01/9/07

2007 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Inductees…

Filed under: General — Bethie @ 10:33 pm

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Foundation Announced its the 2007 inductees today…

And they are…

Grandmaster Flash and the Furious Five (Kid Creole, Cowboy, Grandmaster Flash, Melle Mel, Mr. Ness, Raheim)
R.E.M. (Bill Berry, Peter Buck, Mike Mills, Michael Stipe)
The Ronettes (Estelle Bennett, Ronnie Spector, Nedra Talley)
Patti Smith
Van Halen (Michael Anthony, Sammy Hagar, Alex Van Halen, Eddie Van Halen, David Lee Roth)

I was, of course, hapiest about R.E.M., and to a lesser extent Van Halen, but I suppose they all were important to their various genres. Feel free to critique the 2007 selections here.

Stem Cells from Amniotic Fluid Show As Much Promise As Embryonic Stem Cells

Filed under: General — Bethie @ 1:11 pm

More evidence that the push for funding for embryonic stem cells from the left is more about normalizing the idea of killing the unborn than about curing diseases.

Probably most of my readers have known for a long time that stem cells are available from sources other than embryos, but a recently released study out of Wake Forest University comes at a bad time for dems.

According to an article from CNS News,

A new study has found that stem cells are in plentiful supply in amniotic fluid, but at a time the charged issue of experimentation involving human embryos is back on the political agenda in the U.S., a group that favors the controversial research insisted Monday the discovery does not make embryonic stem cells (ESC) obsolete.

Two Republican lawmakers - both with medical backgrounds - announced Monday they would introduce alternative legislation on Tuesday, authorizing federal funding for stem cell research that does not involve creating or destroying human embryos.

Two days later, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi plans to reintroduce legislation to expand federal funding of embryonic stem cell research.

Currently, federal funding for embryonic research is restricted to a small number of ESC colonies that existed in 2001, when President Bush announced the policy. ESC research proponents want to expand that dramatically, but the president last July vetoed previous legislation seeking to do so.

In a study reported at the weekend, American researchers said they were able to obtain stem cells from amniotic fluid - the substance surrounding babies in the womb - without harming either the baby or mother.

They found the cells to be “pluripotent” - that is, able to differentiate into various types of cells, including brain and bone.

This is the capability scientists believe ESCs will have, thus offering the possibility of future treatments for injuries and degenerative diseases. But the use of embryonic cells is controversial, because the early-stage embryos are destroyed in the process.

Dr. Anthony Atala of the Institute of Regenerative Medicine at Wake Forest University of School of Medicine, who led the study, said in a statement that while ESCs were considered the most adaptable, “our hope is that these cells will provide a valuable resource for tissue repair and for engineered organs as well.”

Rep. Roscoe Bartlett (R-Md.) and Rep. Phil Gingrey (R-Ga.) said Monday they will introduce “an ethical alternative” to the Democrat bill.

“As a scientist who studied advanced embryology earning both a Master’s and a Doctorate in Human Physiology, I know and confirmed with leading scientists that it is unnecessary to harm or kill embryos to obtain cell lines for research,” Bartlett said in a statement.

“With the accelerated federal funding under our bill, there could be rapid progress expanding the number of ethical pluripotent stem cell lines for research,” he added.

Gingrey said the bill would allow lawmakers “to side-step the moral questions surrounding embryonic stem cell research.”

“In America, we do things the right way,” he said. “We don’t take organs from death row prisoners because they are ‘going to die anyway.’ Neither should we steal the life of a fertilization clinic embryo just because there’s a chance it won’t be used to impregnate a woman.”

H/T: GOP Bloggers