. It's a pragmatic approach which can allow poor mothers to avoid starving all of her children because she happened to get pregnant again.

    Back to your remarks:

    Who's to say their morallity [sic] is any better or worse than yours or mine? It's just different.
    All moralities are equal, eh? I have a few questions for you:
    • Can different moral systems result in more or less happiness for people who follow them (all other things being equal)?
    • Do different moral systems result is more of less happiness for people in communities where most people in the community follow them (all other things being equal)?
    I assert that people choose a moral system because they believe that following those morals gives them a greater chance of having "The Good Life", which I approximately define as long-term happiness. I further assert that the happiness of the individual and the happiness of the community are both important, though an appropriate balance of happiness between self and others is a much larger discussion. I also assert that some moral systems are better at maximizing self and other happiness. Finally, I'll assert that rule-based moralities (like all Bible-based moralities) are inferior to moral systems that ask you to think through consequences to achieve goals.

    Ultimately, they are inferior because the world changes and rules can't adapt the way thinking can.

    So, in answer to your question: who am I to say their morality is better or worse than mine? I'm me. I'm free to reach my own conclusions on the matter, and I have. From here, though I'm frequently learning new things (and changing my mind on various subjects as a result), I sincerely doubt that I'll learn something to reverse my big conclusions about morality. The details? Sure. But on the big picture, I just don't buy that there's a big guy in the sky who's got anything useful to say about right and wrong.

    Regards,
    Ross
  179. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by 2short · · Score: 1

    Good question. I don't know. Neither do you. Neither does anyone, because it's a matter of opinion. So the question is whose opinion should matter most in the case of a particular pregnat woman. I find it hard to imagine answering that with anything but "Hers".

  180. ugh by ampathee · · Score: 1

    Pro-life, Pro-choice. Stupid namby pamby frolicking-around-the-point.
    How about this: pro-abortion, anti-abortion.
    But noooo, no-one likes to say "abortion", so we'll invent some new sickeningly cheery PC euphemisms. Oh and we also can't be "anti" anything either. *spit*

    </rant>

    1. Re:ugh by Benzido · · Score: 1

      I'm not 'pro-abortion' in the sense that I think that it is good when someone has an abortion. I think it is (mildly) bad when someone has an abortion. But I think that having a baby when you don't want to can be (very) bad, and so I think a pregnant woman should be the one to decide whether or not it would be worse for her to have a baby than an abortion.

      'Pro-abortion' would just be wildly inaccurate to describe my view. So would 'anti-abortion'. It's hardly a 'cheery PC euphemism' if I describe my view as 'pro choice'. I would be just as happy to be described as 'anti-forced-birth', or 'anti-unwanted-babies', except these options takes longer to type and is more difficult to say.

  181. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by llamaluvr · · Score: 1

    While the embryos all do indeed have the potential to one day live independent lives, one shouldn't deny the fact that at best MOST of them will die, and, possibly ALL of them might die. Many, many, many embryos die for one successful implantation. At least the friend represents an already independent life that will definitely live if you help him. There is no possible way to save a single embryo without being complicit in the murder of many more. This seems like an effort to push the problem of what to do with all these embryos back on pro-lifers. Sorry, but the vast majority of these embryos are doomed because of those who created them outside of the womb, not because of those who objected to this abuse of life from the beginning.

    --
    Insightful: 76, Off-Topic: 379, Flamebait: 24, Funny: 152, Interesting: 201, Underrated: 55, Troll: 9, Total: 896
  182. Reverend Condom-Preacher by focoma · · Score: 1

    Of course preaching is not enough! Why do you think I disagree with your condom-preaching? You talk about having pre-marital sex as "one of the reasons they're doing it". So? Do we fix the problem of rebelliousness by adding another taboo for them to break? When it becomes normal for parents to nag their children not to have sex w/o condoms, that will be another thing for the adventurous ones to do. Besides, as you say, they can always ask Dad for child-support. So what the heck is the difference?

    Education is enough for people who have sense. Nothing, not even the PowerPoint presentations of the more-liberal-than-thou sex-ed teachers, is enough for those without sense.

    Let me clarify things for you. I don't object (not too much, anyway) if certain poor souls want to engage in consensual and legal fornication. I don't even see why I should care about them using condoms, since that'll just add to an already existing wrong. People have the right to do legal yet stupid things, even when they are wrong in doing so.

    What I object to is when these people make the mistake of getting pregnant without wanting to, and then guys like you start blaming it on religion. I mean, if I was going to break my religion's teachings, I wouldn't do it half-assed and get myself into trouble. Only a dimwit would say "God, I'm sorry I fucked her, but at least I didn't use a condom".

    As I say, even though it's likely that reactionary Christians are at fault for the lack of awareness in kids by banning all talk about sex, the emphasis is on reactionary. Atheists could prevent the spread of knowledge just as much as theists, and many atheists do... mainly by their incessant finger-pointing.

    --

    - Francis Ocoma

    Please wait while Sig Request is being processed...

    1. Re:Reverend Condom-Preacher by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Education is enough for people who have sense. Nothing [...] is enough for those without sense.

      There are a lot "gray" people in between, if you did not know.

      Why is consensual sex in your opinion "wrong"? Is it because of your church or your religion?

      [...] start blaming it on religion.

      No, I think he was not blaming religion, only the church. But maybe they are the same to you?

      You are saying some atheists are assholes and of course you are right. But please show me the church that advocates condoms. Please do.

    2. Re:Reverend Condom-Preacher by bky1701 · · Score: 1
      When it becomes normal for parents to nag their children not to have sex w/o condoms
      Then's who's fault is it? Guess? Anyone? The parents! Education needs to be given to the parents as well, and their's needs to focus on the psychological reasons kids do things.

      Education is enough for people who have sense. Nothing, not even the PowerPoint presentations of the more-liberal-than-thou sex-ed teachers, is enough for those without sense.
      Or those that no longer care. Hey, by christian standards, I am going to burn just for being logical. The same logic that makes me not want to have sex. But when you make people out to be evil for rightly doubting you, you are basically left with idiots. Ones you may have helped make. Not to you cannot be logical and christian, and not to say you or anyone else is not logical. It's just the outcome of making logic the bad thing.

