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This op/ed is from the Albany (NY) Times Union 
   
Bush puts science in state of peril  
by Glenn McGee  
(Director of the Alden March Bioethics Institute at 
Albany Medical Center. )
 
First published: Sunday, July 23, 2006 
 
The Washington imbroglio over stem cell research is history, as is 
any hope that the federal government will devote any real funding to 
the research during the next three years. The annals of scientific 
history, no matter which party is writing them, will not smile upon 
President Bush's callous disregard toward those who entrusted his 
office to put science policy ahead of religious dogma.
   
Surrounded by "snowflakes," children made from embryos that were 
never destined to be used for the derivation of stem cells, Mr. Bush 
used nothing less than his first presidential veto to suppress 
legislation by his own party to expand by only a tiny amount the stem 
cell research funded by the National Institutes of Health. The 
President might seem oblivious to the overwhelming majority of 
Americans who favor embryonic stem cell research, including millions 
who suffer from diseases that it will likely be used one day to 
treat. But the truth is that he isn't.

This President has made a decision to leave controversial matters of 
science and medicine to the states. It was clear from the moment he 
offered up his odd logic, in August 2001, that there was no need for 
the federal government to fund or regulate the creation of embryonic 
stem cells for research because there were 62 "ethical" lines of 
embryonic stem cells already on ice. 

Only much fewer of the cell lines were viable, and the ethics of the 
policy made no ethical sense to anyone. It was enough to send some 
American stem cell researchers into orbit, or at least to Britain, 
Israel, Canada, and -- California. There, just as the President was 
elected by the narrowest of margins, a bankrupt state voted by a 
handy margin to devote almost 10 times more money for stem cell 
research than has been proposed for the federal government.

These days, the none-too-united states have taken on roles that would 
have been unthinkable three years ago. The governor of Illinois 
ensures the passage of stem cell funding legislation in that state, 
then launches a letter-writing campaign to lure Missouri's top 
scientists across the Mississippi River. Nor is Illinois alone. 
Connecticut, Maryland and New Jersey could watch the federal debate 
and mutter to themselves how nice it is not to suffer under the Bush 
stem cell policy.

New York's stem cell researchers, along with those in 26 states that 
have laws banning or restricting the research, can be forgiven for 
checking on real estate and schools in New Jersey and California. 
Unable to fund research, forced to work with cells that arrive in 
plain brown wrappers or to employ technicians in other states to do 
much of their research, our researchers keep company not with 
snowflakes, but with patients who have juvenile diabetes, parents who 
have spinal cord injuries and grandparents who endure Alzheimer's and 
Parkinson's. 

The battle for stem cell research in the states is getting stranger 
by the minute. Massachusetts Republican Gov. Mitt Romney vetoed 
legislation promoting the research, but was overridden and the state 
now has an even more ambitious program of research under way than was 
originally proposed. Wisconsin Gov. Jim Doyle, a Democrat, supports 
funding for the research in that state, where the cells were 
discovered, but is at risk for doing so.

And in New York, the state with more potential candidates for stem 
cell therapies than any other, and a huge majority in favor of 
embryonic stem cell research, two gubernatorial candidates have 
announced opposite positions on the research, with one -- Eliot 
Spitzer -- strongly embracing it.

But for now, the state of the research, the state of the science and 
the state of our state's scientific standing are all at risk, thanks 
to the final chapter of the Bush science novella.
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