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Old 03-14-2003, 05:59 AM   #1
cheesecake
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Bills To Ban Cloning Multiply In States n Human

From Stateline.Org.

Bills To BaCloning Multiply In States n Human

By Erin Madigan, Staff Writer
Stateline.org
March 13, 2003

Clonaid claimed in December 2002 to have created the first human clone.
The self-described human cloning company and religious sect hasn't
proven their feat, but they succeeded in breeding new state legislation
to ban the practice.

Legislators in 21 states have introduced 47 bills since the start of
2003 that would outlaw human cloning for reproductive or research
purposes. At the national level, the House approved a bill to ban
cloning, but the Senate has left the issue on the back burner.

"In the absence of a ban by the federal government states are acting on
the issue," said Indiana state Sen. Patricia Miller (R-Indianapolis).
Miller, whose cloning bill recently won Senate approval, would make
cloning a felony, punishable by up to four years in prison or a $10,000
fine.

Since 2001, the number of state bills introduced to prohibit cloning
has more than quadrupled, said Alissa Johnson, a policy specialist at
the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL).

"The issue is back on the radar screen because of an extraterrestrial,
rather outlandish claim," said Patrick Kelly, vice president for state
government relations at the Biotechnology Industry Organization (BIO), a
trade association in Washington, D.C.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"The issue is back on the radar screen because of an extraterrestrial,
rather outlandish claim."
Patrick Kelly, Biotechnology Industry Organization
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This often-emotional debate has triggered world leaders from President
Bush to Pope John Paul II to condemn human cloning.

Johnson said the Clonaid claim might have brought "a greater urgency"
to the cloning issue, but is not the sole factor behind new legislation
in the states.

Lawmakers' debates over cloning focus on two different uses of the
procedure: 'reproductive' cloning and 'therapeutic' cloning, which is
used for stem cell research that proponents say has the potential to
help find cures for diseases like Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, diabetes and
types of cancer.

Opponents of cloning often cite ethical issues and say cloning equates
to abortion because embryos are destroyed in the process. Many
proponents of research cloning advocate control over cloning through
penalties and fines.

Oklahoma state Rep. Bill Graves (R-Oklahoma City) said the bill he's
sponsoring to ban all cloning won't make it out of committee this
session due to time constraints, but he hopes to attach it to a vehicle
bill in the Senate.

"I think that cloning is playing God. If we need more people we can
stop aborting people. It's bizarre and not something we should be doing,
it's a Frankenstein type of thing," Graves said.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"I think that cloning is playing God ... It's bizarre and not something
we should be doing, it's a Frankenstein type of thing."
Oklahoma state Rep. Bill Graves (R)
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

In cloning, a copy of genetic material is made through 'somatic cell
nuclear transfer' (SNT). The nucleus of an egg cell is replaced with the
nucleus of an adult one. The egg cell can then be developed into an
embryo for reproduction or used to derive stem cells for research,
according to NCSL.

Many of the ethical and scientific concerns surrounding cloning
surfaced in 1997 when Scottish scientists unveiled the world's first
cloned animal; Dolly, a sheep. At Dolly's arrival many state lawmakers
scurried to introduce bills to ban the procedure, but only California
passed a ban on reproductive cloning that year.

Since then other animals have been cloned, but no humans. Dolly was
euthanized last month because of premature ageing, which opponents say
illustrates the potential dangers of cloning.

The cloning issue waned at the state level after initial bills fueled
by Dolly were introduced, BIO's Kelly said, although lawmakers in five
states have since passed restrictions on human cloning.

Iowa and Michigan prohibit all cloning and Louisiana, Rhode Island and
Virginia ban reproductive cloning. Missouri prohibits the use of state
funds for cloning research.

So far this year, bills to ban cloning have passed one legislative body
in four states - Indiana, Kentucky, New Jersey and North Dakota.

In contrast, lawmakers in Maryland, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island,
Tennessee and Washington have introduced measures to specifically permit
stem cell research. But NCSL's Johnson said that doesn't reflect the
majority of state action.

As debates play out in Statehouses, the issue is also being addressed
nationally. For the second year in a row, a bill to ban all human
cloning passed the House, this time by a vote of 241 to 155.

But a companion measure in the Senate, sponsored by Senators Sam
Brownback (R-Kan.) and Mary Landrieu (D-La.) and endorsed by Bush, faces
an uncertain future because other cloning measures are circulating
Senate committees.

The full Senate won't consider the cloning issue for at least a few
months, a Brownback aide said. The Brownback legislation, which will be
debated in the Senate health committee, has taken a back seat to
smallpox and bio-terrorism measures.

Some lawmakers say a cloning ban, which never made it to the Senate
floor for consideration last year, might fare better with a Republican
majority and physician Bill Frist (R-Tenn.) as Senate leader. Frist has
previously supported a ban on cloning.



Contact Erin Madigan at emadigan@stateline.org

"Don't worry about the world coming to an end today.
It's already tomorrow in Australia!"----- Charles Schultz
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Old 03-14-2003, 06:30 AM   #2
Wise Young
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This is perhaps one of the most frightening aspects of the movement to ban embryonic stem cells and cloning. They have successfully been able to introduce legislation in many states. Please note that there are already many state laws that ban sale or transport of embyronic cells. Given the thicket of laws both on the state and federal levels, most large pharmaceutical companies are reluctant to invest in a technology that they will not be able to commercialize. Wise.
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