      Let me clarify things for you. I don't object (not too much, anyway) if certain poor souls want to engage in consensual and legal fornication. I don't even see why I should care about them using condoms, since that'll just add to an already existing wrong. People have the right to do legal yet stupid things, even when they are wrong in doing so.
      And that is the reason you will never fix the problem . Telling people they are doing something evil regardless tends to make them care less about the finer points of your debate against their sexual activities. "Boy, you will go to hell anyway, but you may as well not be REALLY REALLY evil, because... um...." Yeah. That's you and your finer points.

      What I object to is when these people make the mistake of getting pregnant without wanting to, and then guys like you start blaming it on religion.
      If my above debate is right, responsibility no longer exists I guess. That's all I have to say.

      Atheists could prevent the spread of knowledge just as much as theists, and many atheists do... mainly by their incessant finger-pointing.
      Us? Point fingers? Who just pointed their finger? With how few Atheists there are, you can HARDLY blame us for the problems that existed long before Atheism was anything other then a "heathen, pegan cult". While I do agree we need to do more, you and your "Jesus loves you" is hardly fixing anything, and we (as stated) are hardly in a majority place to fix a whole hell of a lot, especially when fought by the masses (mostly christians for christian reasons) at every turn.
    3. Re:Reverend Condom-Preacher by focoma · · Score: 1
      Then's who's fault is it? Guess? Anyone? The parents!

      Exactly. It's a bit more complicated than that, but did you think I'd disagree?

      Us? Point fingers? Who just pointed their finger?

      Look, the whole point was that I am offended when atheists wrongfully point at religion everytime believers do something wrong (and contrary to their religion). Simple as that. Are you going to argue that I shouldn't be offended? Man...

      About the rest of your reply, boy, don't you have the talent of putting Fundamentalist crap in my mouth and deriding me based on those planted crap. Unless you're going to argue that I can't have negative views of people I disagree with (not to say that they're necessarily going to hell; read the Cathecism, will you?), that's all I'm going to say.

      --

      - Francis Ocoma

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    4. Re:Reverend Condom-Preacher by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      There is basically no possibility of getting a solid sex ed program at any local school where I live because religious groups go absolutely apeshit when it's even suggested, because they believe that they should be completely in charge of the sex education that their children get...Which would be fine if everyone did a good job of educating their kids, but that is not the case.

      I do not see how "atheists" getting pissed off because they're not allowed to have secular sex ed without it being hijacked by the religious "abstinence only" crowd, is in any way causing the problem. And for the record, I'm not an atheist, and most people who want the damn church to back off on sex ed are not atheists, and it is very typical of a certain type of religious thinker to think that only an atheist could want sex ed.

      The problem is, religious sex ed is all about the morality of sex, and that is useless to people who decide to have sex anyway. Practical, secular education about the physcial issues regarding sex is useful to anyone who might one day have sex. Practical instruction in different types of birth control will help anyone who ever uses birth control. Practical talk about STDs and the real upsides and downsides of sex is useful and needed.

      And the thing that stands between that useful and needed knowledge and our kids, is religious groups who think that knowing actual facts is the same as being brainwashed into sexual deviance. If you want to call that finger pointing, by all means, feel free.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    5. Re:Reverend Condom-Preacher by focoma · · Score: 1
      And the thing that stands between that useful and needed knowledge and our kids, is religious groups who think that knowing actual facts is the same as being brainwashed into sexual deviance.

      I disagree. I think the problem is twofold: the prudish reactionaries don't want to talk about sex at all (I can't imagine how there could be so many of them in the U.S., though...but then, I'm not American), while the "liberals" insist on contraceptive-use. No one wants to compromise, so you Americans end up the way you are. That's why I think both sides of the religious debate is at fault. If only you'd agree on educating your children about sex first (i.e. the biological, social, legal aspects of it), without teaching them how to safely live against their religious beliefs, maybe there will be progress.

      Yes, I know that there will be kids who'd want to do it regardless of what they are taught. We can go on and on debating about how to deal with those people, but that won't get us anywhere. Start with a compromise first, and then you can move your way up from there.

      --

      - Francis Ocoma

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    6. Re:Reverend Condom-Preacher by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      It's the fucking puritans, still haunting us after hundreds of years. I guarantee you there are more prudish reactionaries than you can even imagine, especially we you're talking about sex and nudity. Did the superbowl flap a few years ago cross the pond? One nipple at half time and there are still ripples being felt, lawsuits being settled, and fingers being pointed. And that's just a nipple! Think about the reaction toward sex ed?!?

      It's all well and good to talk about compromise, but where do you compromise with people who say "Abstinence only, and no provided birth control." There's no compromise there, they won that issue already! They got it they way they want it because the prude population is high enough that even moderately liberal representatives are unwilling to push the "teach kids about sex" angle.

      The thing is, I don't really care. It's not important to me at this stage in my life, and I'm a firm enough believer in having ALL the facts that I'll sit down with my kids and explain it to them, and run through the risks and the problems, provide them some reading material for anything I miss, tell the family doctor that they're allowed to have birth control, and then go drink a few litres of scotch.

      But I think it's sick that people oppose sex ed just out of principle, then complain about all the goddamn issues we have with teen pregnancy and abortions.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  183. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

    It's almost certainly a little more complicated than that. For instance, monogamy is advantageous from an evolutionary standpoint, since it prevents the large-scale spread of disease, and it has social advantages as well.

  184. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1
    we should all work toward a time when the only abortions are abortions of medical necessity.
    I'll drink to that. Heck, if we ever meet, I'll buy you a drink too. I think we could have a pretty good conversation.

    You shouldn't be drinking if you're pregnant!

  185. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

    An embryo, "when left to it's own devices" dies. Even if it's kept alive in vitro, it still just sits frozen inside of a petri dish forever unless it is eventually implanted into a woman's uterus and the gestation cycle is completed.

