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Robin Elliott wrote:

> 2. Most scientists seem to think that fetal transplants (I personally prefer
> the more generic and less emotionally-loaded phrase "neural transplantation"),
> whether involving humans or pigs or other animals, remains one of the most
> promising paths to repairing the body's dopamine-producing processes.  NIH
> funded two major double-blind studies of human transplants about three years
> ago and the results are not yet out; maybe later this year.

Yes, I would agree.  It is *much* easier (and more "politically
correct") to de-humanize babies as "neural tissue", or even as
"fetuses" when dealing with plans designed to "harvest" aborted human
beings for scientific research.  The people experimented on in the
Nazi camps were called "subjects", not people.

Best,

Bob

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ROBERT A. FINK, M. D., F.A.C.S.
Neurological Surgery
2500 Milvia Street  Suite 222
Berkeley, CA  94704-2636  USA
Phone:  (510) 849-2555   FAX:  (510) 849-2557

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