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Dolores,

 I just heard by email from the AZ Daily Star that they may print my
response to this travesty.  The AZ Republic ignores me and the issue of SCR.
Think it may be because I got unsigned hate mail when I supported their
cartoonist's take on the Terri Schiavo controversy.  He attacked the
religious right.  Nice people.
Ray
----- Original Message -----
From: "Dolores Gross" <[log in to unmask]>
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Wednesday, March 01, 2006 7:18 PM
Subject: Re: AZ House criminalizes sale of human eggs


> Ray,
>  I'm reminded of the line on "Boston Legal" by Candyce Bergen - "not one
> pill to cure cancer, but 3 different little blue pills..."
>  Dolores
>
>
> rayilynlee <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
>  This is another salvo in the great red-neck state of AZ's war on cures.
> Dumb-as-a-stump Bob Stump is my state rep. Ray
>
> Lawmakers vote to criminalize selling, buying human eggs
> By Howard Fischer
> capitol media services
> Tucson, Arizona | Published: 02.27.2006
> advertisement
> PHOENIX - State representatives voted Monday to make it illegal for a
> woman
> to sell her eggs but refused to impose similar restrictions on men selling
> their sperm.
> On a voice vote, the House of Representatives said that a woman who sells
> her eggs could be sent to prison for up to a year and fined up to
> $150,000.
> HB 2142 would apply that same penalty to any doctor or organization who
> made
> the purchase.
> Lawmakers also gave preliminary approval to HB 2681 to require that even
> when women just donate their eggs they be informed of medical risks. But
> here, too, legislators refused to warn men of the potential legal and
> ethical risks of donating sperm, including the possibility a child born
> from
> the donation could seek them out and demand support.
> Rep. Bob Stump, R-Peoria, said both measures are necessary to protect the
> health of women. But several women legislators reacted angrily, saying
> this
> is really a question of whether lawmakers are going to treat men and women
> the same.
> "I don't understand why a man could go out and sell part of his
> reproductive
> body, ... that a man can go and make money, but I as a woman cannot do
> it,"
> complained Rep. Linda Lopez, D-Tucson, about HB 2142 which criminalizes
> the
> sale of human eggs.
> Women can make a fair amount of money: One classified ad in a Phoenix area
> publication offered up to $24,000.
> But Stump, R-Peoria, said the disparate treatment is justified. And, he
> said, it has "nothing to do with gender politics."
> He said there is a medical risk from the procedure of donating eggs, both
> from the hormones injected into women to produce multiple mature eggs as
> well as the harvesting procedure.
> "I would wager there's not one recorded instance of someone dying from
> donating or selling sperm," Stump explained during the House floor debate.
> "In fact, it's more dangerous for a man to cross the street than to donate
> sperm."
> Stump conceded under questioning, though, the medical risk remains the
> same,
> whether the eggs are donated or sold. And nothing in his legislation makes
> donation illegal.
> But Stump said there is one difference: Human eggs can be used not only
> for
> in vitro fertilization to help a childless couple conceive - like sperm -
> but also can be used "for the express purpose of destroying cloned human
> embryos" for medical research.
> And Stump in his two years at the Capitol has waged a campaign to create
> legal impediments to cloning. Aside from these two measures, last year he
> pushed through a ban on the use of state funds or facilities.
> Rep. Kyrsten Sinema, D-Phoenix, said there is no reason to have one set of
> laws for men and another for women. "You keep your hands off my eggs and
> I'll keep my hands off your sperm," she said.
> Lopez, who raised the issue of "informed consent" for sperm donors, did
> not
> argue that there are medical risks from the procedure. But she said there
> are other potential risks to men, including potential financial risk if a
> court were to determine that the biological father - if he could be
> traced -
> has some financial obligation to the child.
> Final roll-call votes on both issues will send them to the Senate.
>
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