    Religious rhetoric aside, an undeveloped embryo is as sentient a lifeform as a culture of fungi or any other simple organism with a comparable level of complexity. It does not suffer, it does not experience consciousness, and it certainly can't be considered murder any more than killing any other organism sharing the same level of sentience. Objectively speaking, it's far worse to kill, say, a grown chicken or cow than to let an embryo die by preventing gestation.

    Your differential in value between various "classes" of potential life seems rather arbitrary, and what little logic you've given for it is self-contradictory (rather poorly reasoned for a "philosophy major" imho). How does something of little value (gametes) develop into something of much greater value (human life)? If you can give more value to something (a gamete in this case) by facilitating biological processes (implantation/fertilization, for instance), then why isn't it possible to give value to something which initially had no value? Where do you think gametes come from? Do you think they just magically appear as mature eggs and sperms? Does your body not give each collection of atoms and molecules, which initially had no value in regards to being potential for human life, value by organizing them in a particular cellular structure?

    If you want to be logically consistent, then you would have to at the very least concede that masturbation is also unethical to some extent. But your argument that preventing potential life from developing into life is unethical is still absurd. That potential can still only be fulfilled if facilitated by external forces. Who says that just because the potential is there that it is wrong to not realize that potential? A woman choosing to abort a pregnancy and not allow the fertilized egg to develop into a human-life is no more wrong than 2 sexually mature individuals of the opposite sex choosing to use contraceptives during intercourse to prevent their respective gametes from developing into a human-life. They are actively destroying those gametes' potential for life, but whatever "value" those gametes have to you, you still haven't provided any reasoning why it's wrong to destroy it.

    Frankly, your argument is rather flimsly for someone who has supposedly studied philosophy, so before you toss aside all rhetoric, you might want to give a little more thought into your own. Perhaps you need to elaborate on what kind of "value" you are talking about, and why it is wrong to destroy something with this kind of value. Something less vague and of more tangible nature, like the level of sentience a lifeform possesses, might be preferable to vague metaphysical qualities that you've subjectively assigned.

  186. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

    The placenta is an organ that women develop during pregnancy to facilitate gestation. You might as well arbitrarily assign the umbilical cord or endometrial lining of the uterus as the cut off point.

  187. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by lysergic.acid · · Score: 2, Insightful
    How do you know how much consciousness a foetus does or does not possess? What is your metric?
    1. We know that brain scans don't reveal any type of neural activity until the 3rd trimester.
    2. We know that nerve endings don't fully develop until around this same time.

    And my metric is what the embryo/fetus is biologically capable of at that point of development. The human reproductive cycle is well understood and the biology behind it has been extensively studied. Consciousness in the context I was using it in refers to the state of being sentient. Being asleep or "unconscious" does not mean that one is braindead or has lost sentience.

    Also, even though gametes are the only haploid cells in a human being, that doesn't mean they don't possess a full set of chromosomes which are expressed in a human being (the monoploid number in humans is the same as the haploid number). If you want to say that gametes aren't human beings because they are haploid cells, then what about a culture of tongue cells or any of the many other types of diploid cells in the human body which can live in vitro and grow and reproduce?

    Why not make the distinction based on the abundance of other biological characteristics which are different between embryos and a 3rd-trimester fetus? Or on more fundamental differences such as cognitive capacity or biological complexity?

  188. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Schraegstrichpunkt · · Score: 1

    Why should we let the facts get in the way of our zealotry?

  189. Would Bush approve? by jandersen · · Score: 1

    Why would you think he would care? I think that personally he doesn't a hoot about whether you kill embryos, just like he doesn't really care whether civilians are massacred in his war game in the Middle East. He will care if he is told to care by the guys with most money.

    Anyway, I think this debate about not killing 'human life' is totally out of proportion with reality. We are talking about a tiny lump of cells, not unlike a drop of snot; in fact, you shed more human cells each time you blow your nose of go to the toilet. If 'human life' is that holy, should we fight against people cruelly killing off body cells? Or how about cancer cells? They are most definitely human - is it wrong to treat cancer?

    Of course not - it would be silly to suggest this, but no sillier than being against harvesting stem cells from ammbryos.

  190. Re:mod parent underrated, lol by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

    You seem to have a pretty good grasp of biology so you ought to also realize that genetic mutation is an inevitable consequence of our biological design. A tumor also has distinct DNA from its host, but that doesn't really imply that it's a separate human life or that excising a tumor is wrong.

    And I never said that science is cut and dry, but there are some things which pro-life rhetoric blatanly contradicts. The issue of abortion may not be self-contained in the field of science, but it clearly requires a certain measure of scientific background to properly grasp it.

  191. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Grab · · Score: 1

    Problem is that they *don't* get implanted in infertile women. Most unused embryos are destroyed (and in the UK, that's actually mandatory). I've yet to see a "right-to-life zealot" complaining about the mass murder committed every day by these infertility clinics in disposing of these unused embryos.

    Not that I think they're right, but they should at least be internally consistent. Either destroying embryos is murder or it isn't. And if it is, every infertility clinic in the world "murders" around half-a-dozen embryos per treatment. In fact, if it is, then every woman on the Pill "murders" 13 embryos per year, and most women who aren't on the Pill "murder" a fair number whilst trying for a child.

    Grab.

  192. Re:mod parent underrated, lol by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    Is that my approach? Either I dramatically miswrote something or you dramatically misread something. Looking back at my post: you misread something. Take another look. I think you'll find that I do not assert that life begins with conception (or state any other conclusions about when life starts).

    While you mention "humanhood," that is a pretty modern and to date undefined concept. If I'm not mistaken, the notion of humanhood as the basis for when a person exists has only been around for the last 40 years or so and is still in the debate stage of what it means. From my limited understanding of it, but some definitions, for instance, new born infants, since they are not aware of their own existance would not considered human persons. Because of it is such a new concept and hasn't stood the test of time and the rest of your post was refering to more traditional concepts, I didn't focus on the "humanhood" aspect of what you were saying. Sorry about that. However, since most of the rest of your post was about fertilizing the embryo and it's status, that is where I picked up the "life begins at conception" argument, because for most people that's where they see the issue.

