| | Quoth Adam Reed:
"Thomas, and anyone else who was not here during, or has already forgotten, the substance of our earlier discussion of the status of stem cell research ..."
Followed by an interesting an informative primer of the discussion's progress. My response:
I agree entirely that there's a lot of potential for abuse via the FDA and other agencies, which is why I'd like to see government power limited and the FDA abolished.
On the other hand, there's no indication I've seen so far that the feds plan to take fetal stem cell research to the level of interference that's been seen in some other areas. There are a couple of reasons for that:
1) A number of _Republican_ politicians, including some powerful ones who could make or break the political futures of presidential aspirants, are behind fetal stem cell research. One that comes to mind offhand is Arnold Schwarzenegger, who has proposed that California use taxpayer money to make the state "friendly" to the research, presumably by funding it with grants, providing facilities at taxpayer expense for pharmaceutical companies and such who want to pursue it, etc.
For that reason, a Republican administration, while it will take some steps -- such as banning federal funding of new fetal stem cell lines -- to "pay off" a portion of its political base (the Religious Right, some of the "pro-life" advocates, etc.), it will only push it so far. It has other constituencies to please as well.
2) Federalism and "states' rights" are rearing their head. The Schiavo case is only the most recent instance in which those points are at issue. Medical marijuana has brought up federalism concerns. So has whether or not states can import, or allow the importation of, Canadian prescription drugs.
The feds really don't want an escalating "states' rights" debate, especially now that such a debate has its advocates on both sides of the partisan/political aisle. If you look closely, they've been trying very hard to find graceful, non-noticeable ways to back off whenever federalism issues have been raised lately. I think that the Schiavo case surprised them in that respect, although it shouldn't have.
Tom Knapp
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