New Jersey Residents Oppose Funding Embryonic Stem Cell Research
by Paul Nowak
LifeNews.com Staff Writer
March 16, 2004
Trenton, NJ (LifeNews.com) -- According to a poll by the Quinnipiac
University Polling Institute, a majority of New Jersey voters disagree
with Governor James McGreevy's $50 million proposal to fund a New Jersey
institute for human stem cell research.
Between February 29 and March 7, Quinnipiac University surveyed 1,210 New Jersey registered voters, and found that 48 percent of those surveyed disagreed with the Governor's plan, while only 42 percent agreed with the idea. Only Democrats and urban residents were more likely to agree with McGreevy, while all other segments of the population did not approve of the taxpayer-funded program.
Governor McGreevey has proposed spending $6.5 million of state money for a stem-cell research institute, which would be managed Rutgers University and the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey.
Marie Tasy, director of public and legislative
affairs for New Jersey Right to Life, said research using "adult"
stem cells from umbilical cord blood, bone marrow and other sources
has been proven to work and is ethically sound. However, embryonic stem
cell research relies on the destruction of human life, sometimes created
through cloning, in order to harvest the stem cells.
Tasy said the embryonic stem cell research can open up "a new exploitation
of women," noting that South Korean scientists super-ovulated 16 women
to obtain 242 eggs, which resulted in only one stem cell line.
Somatic nuclear transplantation, the technique used to create the embryos
as well as create human clones, is the same method used to clone Dolly
the sheep.
Tasy pointed out that Dolly was the result after 300 failed attempts, resulting in miscarriages and malformed offspring. Ultimately, the "successful" result, Dolly, aged too rapidly and had to be euthanized.
"While this may or may not be acceptable for
animals, it certainly should not be acceptable for human children, said
Tasy. "There is no reason to exploit women and create human life to
destroy it when adult and cord blood stem cells are accessible and are
being successfully used to treat human patients."
Human cloning for experimentation, as well as the allowance of "reasonable
payment'' for embryonic or cadaveric fetal tissue production, implantation,
transplantation and preservation costs, is now legal up until newborn
stages in New Jersey.
Governor McGreevy signed the legislation into law in January, and is now seeking taxpayer funding for the research.
Tasy says pro-life advocates in New Jersey feel
betrayed.
"Sponsors of the bill, the Biotech Industry and the Governor, engaged
in a highly deceptive misinformation campaign claiming that the research
on human embryos would be limited to those already existing from left
over fertility treatments and boldly denied they would attempt to publicly
fund it," said Tasy.
Meanwhile, Assemblyman Neil Cohen (D-Union) announced
plans Friday to create a non-profit organization to raise $3 billion
to fund stem-cell research in New Jersey. In a conference call with
reporters he said he has already received "a tremendous response"
from corporations and institution in the Garden State, and plans will
be discussed further at a "stem cell summit" in the spring.
Gary Friedman, a transplant surgeon assisting Cohen, compared their
joint enterprise to the project that created the atomic bomb.
"It's almost like the Manhattan Project," said Friedman, who
heads the Center for Regenerative Medicine at Morristown Memorial Hospital.
"You want to put together the most resources with the best research
minds.
Related Sites:
New Jersey Right to Life - http://www.njrtl.org