    BTW, I agree that birth isn't an absolute either, however, I assumed we were talking about western culture as that is where most of the controversy over the research is taking place. I don't buy the arugument, however, that a poor mother starving her newborn to keep from starving the other children is an example of the newborn not having rights. It could simply be the mother being place in the terrible position of having to choose which child has the greatest chance of survival with the limited food at hand. Kind of a very real and sad version of the life boat question of who are you going to throw out of the boat so the others can be saved.

    I find your comments on moral systems very intresting and for the most part don't disagree. I don't think, however, that rule-based moralities, like Bible-based ones, HAVE to be as inflexible as you make them out to be. There's nothing to keep them from allowing for adaptation to the situation and circumstances (whether they do or not is a different story). I also am not sure that the purpose of a moral system is for happiness (you mention that several times) or for an ordered society (which ultimately leads to certain level of happiness). If the purpose is really just to maximize happiness, then that would seem to lead to what many would view as an immoral society by today's standards anyway and would seem to allow for the infringement on others "rights."

    So, if the purpose is to maximize happiness but with certain restriction on how far you can go, then we are back to a rule-based morality like you are opposed to.

    As for the question of "Who are you to say your morality is better or worse..." I have to admit, that was a cheap shot and I shouldn't have made it. My intention was, however, to emphasize that in the argument on pro-life argument people are using two (or more) different moral frameworks for their reasoning. To one group, the threat is the other group is trying to take something away. To the other group, they think they are trying to restore what was taken away. Until they come up with a common framework, however, it is unlikely the debate on this issue will go away (even if politically, the laws changed, the debate will rage on, it will only change who is doing the protesting).

    As for the big guy in the sky, whether you believe in one or not or whether if there is on who's got anythign useful to say about right or wrong doesn't change the fact that all of those people who came before you that did believe and were influence by such a deity have passed down their morality through social norms that you have been influenced by (we all have). Our basic sense of right and wrong is culturally based and is based, at least in the U.S. on judea-christian values. They aren't set in stone, but they don't change easily, either. So, like it or not, even if you think through your consequences to achieve the goals you want, it's still influenced, in some form or another by the big guy in the sky (or at least by those who believe there is a big guy in the sky).

  193. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Shaper_pmp · · Score: 1

    Well said.

    Speaking of which, given scientific research and medical advances are of benefit to society, and Bush believes that abortion is murder...

    Why did he find it abhorrent to "murder" for profit, but decide that it's ok to profit from "murder" that's already happened?

    If you're taking the amoral pragmatic view, this makes perfect sense. If you're trying to make it an issue of morality and principles, I don't see a significant difference between the two actions.

    --
    Everything in moderation, including moderation itself
  194. Hey there, laddie. Internal Exile ! by krell · · Score: 1

    "I know of a few NEAR lands that need colonizing- BLM lands in Nevada "

    We could put a bunch of diverse people there. It's not like people have ever fought over desert land before.

    --
    Where were you when the voynix came?
  195. You said a mouthful by cascadingstylesheet · · Score: 1

    >Harming the Embryo is half the fun of Stem Cell Research!

    You're being funny, but the sick thing is that this is true.

    Look for stem cell research to get far less trendy and popular and for people to be far less gung-ho about it if this (getting the cells without killing the embryo) pans out. Something about destroying the embryo made this weirdly attractive to many.

  196. that's the way it's always been. by Nowhere.Men · · Score: 1

    Always is a very short period for you. Before the time it's always been, there was a time where we were offering human sacrifice to apease the wind.

    Science and Religion can NOT co-exist. One is based on reason, the other on faith.
    There shouldn't be any 'I believe' in science. And there are very little of reasoning in Religion. But we are all human and we all make mistakes to mix/do things, that we shoud not.
    ---

    Science should not be held back by ignorance, religious or others.
    To be more precise, we have to make a distinction between scientific knowledge and scientific methode.

    There should be no limits in the scientific knowledges we are pursuing. (I don't want things like : Don't study the Big Bang because you may show that God does not exist!)

    There should be limits on what we do with our knowledge. (e.g. don't test nuclear weapon in the atmosphere because it pollute.) Those limits should be set by the community at large using all the knowledge at our disposition. These decision should apply to everybody/everything including but not limited to the scientific methodology.

    Can you or can you not destroy an embryo? The origin/reason should not matter: abortion, extra embryo from fertility treatment, scientific experiment, ...

    1. Re:that's the way it's always been. by mrpeebles · · Score: 1

      You are comparing the scientific elite with the common worshiper. Take a look at the common scientific beliefs in the USA, say, and you will find can be just as irrational and superstitious as religious beliefs. But of course, my guess is that you would instinctively lump them in with religious beliefs. This is the problem- when we say science, we inevitably mean only the beliefs of the scientific elite. When we say religion, we typically aren't referring to the beliefs of, say, the university theologians, who are the intellectual equivalents of the scientists. Instead, we mean whatever aspects of the belief system of the masses has gained political traction. These are the beliefs of people who often have to worry about getting their kids through college more than logical consistency or the need to always push the limits of imagination. Finally, to say that science is reason, while religion is faith, is a vast oversimplification. True, religion places emphasis, maybe even preeminence, on personal revelation, which science can never accept. But science is not based on pure reason, and does require assumptions, and the christian tradition makes extensive use of reason.

    2. Re:that's the way it's always been. by Nowhere.Men · · Score: 1

      No, I'was comparing the elite, you may say fundamentalist, on both side.
      The ones who think that wearing a condom during sex will send you to hell, such idea comes from people who study theology at University.
      Such idea does not come from John Doe who go to church with his wife every sunday and has sex with his secretary during the week.

      The scientists are aware thatthe assumption they made may be wrong. Along the years, many such assumptions has been proven wrong, new theory build with new assumption.

