Gmail Calendar Documents Reader Web more »
Recently Visited Groups | Help | Sign in
Google Groups Home
Message from discussion Human Cloning Farms Gathers Momentum in Australia

View parsed - Show only message text

Received: by 10.36.135.4 with SMTP id i4mr331351nzd.1177037488491;
        Thu, 19 Apr 2007 19:51:28 -0700 (PDT)
Return-Path: <dgrmor...@telus.net>
Received: from defout.telus.net (outbound03.telus.net [199.185.220.222])
        by mx.google.com with ESMTP id h49si578289nzf.2007.04.19.19.51.28;
        Thu, 19 Apr 2007 19:51:28 -0700 (PDT)
Received-SPF: pass (google.com: domain of dgrmor...@telus.net designates 199.185.220.222 as permitted sender)
Received: from priv-edtnaa05.telusplanet.net ([207.194.36.251])
          by priv-edtnes86.telusplanet.net
          (InterMail vM.7.08.02.00 201-2186-121-20061213) with ESMTP
          id <20070420025127.XPYI14242.priv-edtnes86.telusplanet....@priv-edtnaa05.telusplanet.net>
          for <Bible-Prophecy-News@googlegroups.com>;
          Thu, 19 Apr 2007 20:51:27 -0600
Received: from [127.0.0.1] (unknown [207.194.36.251])
	by priv-edtnaa05.telusplanet.net (BorderWare MXtreme Infinity Mail Firewall) with ESMTP id 8BWJ1JT6LT
	for <Bible-Prophecy-News@googlegroups.com>; Thu, 19 Apr 2007 20:51:25 -0600 (MDT)
Message-ID: <46282ADB.7000301@telus.net>
Date: Thu, 19 Apr 2007 19:52:11 -0700
From: Pastor Dale Morgan <dgrmor...@telus.net>
Organization: The Good News Ministry and Missions Outreach
User-Agent: Thunderbird 1.5.0.10 (Windows/20070221)
MIME-Version: 1.0
To: Bible-Prophecy-News@googlegroups.com
Subject: Human Cloning Farms Gathers Momentum in Australia
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=windows-1252; format=flowed
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
X-Antivirus: avast! (VPS 000734-3, 04/19/2007), Outbound message
X-Antivirus-Status: Clean

*Perilous Times

Human Cloning Farms Gathers Momentum in Australia*

Apr 19th, 2007 6:47 AM

Peter Ker
April 19, 2007


AUSTRALIA - FIFTEEN members of State Parliament crossed the floor as a 
Bracks Government push to legalise therapeutic cloning was supported in 
the lower house.

Members of the Labor Government, the Liberal Party and the Nationals 
voted against party colleagues last night as a conscience vote supported 
the stem-cell draft legislation by 58 votes to 25 votes.

The Liberal Party was the most divided, with 10 members including leader 
Ted Baillieu, his deputy Louise Asher and former leader Denis Napthine 
all crossing to vote with the bulk of the Government in favour of the 
new laws.

Sports Minister James Merlino, Christine Campbell and Tammy Lobato 
opposed the bill, as expected, and were joined by their Labor colleague 
Colin Brooks.

Benalla MP Bill Sykes was the only National Party member to support the 
motion, which went to the committee stage last night and, if passed, is 
expected to find a path through the upper house more difficult.

Introduced last month by Health Minister Bronwyn Pike, the legislation 
would allow Victorian scientists to clone human embryos for medical 
research through somatic cell nuclear transfer, commonly known as 
therapeutic cloning.

Scientists would be able to take the nucleus from an adult skin cell, 
insert it in an unfertilised egg and then use the resultant embryonic 
stem cells for medical purposes.

Scientists believe the research could help fight degenerative diseases 
such as Alzheimer's, Parkinson's and cystic fibrosis.

The conscience vote came after an emotion-charged marathon debate, which 
lasted close to eight hours across two sitting days.

Despite calls from Melbourne's Catholic and Anglican archbishops for MPs 
to oppose the legislation, Ms Pike used the final speech before the vote 
to argue that religious faith could be a reason to support the legislation.

"Religious texts consistently exhort human beings to have a far more 
sophisticated expression of living … real life to me is about reaching 
out to potential," she said.

"I think we have an obligation to nurture a much fuller expression of 
life, a higher quality of life."

But Liberal member for Malvern Michael O'Brien said he could not support 
the legislation, despite its potential to treat "old afflictions".

"This bill does represent an instance of our grasp of the possible 
exceeding our ethical reach; accordingly I'm unable to support it," he said.

"This bill commits the creation of embryos for the specific purpose of 
their research and their destruction … motive does matter, intent is 
important."

Roads and Ports Minister Tim Pallas said his support was "a commitment 
to hope" for people with degenerative diseases.

"Life without hope is mere existence," he said.

Mr Pallas said legislators should rule with concern for life, rather 
than "the potential for life".

Attorney-General Rob Hulls said the conscience vote was difficult for 
all MPs.

"But I believe the most difficult decisions are the ones worth making," 
he said.

"As a son, as a brother, as a husband and most of all as a father, I 
believe I owe it to my children to do what I can to ensure they never 
need fear some of the diseases that currently stalk human existence, 
which is why I support this bill."

Liberal member for Mornington David Morris said the legislation would be 
the "quantum leap of the 21st century" and would be the modern 
equivalent of the discovery of penicillin.

But Nationals member for Shepparton Jeanette Powell opposed the bill, 
saying there was a lack of research and it had been introduced too 
hastily to allow proper consideration.

That opinion was rejected by Mental Health Minister Lisa Neville, who 
said MPs had had several months since a similar bill was passed by the 
Federal Parliament in December to form an opinion.

Copyright © 2007. The Age Company Ltd.

Create a group - Google Groups - Google Home - Terms of Service - Privacy Policy
©2009 Google