President Bush Vetoes Legislation
to Use Tax Dollars for Embryonic-Killing Stem Cell Research
On June 20, President George
W. Bush vetoed legislation to expand the federal funding of embryonic
stem cell research. The bill, S. 5, would have broadened which embryonic
stem cell lines researchers could use in federal funded experiments.
Right to Life of Michigan President Barbara Listing said, "President Bush
has again boldly prevented American taxpayers from being compelled to
fund the killing of human embryos. Advances in life-affirming forms of
stem cell research continue to prove we do not need to kill the smallest,
most vulnerable human beings in order to successfully treat those who
are
suffering."
According to the National Institutes of Health, the federal government
has spent $122 million on research using human embryonic stem cells in
the last four years and plans to spend an additional $74 million in the
next two years. The University of Michigan received a federally funded
grant to experiment on human embryonic stem cells in 2003. This research
has not treated a single human patient.
"Right to Life of Michigan will continue to educate the public on the
advances in adult stem cell research and research using stem cells found
in umbilical cord blood and amniotic fluid through our StemCellResearchCures.com
web site. Unfortunately, many people have been deceived into believing
that embryonic stem cells offer their only hope of being cured," said
Listing.
Right to Life of Michigan is a nonpartisan, nonsectarian, nonprofit organization
of diverse and caring people united to peacefully protect the precious
gift of human life from fertilization to natural death.
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