      If the reason used by catholics is the same used in Intelligent Design, I'm not impress.

    3. Re:that's the way it's always been. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Science and Religion can NOT co-exist

      I would have to disagree - One is the How, the other is the Why.

  197. It only takes one... by ShyGuy91284 · · Score: 1

    Much likes screwing around with nuclear weapons, it only takes one mistake to completely blow yourself up. I have my doubts this is 100% harmless (as nothing ever is), and after a couple dozen ebryos that don't develop or children that are severely handycapped, this will probably get shot down.....

    --
    In undeveloped countries, the consumer controls the market. In capitalist America, the market controls you.
  198. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
    since the church is anti-sex ed, and opposed to providing any form of contraception

    Slow down there! What you meant to say was that "the Catholic church is opposed to contraception". In the United States, about 26% of adults are Catholics - hardly a majority of religious practitioners. I'm not aware of any other major religious groups that oppose contraception, and I'm certain that less than 100% of Catholics agree with that policy.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  199. Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From my understanding of their work they are taking a cell from a 8 cell blastoplast (not yet an embryo, as the neurons are yet to form). They then leave this cell to replicate, using one for DNA testing and the others for stem cells.

    The problem is simple: if you split a blastoplast in the womb and the split one replicates and successfully grows into an embryo then you have an identical twin. So if you believe destroying a blastoplast is morally wrong then destroying the 'twin' blastoplast is equally as wrong as destroying the original blastoplast.

    This paper isn't science, it's public relations.

    Cheers, Glen Turner.

    PS: For the record, I don't think destroying a blastoplast is morally wrong, our bodies do that all the time.

  200. Don't kill me, kill my brother. by Nowhere.Men · · Score: 1

    Isn't that methode just creating a second embryo that could develop into the twin of the unborn
    child this method is supposed to save?

    To the newly born child:
    Science has saved you. Without such discovery, they would have destroyed you. Now, they had just to create your twin and destroy it ...

    Unless they let the twin grow and remove one of his cells. ...

  201. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by AdamWeeden · · Score: 1
    I will grant you that there is some tension between the two beliefs...
    There shouldn't be. I'm against abortion AND against out-of-wedlock childbirth, but my issue with the latter is less the result and more the cause (i.e., pre-marital sex). I know many out-of-wedlock mothers, and while they know I disagree with the action they chose that led to that status, it doesn't mean that I stop associating with them, tell them they are going to hell for having a baby out-of-wedlock, or treat the child any differently than any other child I come in contact with. It is important to realize that when an out-of-wedlock woman gets pregnant the damage has already been done, but she CAN still make the best of a bad situation by accepting the mistake, move on, and try to be the best out-of-wedlock mother she can be.
    --
    I was quoted out of context in my autobiography...
  202. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Dan+Ost · · Score: 1

    In fact, if it is, then every woman on the Pill "murders" 13 embryos per year

    The Pill simply prevents ovulation, so no embryos are involved.

    --

    *sigh* back to work...
  203. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by ArmyOfFun · · Score: 1

    Why was this modded troll?

  204. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    Why would masturbation be unethical? Is spitting unethical? Masturbation has nothing to do with potential life, because it is impossible for masturbation to create potential life. Sperm + egg brought together in a hospitable environment is potential life. A fertilized embryo in a freezer is not potential life, because without some serious intervention, it will never become a life. If you think I'm arguing that stored embryos shouldn't be used for medical research you're out of your mind.

    Sentience means nothing. Consciousness means nothing. And no, it ain't murder. You're trying to prove it's a person, and I'm not, because it's not. But if it will grow into a human life without intervention/accident, it is undeniably a potential human life. Not a parasite or a fungus or any number of other things which will never ever become a human life.

    Chickens and cows are beyond the scope of this argument, but, for the sake of argument, are you saying that the life of a chicken or a cow should weigh against a human life? I don't argue with vegans in the same way I don't argue with drunks.

    I have a very narrow and defined range for potential human life. Implanted embryos only. If you can provide a proof that a viable implanted human embryo is not a potential human life, I would be glad to hear it. Until they find a way to bring a baby to term without a woman, this definition is extremely specific. This is a boundary condition. It is not a class. It is a definition for the sake of argument, which you completely ignored.

    Within that very strict definition of "potential human life" which coincidentally covers all of the cases where abortion is necessary, and assuming human life is valuable, the termination of that potential is an act with a negative moral component. End of story.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  205. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by mutterc · · Score: 1
  206. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Grab · · Score: 1

    It works in several ways - preventing ovulation *and* preventing implantation.

    I guess the case is more clear-cut for the "morning after" pill, about which there are complaints by pro-lifers. Although I don't believe they also complain about IUDs, which is curious.

  207. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How is it a defeatist attitude? You've got maybe a few days/weeks out of several years of school (unless they've changed since I was a kid) weighed against the full force of teenage hormones. Saying abstinance isn't likely to work isn't defeatist, it's optimistic - defeatist would be admitting that abstiance isn't going to work at all, since the ones who abstain would have done so anyway.

    A decent middle ground proposal would be as follows:

    1. Here are the mathematical odds of conception. Here are the rates of infection for various STDs, and their transmissability. If you do screw, these are what you're risking (a few pictures of herpes sores wouldn't hurt here, though the parents in some communities would raise hell).

    2. If you do decide to have sex, these are the things you can do to prevent the above. This is what will work, and this is what won't. Here is the information about how to recognize symptoms of infection - see a doctor if you get them, and soon. Ideally this stage of the teaching should involve useful instructions on stuff like proper condom use, which makes a huge difference in effectiveness.

    3. Don't sleep around. If you do decide to have sex, monogamy reduces you chances of catching anything. Give 'em a carrot here - tell them sex is more fun if the other person actually has an emotional attachment to you (which is a message that might actually do some good).

    4. Finally, it's better not to have sex in the first place until you're an adult.

    The key idea here is to get them looking at the situation realistically, with an informed knowledge of important stuff like birth control. Then you tell them not to fuck. Teaching responsibility isn't about trying to scare the kids into good behavior, it's about teaching them to think carefully before they act.

