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Re: I'm in this guy's column! Pls read how he has me telling off Frist

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Rayilyn -

        Good on you.  Never give up the fight.

Warm regards,
Bill Isbell
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

At 10:14 AM 7/25/2005, you wrote:

Link To Article Print Article Email Article Article Launched: 07/25/2005 02:18:00 AM

                  jim spencer
                  As stem-cell bill languishes, so do the ill and dying
                        By Jim Spencer
                        Denver Post Columnist



                  Colorado Rep. Diana DeGette is not surprised that the
U.S. Senate has yet to debate the stem- cell research bill she shepherded
through the House of Representatives two months ago.

                  She's disappointed.

                  Disappointed but determined.

                  Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist had said he would let
the Senate version of DeGette's bill be discussed.

                  It hasn't happened yet.

                  The stalling tactics are so obvious that Pennsylvania
Sen. Arlen Specter last week threatened to attach the stem-cell bill to
an appropriations bill and get it a hearing.

                  Once more, America lets politics and religion trump
science.

                  Once more, sick and dying people pay the price.

                  "Bill Frist is running for president," DeGette said.
"He's trying to cater to the far right," which considers embryonic
stem-cell research abortion.

                  Frist is also trying to protect George Bush from having
to make good on a veto threat that will placate the flat- Earth forces in
his conservative base. Such a presidential veto will alienate mainstream
Americans who appreciate and rely on scientific research.

                  "This is an issue that isn't going away," DeGette said.
"It's an issue with growing public support."

                  Incorporating stem-cell research into an unrelated,
"must-pass" Senate bill is clearly a parliamentary maneuver.

                  "That's essentially what we had to do in the House to
get a hearing," DeGette said. "We told (the leadership) we'd attach the
stem-cell bill to any moving piece of legislation."

                  Instead, House leaders decided to let the bill rise or
fall on its merits.

                  It won in the House, and has an excellent chance of
winning in the Senate, where Republicans such as Specter and Orrin Hatch
of Utah support it.

                  "I think it would pass if it came to a vote," DeGette
predicted. "Close to 60 senators signed a letter to the president
(calling for expanded stem-cell research)."

                  Colorado Sen. Wayne Allard does not disclose his
position on bills passed by the House but not yet introduced in the
Senate, said Allard's spokeswoman, Angela DeRocha.

                  In a statement released Friday, Colorado Sen. Ken
Salazar had no problem taking a stand: "I will support the stem- cell
research bill that is soon to be before the Senate so that we can finally
move beyond the rhetoric dividing this issue to the hope-giving results
of morally and ethically guided research."

                  Polls show that most people in this country want more
stem-cell research. That's because so many of them stand to benefit from
it. An estimated




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100 million Americans are affected by or know someone with diseases, conditions and injuries that might be helped by stem-cell research. "Since the bill passed the House," DeGette said, "hundreds of people have thanked me. They say, 'My father has Parkinson's.' Or 'My brother has Lou Gehrig's disease.' Or 'I have family members with diabetes."'

                  Spinal cord injuries, cancer - just about every patient
can benefit.

                  DeGette's bill needs a Senate hearing. It allows the
federal government to pay researchers to study embryonic stem-cell lines
created from embryos that will otherwise be thrown away by fertility
clinics. Donors of those embryos must consent to this research. No one
gets paid for the embryos.

                  The flat-Earthers call this abortion. They argue that a
sperm fertilized by an egg is a person. They argue that artificial
insemination is wrong. They argue that frozen embryos should be stored
indefinitely. And finally, they argue that if a choice must be made
between discarding frozen embryos or letting them help cure diseases and
ease the suffering of real human beings, it's more moral to throw the
embryos away.

                  That's not just narrow-minded; it's medieval.

                  It's time for Bill Frist and other politicians to
listen to people like Rayilyn Brown.

                  A self-described "ovarian cancer survivor" and
"Parkinson's disease prisoner," Brown asks only for enlightenment.

                  "I am very disturbed by the confusion of scientific and
religious truth," Brown said. "People seem more ignorant than ever, and I
am one of those people who suffers because of religious agendas stifling
stem-cell research.

                  "I don't expect a cure in the U.S. in my lifetime, but
the Dark Ages lasted a thousand years."

                  Jim Spencer's column appears Monday, Wednesday and
Friday. He can be reached at 303-820-1771 or jspencer@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx


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