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I saw a Biography special on Christopher Reeve last night and learned
that he had been an advocate for  social issues throughout his life. He
worked for environmental issues, for artistic freedom, he advocated
before Congress to continue funding of the National Endowment for the
Arts, worked with Special Olympics and even went to Chile at a very
dangerous time to try to protect dissident artists who were to be
executed by the government.  Christopher Reeve surely made a tremendous
impact in many ways during his much too short life.
Linda

The following  OP/Ed is by Patti Davis, President Reagan's daughter.

FROM:   MSNBC.com
Opinion: The Life He Left Behind
People who never met Christopher Reeve were emboldened by his crusade. If
only President Bush had been one of them

WEB-EXCLUSIVE COMMENTARY
By Patti Davis
Newsweek
Updated: 11:56 a.m. ET Oct. 12, 2004

"Oct. 12 - I wonder if President Bush could look into the eyes of
Christopher Reeve’s family and tell them that it’s because he values life
so deeply that he is preserving clusters of cells in freezers—cells that
resulted from in-vitro fertilization and could be used for embryonic stem
cell treatment—despite the fact that more people will die as a result of
his decision. I wonder if he could stare into their grief and defend the
fact that he has released only a few lines of stem cells—lines that are
basically useless because they have been contaminated. Or brazenly point
out that he has authorized funding for adult stem cells—which do not hold
the same miraculous potential as embryonic stem cells.

The sad fact is, the president probably could. After all, Laura Bush went
on national television during the week of my father’s funeral and spoke
out against embryonic stem cell research, pointing out that where
Alzheimer’s is concerned, we don’t have proof that stem-cell treatment
would be effective. It wasn’t too long after that interview that she gave
a speech in which she chided people for offering “false hope” to the
families of Alzheimer’s patients. In a sweetly patronizing tone, she said
it’s terribly unfair to all of those who are vulnerable and in pain to
suggest that a cure is just around the corner.

Memo to Mrs. Bush: I am one of those poor, vulnerable souls who you think
has been misled. I speak for many others when I say that none of us
believe a cure is just around the corner. We believe it’s around a very
wide bend, which we can’t get around because your husband has put up a
barrier to further research. And as far as false hope, there is no such
thing. There is only hope or the absence of hope—nothing else.

Christopher Reeve understood that. He knew that everything begins with
hope. His vision of walking again, his belief that he would be able to in
his lifetime, towered over his broken body. His tireless work, his
commitment to help turn stem-cell treatment into a reality revealed a
courage that was molded out of fire and pain and tears. It was
unbreakable. It was huge. It transcended paralysis. With that courage, he
did more than walk; he soared. Many of us learned a valuable lesson about
hope from a man whose life changed dramatically on a single afternoon. We
learned that it’s limitless, that it’s as real as you allow it to be.

Even if the Bush Administration had flung open the gates to stem-cell
research years ago, we would not be at the point of offering treatment
today. Christopher Reeve would still have been taken from us. But we
would be closer. Other people who are confined to wheelchairs or
imprisoned by illness would have more hope. Scientists would be working
feverishly to turn this miraculous cure loose on the world. Because they
have families too. They have loved ones and friends, and they value them
more than clusters of cells that will only ever be clusters of cells.
With each day, each month, each year that passes more people will die. We
will look at names, at lives, and we will be left with the sad truth that
many of them didn’t have to die.

Some people, when they die, leave so much life behind that we wonder how
they did it. How did a man paralyzed from the neck down find the
strength, the reserve, the energy to do so much in these past years?
People who never met Christopher Reeve were emboldened by his crusade;
they were infused with faith and confidence, where before things had
looked terribly bleak.

He said in an interview a few years ago that when he dreamed, he was
never in a wheelchair. In his dreams, he walked and ran and sailed on the
sea. He is doing all of that now—far beyond this world and the body that
wouldn’t allow him those freedoms. He’s left the rest of us with a
responsibility—to never let anyone stop us from one of the most towering
medical achievements in history. To never let anyone call our hopes
“false.”

URL: http://msnbc.msn.com/id/6232686/site/newsweek/

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