  208. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by phlinn · · Score: 1

    No, it is NOT banned. Federal funding of research involving new lines is banned. That is all. Check out Stanford's stem cell research institute. Private funding for harvesting new stem cell lines is still possible. Perhaps you should get your facts straight, idiot.

    --
    "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
  209. Delayed gratification by CustomDesigned · · Score: 1
    You're extremely thirsty on your hike through Death Valley. You see a spring of water. The water is perfectly clear. No insects or slime. The thought of passing that delicious looking water by and slogging on is almost unbearable. Do you a) drink the crystal clear water b) slog on. Answer: your choice, but such springs in Death Valley are deadly poison - hopefully you took that into account.

    in my experience usually those who subject themselves to chronic frustration develop serious long term side effects, none of which are positive.

    There was no chronic frustration because I took the simple and obvious expedient of avoiding the problematic situation. If you're on a diet, frequenting the donut shop might not be the best course.

    What *is* extremely unhealthy is sexual promiscuity. Sex glues you emotionally to your partner. When you switch partners, it is like ripping your tongue off a frozen flagpole - only it is your heart instead. I have seen the trauma and pain of fornication and divorce over and over again. It really doesn't have to be that way. You don't have to call it marriage or do a religious ceremony (though a public commitment is very helpful) - but just stick with one man and one woman until death. You'll save yourself and your spouse a world of grief.

  210. Re:mod parent underrated, lol by mantar · · Score: 1

    you ought to also realize that genetic mutation is an inevitable consequence of our biological design

    I absolutely do understand this... it is true that meiosis is a kind of genetic mutation, but one under the control of the cells themself. It is a genetic mutation called translocation that occurs neither randomly nor accidentally. A tumor is only a slight variation from the original DNA (a deletion, insertion, or point mutation) caused by copy errors, or exposure to harmful radition or chemicals. The difference between these two kinds of mutations is huge: one ultimately results in a seperate and distinct human being... the other results in a benign or harmful lump of tissue, but never a seperate organism that can one day survive on its own.

    A tumor also has distinct DNA from its host, but that doesn't really imply that it's a separate human life or that excising a tumor is wrong

    Correct... partly. The DNA found in a tumor is differrent from the rest of the body, true... but only slightly. We're talking a fraction of a fraction of a fraction of a percent difference. The DNA found in a fetus on the other hand has a much greater difference. Meiosis works to produce a crossover from the chromesomes of both donors... these are new chromesomes not inherited completely from either parent. Mutation as a result of deletion, insertion or point modification is the same DNA as before... only slightly modified.

    Given this understanding of the differences between one genetic mutation and another yeilds an answer to the ethical question (for some, well... OK, for me anyway). There are 2 parts to my conclusion:

    1 - A tumor is not a seperate organism and excising a tumor is not wrong because it is essentially 99.99999% your genetic material. Excising a fetus is wrong because it is 0% your genetic material. In laymans terms, we could say it's 50% of each donor... but that's not a literal copy of the donor's DNA... it is a crossover between yours and another persons.

    2 - Although "The Hidden Life of a Tumor" might make a great title for a show on the Discovery channel, the tumor doesn't really have a life apart from your body... cut it out now, and the cells rapidly die. Cut it out in 9 months, and it's the same story. With a fetus, an abortion will result in its death because it is not mature enough to survive outside of the mother... wait 9 months, and we have [insert your name here]. The difference between day 1 and month 9 is only the maturity of the organism. Absolutely nothing happens at birth, mystical or scientific, that now makes it wrong to end the life of the child just because it's outside the womb.

    I always find it interesting when pro-choicers include a fetus in the same group as a tumor... it's a convenient argument that has no merit when examined in the proper scientific context. One is caused by an accidental genetic mutation resulting in only a slight variation in DNA, the other is caused by a natural process within the organism that starts at fertilization resulting in a crossover of DNA and a seperate organism.

    The issue of abortion may not be self-contained in the field of science, but it clearly requires a certain measure of scientific background to properly grasp it.

    Absolutely! And speaking of having a scientific background, it doesn't seem you understand the difference between translocation mutations and insertion/deletion/point mutations. If you did, I dare say you wouldn't classify a fetus as a tumor.

    --
    # man tar
  211. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by permawired · · Score: 0

    I know this is a troll, but on this one I just can't keep quiet...

    I honesly feel sorry for your sir, you obviously have been brainwashed since you were very young and are/have missed out on an excellent part of the human experience. You view sex simply as a function of procreation, when it is in fact dual purpose. There are a great deal of positive things show by a number of studies I've read over the years. I'm not able to post any links because I work for a government institution and viewing anything reguarding sex at work is strictly off limits. IIRC studies have shown that people who engage in sex on a regular basis tend to be much happier people, and also tend to live longer. Now I'm sure this is because of multiple reasons. Anyone out there care to post a couple articles of these studies?

    For those who choose it, you simply marry them to their significant other, and no divorce allowed until the children are adults.

    Umm, somehow I don't think thats going to create a positive environment for the "parents" of the child. I don't care how mature you are at the age of 16... your not capable of raising a child.

    Implying that it can be done "safely" is a lie at best. But the rest I most certainly DO agree with- just be sure to tell the WHOLE truth, not just the recreational half-truth that sex is just intercourse and only takes sleeping together and one night stands.

    I, and may of my friends for that matter, have enjoyed the recreational side of sex for about 10 years now. I get gotten myself tested a couple times to make sure that I haven't gotten and or spreading anything. Now after this 10 years, because I know how to have safe sex, I have no children and no STDs. So your "point" of saying it can't be done safely is proposterous at best.

    Completely agreed. And when you have laws that back that up; requiring people take parental responsibility, then there's no need for birth control at all.

    Sure.... that makes sense... a person that by your definition is irresponsible by having sex in the first place because it was for recreational purposes is now supposed to be responsible enough to parent a child....

  212. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    So, you're saying that 74% of churches are willing to provide contraception to parishoners who are in need?

