10 Million Dollar Cloning Fraud
by
Illinois Governor Blagojevich
From LifeSiteNews.com July 13, 2005
Publisher’s
Comment
In light of Missouri’s upcoming battle to
prevent human cloning, I thought the following article dated July 13, 2005 from
LifeSiteNews.com would be quite interesting to read or reread for both our
Illinois and Missouri readers. As you’ll see, Governor
Blagojevich - like our ‘clone & kill friends’ here in Missouri - just loves
to play with words to deceive people.
LifeSiteNews.com – July 13, 2005. By an
executive order, Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich forestalled public debate on
the moral admissibility of human embryonic research and awarded $10 million for
research that would include the creation of clones, with the caveat that such embryonic children can only be created as long as
they will not be allowed to live.
In the Governor’s press conference, he claimed that the funding would
not be used for cloning. But this claim rests upon a gross deception. The
order uses a
definition
of ‘cloning’ that would allow any kind of clone to be created as long as it
is not implanted into a woman. The Order leaves the door wide open for funding
for creating clones, for using their parts, even, potentially, for having
cloned human beings gestated in artificial wombs when such technology becomes
available.
By
means of manipulation of terms that are only too familiar to pro-life opponents
of cloning, the Order specifically bans only “reproductive cloning” and defines
“cloning” as implantation of the cloned embryo. In the Orwellian world of
biotechnology lobbying, a non-existent distinction has been concocted between
‘reproductive cloning’ and ‘research cloning,’ with the former used as a scapegoat
for public fears and the latter lauded as the key to solving the world’s medical
problems. In reality, however, the difference is imaginary. In the first,
the cloned human being is allowed to live; in the second, he is torn apart
for stem cells.
This
has become the most popular dodge in crafting state legislation to allow
cloning for research and has been dubbed by pro-lifers as the “clone-and-kill”
tactic. By manipulating the language used to describe the process and by
playing on public ignorance and fears, California, New Jersey and Connecticut
and now Illinois have allowed for the creation of publicly funded organ
factories where people can be manufactured and killed for their parts.
The
Center for Bioethics and Human Dignity (CBHD) condemned the Governor’s order
pointing out that public funds would be better spent on adult stem cell
research which has produced real results. Both the Center and the Illinois
Family Institute (IFI) said that lives cannot be saved at the expense of other
lives.
Pro-life
activist and blogger, Jill Stanek,
noted the cloning deception. She wrote, “That claim [of prohibiting cloning]
is so false (or to give benefit of doubt, utterly and incredibly ignorant)
that I can hardly sit still. And this is a critical point, because most Americans
are against human cloning.”