Print

Print


I'm sure we all applaud the passage of the cord blood bill and Joan's
tireless efforts on behalf of all sufferers of diseases and horrible
conditions.

Although Joan is no doubt correct that it may help people get used to the
idea of ESCR, I think it is a shame.  Maybe what we really need to do is get
behind one disease - diabetes - for a cure.  Diabetes strikes young people,
and perceptions are  still  prevalent that we all have to die of something,
suffering is noble and part of the human condition. (I'm getting this from a
guy I'm arguing with in a Pro-Life Blog) The poster child needs to be a
child.  Parents of sick children would do anything to help them.

Vaccinations, blood transfusions, organ transplants, and IVF all faced
religious opposition, though not from the federal government, if memory
serves me, and they all work. I don't think the American people are so moral
or unpragmatic they could withstand success. Surgeons used to believe that
you couldn't operate on the human heart - saw this in an HBO film 'What God
Hath Wrought" about the first heart surgeries for "blue" babies - remember
them?
I believe if the polls are correct,  a majority of the American people
already support ESCR.  It is the government, that is the most anti-science I
know of, that is the problem.

Ten years ago when I was diagnosed, my neuro said ten years for  a cure.
Ha. Ha.Like people who died from polio, we were born too soon.
Ray, still "Waiting for Godot"

----- Original Message -----
From: "Joan Snyder" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, December 20, 2005 9:09 PM
Subject: just my two cents


>i worked long and hard , hand-in-hand with my state representative (who
> is by-the-by a Republican) David Leitch to pass, celebrate, get the word
> out and helped impliment the nation's first cord blood law. Illinois was
> the first state to pass this no-brainer of a law, which requires that
> all pregnant women be asked during their second trimester by their OB if
> they would like to donate the cord blood (the umbilical cord and the
> afterbirth) to be used for medical research rather than be incinerated
> as waste. while these are not the embryonic stem cells that we are all
> waiting for the laws to change to allow to be used for research, in the
> meantime, it is a good thing to get behind and to have passed in your
> home state. it is not controversial, everybody wins with this. since the
> inception of this program, illinois has collected tens of thousands of
> cord blood samples and gotten scores of usable "juvinelle" stem cells.
> my friend and Bradley University researcher and professor has made the
> most of what is available to him and had numerous breakthroughs using
> cord blood stem cells, sure, he'd like to get embryonic stem cells and
> feels that it is beyond reason to eleminate any cells from research that
> could possibly help people, he is going ahead with groundbreaking
> experiments each day. he has learned that neurons have 'voices' with
> which they communicate to other neurons and he has been able to grow
> stem cells into neurons that have the ability to 'talk' just like the
> original neurons. just think of the possibilities and the wonders that
> they will find when we finally get the embryonic cells, but in the
> meantime, he is making do with what he has. i don't think that this is
> any way detrimental to the House and Senate bills pending that will
> allow embryonic stem cell research; but it does open the nay-sayers
> minds to the possibilities and the idea of stem cells being good and
> helpful and able to help cure disease and then it isn't such a far leap
> to embrace embryonic stem cell research. so, i thinik that cord blood
> laws, even if they do not directly have an impact on pd, they do allow
> more stem cells to be out there and available for research....this is
> just the way i feel about it. it in no way takes away my commitment to
> push for passage of the bill before Congress at this time. j
>
> --
> Joan Blessington Snyder   54/14
> [log in to unmask]
> http://www.pwnkle.com/jes/jes_web/index.htm
> “Hang tough……..no way through it but to do it.”
> Chris in the Morning      Northern Exposure
>
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
> To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to:
> mailto:[log in to unmask]
> In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn

----------------------------------------------------------------------
To sign-off Parkinsn send a message to: mailto:[log in to unmask]
In the body of the message put: signoff parkinsn