    While the bulk of protestant churches do not ban contraception, they do not, by any stretch of the imagination, promote the use of contraception. They do not educate about contraception. They do not provide free contraception.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  213. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

    You're right: few of them provide contraception. Even fewer of them provide toilet paper, bug spray, furniture, or bus fare. While all of those may be necessary for the people who can't afford them, most churches aren't in the "give a man a fish" business. Some are, mind you, but most aren't.

    --
    Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  214. you don't need an embryo to by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    have the "same" rights - just "any" rights will do. Five year olds do not have the same rights as twenty-one-year-olds. There is nothing wrong with this.

    Also, you should quit begging the question - by claiming that embryos should not have the same rights as "persons", you are presuming that they are NOT persons. Yet this is the crux of the debate.

    I see nothing insane about banning the intential killing of living human beings, at any stage of their life. Please, explain what would be insane about such a commitment?

    1. Re:you don't need an embryo to by plunge · · Score: 1

      I am presuming it because it's obvious: embryos have absolutely NONE of the substantive qualities of persons relevant to any sort of moral consideration. To promote them as deserving of any more protection than bacteria is to completely miss the point of morality in the first place. Morality is not about following rules as litteralistically as possible without any idea at all what the rules are supposed to do. Protecting the sanctity of life of something without a nervous system is an outrageous error.

      "I see nothing insane about banning the intential killing of living human beings, at any stage of their life. "

      That's because you likely don't have any clue why its bad to kill people: you just know there is a rule not to do so, and when you realized that there is a way to define person (genetically human) that happens to include zygotes and so you interpret the rule without any sense of the purpose of the rule (i.e. to protect the interests of a very special sort of being that can actually have interests, feelings, concerns, etc).

  215. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    I thought Jesus was big on giving people fish? I bet he'd have even sprung for bug spray for the 5000, because he was that kinda guy.

    This is the exact attitude I've been talking about through this whole thread...Religious groups putting huge protests together about abortion, but when you ask 'em to shell out for a box of condoms, it's all "Hey, we don't do welfare, we work for a living."

    Make up your goddamn mind. Either you help people make smart choices with regards to contraception and family planning, or stop bitching when the bad choices they made because they couldn't afford birth control or didn't know how to use birth control, lead to them getting an abortion.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  216. Your right about one thing. by S.P.B.Wylie · · Score: 1

    It is a very nuanced issue. That is why, until you can resolve all those nuanced issues, I am going to come down on the side of individual freedom (pro-choice). If the issue can't be resolved, then let each women decide what they should do. And you have the freedom to try to talk them all out of it.

    --
    I give bread to the poor, they call me a saint.
    I ask why the poor have no bread, they call me a communist.
  217. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by teklob · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry, but if you're adopting a child to make a political statement then you're not a fit parent.

  218. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Carpe+PM · · Score: 1

    Food is needed to sustain life. Condoms sustain the imprudent.

  219. No twistin' my words, now. by S.P.B.Wylie · · Score: 1

    I just said that potential life trumps actual life, not that it wasn't worth something. It isn't black and white. If the eggs hurt the species in the long run, omelet away.

    --
    I give bread to the poor, they call me a saint.
    I ask why the poor have no bread, they call me a communist.
  220. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Carpe+PM · · Score: 1
    many people agonize over having an abortion

    No need to agonize if it isn't a living human.

  221. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Carpe+PM · · Score: 1
    Or again, say a night club is burning down (Great White venue*). I might save my friend

    Friends don't let friends listen to Great White.

  222. Which are? by Ogemaniac · · Score: 1

    I would say "living human being" and "living organism with substantial potential for sentience" are very relevant qualities. By 'sentience', I mean sufficient intelligence and self-awareness to deserve rights. Where we draw THAT line is another tangential debate.

    What 'concerns' do infants have? You will quickly find, if you think about it, that wherever you draw this "sentience" line, either:

    1: You must grant most mammals rights of citizenship

    or

    2: you must permit infanticide

    An adult chimp is about as smart as a 2-3 year old. Which do you prefer? Citizen Bobo or allowing post-birth abortions up until age three? What about Fido? He is smarter than infants out to a year or so. Great. Now your dog can sue and collect Social Security!

    As you can see, drawing the line for "personhood" at the moment that something actually achieves 'sentience' winds up being absurd. Clearly, we have rights BEFORE we are actually smart enough to earn them.

    Another problem with the 'must be sentient to earn rights' logic is that it does not explain why people have rights when asleep, unconcious, in comas, etc. By no means is a guy passed out drunk in the gutter "sentient". He still has rights.

    1. Re:Which are? by plunge · · Score: 1

      "What 'concerns' do infants have?"

      Interests to not feel pain, for instance. Interests in an ongoing experience of life (even if they cannot conceptualize it as a long term thing.

      "An adult chimp is about as smart as a 2-3 year old. Which do you prefer? Citizen Bobo or allowing post-birth abortions up until age three? What about Fido? He is smarter than infants out to a year or so. Great. Now your dog can sue and collect Social Security! "

      No, because they don't have capacities relevant to any of that.

      But it's quite interesting that you would object to the idea of having moral concerns for other feeling beings with such contempt merely because the idea seems strange to you or might complicate your life. That strongly suggests that to you, morality is not about consistent principles even when the things they suggest are tough, but rather about mere convienince.

      Personally, I think it's quite obvious that intelligent life should have some limited protection from abuse and harm and killing, as befits their status. That's not the same thing as making them citizens, anymore than we give infants the right to drive or vote.

      "As you can see, drawing the line for "personhood" at the moment that something actually achieves 'sentience' winds up being absurd."

      Not really. You've demonstrated that you find it absurd, because it sounds like a hassle to you. And you still haven't explained an alternative that doesn't rely on a pathetically amoral juggling of semantics. "All genetic humans should be protected just cus" is not a moral argument.

      "Clearly, we have rights BEFORE we are actually smart enough to earn them."

