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California Stem Cell Report
News, information and commentary on public policy and business issues
involving California's new stem cell agency, the California Institute for
Regenerative Medicine, created by Prop. 71.
Wednesday, March 15, 2006
Demons, Disease and Stem Cells
Nobel Prize winner Paul Berg says that social conservatives are "actively
demonizing" some scientists for stem cell research and other work that
offends the critics' sensibilities.

Berg, a Stanford University professor who serves as an alternate member on
the California stem cell Oversight Committee, made the comment in a speech
at a major stem cell conference in San Francisco earlier this week.

Berg said,
"Perhaps for the first time, the threat looms that certain lines of
biomedical research could be forbidden, indeed, criminalized. Currently,
legislation passed several times in the House and pending in the Senate
threatens criminal penalties of 10 years in prison and a $1 million fine for
using a procedure that involves cloning a patient's genetic information in
the form of embryonic stem cells. Never mind that this procedure is intended
solely for creating a deeper knowledge of the genetic and cellular roots of
disease; and, that the procedure is presently the only means for creating
patient-specific embryonic stem cells for the treatment of several
debilitating ailments. Even more ludicrous, are the same criminal penalties
for providing or receiving any therapy if the development of that therapy
involved the nuclear transfer technology. Consider the arrogance of
withholding possibly life-saving aid from the American public because some
members of the Congress are offended by the technology!"
He continued:

"I am concerned that the quality of the science may no longer be the sole or
principal determinant in whether a particular line of research would be
permitted; rather, theological and ideological pronouncements parading as
fundamental ethical and moral values may increasingly take over. Vocal and
organized minorities through their political representatives could become a
prominent force in defining the boundaries and even the permissibility of
scientific research."
Berg said,
"Presently, social conservatives are actively demonizing scientists
conducting research on AIDS, reproductive technologies and fetal and embryo
development. The call by social conservatives to limit certain lines of
inquiry, as now exists for human embryo research, has been to restrict
federal funding for the 'offensive' activity."
Berg also suggested that research is entitled to protection under the First
Amendment and discussed legal arguments that support that position. He said,
"Abridging (the) implicit right to unfettered inquiry because it offends
someone's religious beliefs or ethical views is in my view no more
justifiable than prohibiting press investigations that offend certain
constituencies."

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