Charles Brown Mon, 09 Mar 2009 19:36:33 -0700
Republicans had blocked stem cell research under their anti-abortion fraud
Obama opens up stem cell work, science inquiries
By SETH BORENSTEIN and BEN FELLER, Associated Press Writers Seth Borenstein And
Ben Feller,
AP – President Barack Obama signs an Executive Order on stem cells and a
Presidential Memorandum on scientific …
WASHINGTON – From tiny embryonic cells to the large-scale
physics of global warming, President Barack Obama urged researchers on Monday
to follow science and not ideology as he abolished contentious Bush-era
restraints on stem-cell research. "Our government has forced what I believe is
a false choice between sound science and moral values," Obama declared as he
signed documents changing U.S. science policy and removing
what some researchers have said were shackles on their work.
"It is about ensuring that scientific data is never distorted or concealed to
serve a political agenda — and that we make scientific decisions based on facts,
not ideology," Obama said.
Researchers said the new president's message
was clear: Science, which once propelled men to the moon, again matters in
American life.
Opponents saw it differently: a defeat for
morality in the most basic questions of life and death.
"The action by the president today will,
in effect, allow scientists to create their own guidelines without proper moral
restraints," Family Research Council President Tony Perkins said.
In a crowded ornate East Room, there were
more scientists in the White House than Alan Leshner, CEO of the American
Association for the Advancement of Science had seen in his
30 years in Washington. "More happy scientists than I've seen," he added.
The most immediate effect will allow federally
funded researchers to use hundreds of new embryonic stem cell lines for
promising, but still long-range research in hopes of creating better treatments,
possibly even cures, for conditions ranging from diabetes to paralysis. Until
now, those researchers had to limit themselves to just 21 stem cell lines
created before August 2001, when
President George W. Bush limited funding because of "fundamental questions
about the beginnings of life and the ends of science."
Science, politics and religion have long intertwined
and conflicted with each other. In his actions Monday, especially with the stem
cell decision, Obama is emphasizing more the science than the
religion, when compared with his predecessor, science policy experts say. But
they acknowledged politics is still involved.
Don't expect stem cell cures or treatments anytime soon. One company this
summer will begin the world's first study of a treatment using
human embryonic stem cells, in people
who recently suffered spinal cord injuries. Research institutions on Monday
were gearing up to ask for more freely flowing federal money, and
the National Institutes of Health was creating guidelines on how to hand it
out and include ethical constraints. It will be months before the
stem cell money flows; the average NIH stem cell grant is $1.5 million spread
out over four years.
Scientists focused on a new sense of freedom.
"I think patients everywhere will be cheering us on,
imploring us to work faster, harder and with all of our ability to find new
treatments," said Harvard Stem Cell Institute co-director Doug Melton, father
of two children with Type I diabetes who could possibly be treated with stem
cells. "On a personal level, it is an enormous relief and a time for
celebration. ... Science thrives when there is an open and collaborative
exchange, not when there are artificial barriers, silos, constructed by the
government."
Opponents framed their opposition mostly,
but not exclusively, on moral grounds and the scientifically contested claims
that adult stem cells work just as well.
Said Wendy Wright, president of Concerned
Women for America: "President Obama's order places the worst kind of politics
above ethics. Politics driven by hype makes overblown promises,
fuels the desperation of the suffering and financially benefits those seeking
to strip morality from science."
In Congress, Reps. Diana DeGette, D-Colo.,
and Mike Castle, R-Del., said they would seek a quick vote on legislation to
codify Obama's order in federal law, after failing twice in the past to
overturn Bush's restrictions. DeGette said she doesn't want stem cell research
to become "a pingpong ball going back and forth between administrations."
But Rep. Tom Price, R-Ga., chairman of the
Republican study committee, said the president's new policy would "force
taxpayers to subsidize research that will destroy human embryos."
De Gette and Castle said their legislation tries to minimize destruction of
embryos.
Stem cells are typically derived from fertility
clinic surplus, destined for destruction.
Obama also said the stem cell policy is designed
so that it "never opens the door to the use of
cloning for human reproduction." Such cloning,
he said, "is dangerous, profoundly wrong, and has no place in our society or
any society."
In addition to the stem cell order, Obama issued
a memo designed to ensure openness about
scientific research and give whistleblower protection to scientists.
Promoting science "is about letting scientists
like those here today do their jobs, free from manipulation or coercion, and
listening to what they tell us, even when it's inconvenient — especially
when it's inconvenient," Obama said.
Science and politics often conflict, said
Granger Morgan, professor of engineering and public policy at Carnegie Mellon
University and a former science advisory board chairman for the
U.S. Environmental Protection Agency — perhaps illustrated no more wildly than
in 1897 when the Indiana legislature attempted to change the
mathematical concept of pi to 3.2. Science should provide the facts that
politicians use for their decisions, Morgan and Leshner said.
Many scientists and environmental activists
complained that the Bush administration had
censored and marginalized science. That's a
perception that Bush science adviser John Marburger
repeatedly called untrue and unfair, as
he addressed a series of occurrences that troubled critics.
In 2006, the White House edited out congressional
testimony about public health effects of global
warming by Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Director Dr. Julie
Gerberding. A 2003 EPA global warming document was edited by
nonscientists at the White House. A NASA
political appointee tried — and failed — to
silence the agency's top climate scientist.
Former Surgeon General Richard Carmona resigned in 2006, complaining about
White House interference on global health issues: "The
problem with this approach is that in public health, as in democracy, there is
nothing worse than ignoring science or marginalizing the voice of
science for reasons driven by changing political winds."
Obama advisers contend that all has changed. The government has already put on
hold rules about scientific input on endangered species, reinstating
advice that had been excised during the Bush administration.
Public policy must "be guided by sound scientific
advice," said Dr. Harold Varmus, the Nobel Prize-winning co-chairman of the
President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology. The new
memo Obama signed is "mainly a way of trying to
prevent tampering with any advice," Varmus told MSNBC.
___
Associated Press writers Lauran Neergaard, Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar and Philip
Elliott contributed to this report.
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