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Democratic Radio Address
Remarks of Senator John Kerry

June 12, 2004

For Immediate Release


Good morning, this is John Kerry.
Yesterday, we said goodbye to President Ronald Reagan.

For his children and his friends, and most of all, for his courageous
wife Nancy, this painful goodbye began almost ten years ago, with the
diagnosis of a disease that took Ronald Reagan away before it took his
life.


There is a moment after you get the call from a doctor that you or a
loved one must face a disease like Alzheimer’s where you decide that it
can’t mean the end – that you won’t let it.  So in our own way, we become
researchers and scientists.  We become advocates and friends, and we
reach for a cure that cannot – that must not – be too far away.
Some call this denial.  But I’m sure that Nancy Reagan – the wife of an
eternal optimist – calls it hope.

She told the world that Alzheimer’s had taken her own husband to a
distant place, and then she stood up to help find a breakthrough that
someday will spare other husbands, wives, children and parents from the
same kind of heartache.

Millions share this hope, and it is because of their commitment that stem
cell research has brought us closer to finding ways to treat Alzheimer’s
and many other diseases.

Today, more than 100 million Americans have illnesses that one day could
be cured or treated with stem-cell therapy.  Stem cells could replace
damaged heart cells or cells destroyed by cancer, offering a new lease on
life to those suffering from diseases that once came with a certain death
sentence.  Stem cells have the power to slow the loss of a grandmother’s
memory, calm the hand of an uncle with Parkinson’s, save a child from a
lifetime of daily insulin shots, or permanently lift a best friend from
his wheelchair.

Chances are that you love someone with such a disease.  You may be that
someone.  So what can we do to make sure that doctors and scientists keep
learning, keep discovering, and keep researching stem cells so that the
incredible potential for discovery becomes a reality in people’s lives?

We must lift the barriers that stand in the way of science and push the
boundaries of medical exploration so that researchers can find the cures
that are there, if only they are allowed to look.  We can do this while
providing strict ethical oversight.

We must make the funding of stem cell research a priority in our
universities and our medical community.  And we must secure more funding
for it at agencies like the National Institutes of Health and the
National Science Foundation.

Above all, we must look to the future not with fear, but with the hope
and the faith that advances in medicine will advance our best values.
America has always been a land of discovery – of distant horizons and
unconquered frontiers.  But progress has always brought with it ethical
concerns that this time we have gone too far.  Believe it or not, there
was a time when some questioned the morality of heart transplants.  Not
too long ago, we heard the same kind of arguments against the
biotechnology research that now saves stroke victims and those with
leukemia.

I know there are ethical issues, but people of goodwill and good sense
can resolve them.  For I also know the fear that most Americans feel at
some point – the fear of a diagnosis that may take our life or sentence
us to a diminished life.

In the past few years, I have seen cancer and stroke take my own parents.
 Last year, because of the remarkable medical advances we have made, I
was cured of prostate cancer.  Now everywhere I go in America, people
come up to me and tell me about their struggle with illness or the
bravery of family members who faces it.  They share their worries, but
they also believe that this is a country of the future, a can-do country.


The medical discoveries that come from stem cell are crucial next steps
in humanity’s uphill climb.  And part of this nation’s greatness lies in
the fact that we have led the world in great medical discoveries, with
our breakthroughs and our beliefs going hand-in-hand.

If we pursue the limitless potential of our science – and trust that we
can use it wisely – we will save millions of lives and earn the gratitude
of future generations.

Thanks for listening.

http://www.johnkerry.com/pressroom/releases/pr_2004_0612b.html

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