by
Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
November 20,
2007
Washington,
DC (LifeNews.com) -- Pro-life groups are responding to today's news
that two teams of scientists have been able to create embryonic stem
cells without destroying human life. The destruction of days-old unborn
children has been the chief obstacle preventing pro-life advocates from
supporting the controversial research.
However, as LifeNews.com reported Tuesday, scientists in Japan and Wisconsin say they have been able to get adult human skin cells to revert to their embryonic state.
Pro-life advocates initially appear to support the new process and say it could be an alternative way to use embryonic stem cells in research that could bridge the stem cell research divide.
Richard Doerflinger, a spokesman for the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops and one of the leading bioethics watchdogs for the pro-life community, appeared supportive.
He told the Associated Press the new work is "a very significant breakthrough in finding morally unproblematic alternatives to cloning."
"I
think this is something that would be readily acceptable [to pro-life
people]," he added. "It's a win for science and for ethics."
"I think this is a wonderful advance for basic research in stem
cells and maybe some day for regenerative medicine," Doerflinger
added in a Reuters interview.
Dorinda Bordlee, an attorney with the Bioethics Defense Fund, which helped lead the legal battle against the pro-cloning Amendment 2 in Missouri, told LifeNews.com she was also excited about the news.
"This remarkable scientific advance has the potential to bring all sides of the human cloning debate together in a common quest for aggressive yet ethical stem cell research," Bordlee said.
Bordlee
noted that the scientist who originally cloned Dolly, Professor Ian
Wilmut, has already announced that he was
abandoning his license to clone human embryos in favor of the direct
reprogramming method.
The National Catholic Bioethics Center also chimed in on the new research,
telling LifeNews.com in a statement that it "affects the ethical
discussion around stem cells in a very positive way."
"Such strategies should continue to be pursued and strongly promoted,
as they should help to steer the entire field of stem cell research
in a more explicitly ethical direction by circumventing the moral
quagmire associated with destroying human embryos," the group
said.


