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Folks,  I took another look at this and it is another form of the 
"personhood" movement.  Recently there was a Mary  Scott Doe case in 
California (this one is in Maryland).  The judge threw it out.  This guy 
takes  it to court.  I was concentrating on the states that are trying to 
enact "personhood" laws giving blastocysts 14th amendment rights.

Time for bed.

Ray

Rayilyn Brown
Director AZNPF
Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
[log in to unmask]

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From: "rayilynlee" <[log in to unmask]>
Sent: Tuesday, March 31, 2009 6:46 PM
To: <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: "Enslaving" embryos

> Group Accuses Obama of 'Enslaving' Embryos, Compares Policy to Holocaust
> The National Association for the Advancement of Preborn Children is urging 
> a federal judge to halt Obama's plans to infuse embryonic stem cell 
> research with federal funds.
> By Mike Levine
> FOXNews.com
> Tuesday, March 31, 2009
>
> A group opposed to abortion and embryonic stem cell research is accusing 
> President Obama of violating the constitutional rights of a frozen embryo 
> and "enslaving" it, like Nazis enslaved Jews during the Holocaust.
>
> The group is urging a federal judge to halt Obama's plans to infuse 
> embryonic stem cell research with federal funds. In a lawsuit filed 
> Thursday, the group said it was taking legal action on behalf of "Mary 
> Scott Doe" -- described as a "U.S. citizen" whose life has been 
> "suspended" since "she" was frozen in liquid nitrogen -- and thousands of 
> other embryos just like "her."
>
> "She is entitled to due process and the equal protection of the laws and 
> to be free from slavery and involuntary servitude, as guaranteed by the 
> Fourteenth and Thirteenth Amendments," said the lawsuit, filed by Maryland 
> attorney Martin Palmer, who heads the National Association for the 
> Advancement of Preborn Children.
>
> In early March, Obama issued an executive order reversing the Bush 
> administration's limits on embryonic stem cell research, in effect opening 
> the door for an influx of federal dollars toward such research. Embryos 
> have to be destroyed to create stem cells for research, but many 
> scientists believe it could lead to cures or treatments for serious 
> ailments, including Parkinson's Disease and diabetes.
> "That potential will not reveal itself on its own," Obama said in 
> announcing his plans. "Medical miracles do not happen simply by accident.
> They result from painstaking and costly research, from years of lonely 
> trial and error -- much of which never bears fruit -- and from a 
> government willing to support that work."
>
> The lawsuit filed Thursday said Obama is "treating human embryos, and, 
> thus, human beings as property" that "may be donated for use and 
> destruction in federally-funded [research] ... without the consent of and 
> against the will of the embryos themselves."
>
> According to a 2003 study by the Rand Corporation, about 400,000 embryos 
> have been frozen and stored for future use, but the vast majority of them 
> are designated for future attempts at pregnancy. Only about 11,000 have 
> been designated for research.
>
> Nevertheless, the lawsuit said any frozen embryos designated for research, 
> by their inherent state, are "entirely incapable of giving an informed 
> consent to their use," insisting that every embryo has "a will to live and 
> develop into a fully-formed human being." Therefore, the lawsuit said, 
> stem cell research is "a form of slavery or involuntary servitude in 
> violation of the Thirteenth Amendment."
>
> The lawsuit compared the use of embryos in stem cell research to the human 
> experiments Jews endured during the Holocaust.
> "The utilitarian thinking underlying [President Obama's] proposed 
> government funding of human embryo stem cell research and experimentation 
> is what led to the Nazi experimentation on concentration camp prisoners 
> during World War II," the lawsuit said, noting that after all the Nazi 
> experiments on humans "not a single advance for medical science resulted."
>
> The lawsuit is asking -- actually, "praying" in its words -- for a federal 
> judge in Maryland to declare Obama's executive order "null and void," to 
> rule that "Mary Scott Doe" and other frozen embryos are "persons" entitled 
> to due process under the Constitution, and to order Obama to "cease and 
> desist any and all plans to fund or otherwise facilitate, assist or 
> encourage the undertaking of any human embryo stem cell experimentation."
>
> This is the latest in a series of similar lawsuits filed by Palmer over 
> the past several years.
> In 1995, he filed a lawsuit to halt research recommended by the National 
> Institutes of Health under President Bill Clinton. A federal district 
> court and a federal court of appeals in Virginia dismissed the case after 
> determining it had no legal standing, and the U.S. Supreme Court then 
> rebuffed Martin's efforts to have the highest court in the land hear the 
> case.
>
> Ten years later, in 2005, Martin filed a lawsuit in California, arguing 
> that a 2004 law expanding state money for stem cell research violated the 
> constitutional rights of a frozen embryo named "Mary Scott Doe." Its 
> language, including the reference to Nazi experiments, was nearly 
> identical to the lawsuit filed this week against President Obama. That 
> lawsuit was dismissed.
>
> Rayilyn Brown
> Director AZNPF
> Arizona Chapter National Parkinson Foundation
> [log in to unmask]
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