      How is that clear? Rights are things we grant other beings as a society because we think they help protect something important, something of value to all of us. What is that for a zygote? A zygote has no opinions or thoughts or feelings or concerns or ANY of the qualities which we've come to value.

      "Another problem with the 'must be sentient to earn rights' logic is that it does not explain why people have rights when asleep, unconcious, in comas, etc. By no means is a guy passed out drunk in the gutter "sentient". He still has rights."

      Two obvious reasons apply. One is that the person has ALREADY been sentient: and as such has all sorts of expectations and desires and so forth that are ongoing even if they are temporarily out of commission. All of us realize that we could reach such a state, and so we all realize and recognize each other's desires not to be harmed while in it. Otherwise the fear of going to sleep would be overwhelming. By zygotes have no such expectations, no hopes, no fears of anything happening to them.

      Another reason is that even people in comas seem to have some experience of pain and even existence. A third is that regardless of their current state, these people have the ongoing functional capacity for sentience: it just happens to be off for a bit. But look at what happens when someone dies: this is when they CEASE to have that capacity: the functionality is broken irreperably. Corpses are human. Yet we don't consider them morally important (though often we DO respect the wishes expressed by the person prior to their death, in part in deference to the idea that we would want others to treat our bodies in the same way after death). That is because they have lost that functional capacity to be the SORT of being we grant rights to. Well, zygotes have never been such a being, and they hve no functional capacities at all.

  223. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    And then the imprudent have abortions. Enjoy the outcome you so clearly desire.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  224. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Phleg · · Score: 1

    And when I say education, I mean education. I don't mean "teach abstinence". I mean "this is sex, this is what goes on, this is what you can catch, and this is how you can do it safely." I'm talking a significant course here, not just a day out of gym class. Fuck, this is probably the most insightful comment in the entire thread. I don't know about you guys, but seeing some of this stuff is more than enough to keep anyone's hormones in check. Ever see a grunting, screaming woman giving birth? It's quite a disgusting process, to be honest. Almost makes you want to pass on the next available offer.
    --
    No comment.
  225. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    I honesly feel sorry for your sir, you obviously have been brainwashed since you were very young and are/have missed out on an excellent part of the human experience.

    I can say the same thing about people who think that 30 seconds of pleasure shouldn't be paid for.

    You view sex simply as a function of procreation, when it is in fact dual purpose. There are a great deal of positive things show by a number of studies I've read over the years.

    Studies by biased people who have a reason to lie don't count.

    I'm not able to post any links because I work for a government institution and viewing anything reguarding sex at work is strictly off limits. IIRC studies have shown that people who engage in sex on a regular basis tend to be much happier people, and also tend to live longer.

    When done properly, it allows you to live forever, in a sense. But of course, that's the point of view that sex includes being a parent and raising children; anything less does not have that benefit.

    Sure.... that makes sense... a person that by your definition is irresponsible by having sex in the first place because it was for recreational purposes is now supposed to be responsible enough to parent a child....

    Marriage, having sex, and being a parent is all the same act. If they're responsible enough to be allowed to have sex, then they're mature enough to be a parent. In fact, one creates the other- having a child makes you grow up.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  226. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    I'm of the opinion that Marriage, Sex, and Parenthood are really three stages of the same basic act- raising the next generation.

    In reality though, I see four types of marriage- Natural, Sacramental, Secular, and Sinful. Each of these is a corruption, because everything man tries to regulate, he corrupts. Natural marriage and sex are the same thing- you're doing something plearuable that is pleasurable solely to encourage you to create the next generation. If sex didn't create the next generation, it would not be pleasurable- because the people that did it would not be passing their genes on to the next generation. Simple evolution. Sacramental marriage is a corruption of this- but not much of one- it basically says "we need to have morals and we need to insure that the children have role models of both sexes to raise them". This is religious marriage in the most conventional sense- it completes the natural marriage act of sex by finishing the task. Secular marriage is the government getting involved- and saying, originally, "we want to encourage certain types of parents that seem most successfull with tax breaks and other benefits". One early form in the United States was that multiracial marriages did not make for good parents, and so they were banned. The final form, Sinful marriage, is the inevitable corruption once money is involved: "We want all the benefits of being married without the responsibility of raising children". Personally, I see this as no different than cheating on your taxes or any other form of stealing money from the government.

    I can guarantee you, people of those opinions will still see a need for birth control.

    Of course- having children would ruin their scam of stealing money from the government.

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  227. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can say the same thing about people who think that 30 seconds of pleasure shouldn't be paid for.

    Hey, that is a down right lie. I ALWAYS pay my hookers.

  228. Re:Yay! (Sort of) by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

    And they're cheaper than they should be. A good hooker should cost you around a million with my method of sexual morality; she's called a wife ($50,000/year for 20 years).

    --
    SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
  229. The Church of Euthanasia by Anarcho-Goth · · Score: 1

    What I object to is when these people make the mistake of getting pregnant without wanting to, and then guys like you start blaming it on religion. I mean, if I was going to break my religion's teachings, I wouldn't do it half-assed and get myself into trouble. Only a dimwit would say "God, I'm sorry I fucked her, but at least I didn't use a condom".

    I agree.

    Or at least I agree with blaming it on religion in general.

    Some religions are better than others. There are a lot of decent Christian sects out there, while other "Christians" are the American version of the Talaban.

    Overpopulation scares the shit out of me. That's why I think we need to allow religion in school, specifically, the The Church of Euthanasia. Kids these days need more than sex ed. They need the four pillars of Suicide, Abortion, Cannibalism, and Sodomy.

    That's right Sodomy. It feels good and it's not just for homosexuals anymore!

    Of course that is not going to protect you from VD, as many who receive an "abstinence only" education believe, but I say stupid kids dying of VD is a good thing.

    And really, any parent who does not make sure their children have the knowledge they need to survive in this world are stupid, and again it is a good things if their kids die of VD, hopefully before they spawn any more idjets.

    --
    I hate Liberals and Conservatives.
    If you are a Liberal or a Conservative, then HAVE A NICE DAY!
    Courage.