Seems like you never looked into the issue.
Back at you.
Seems like you never looked into the issue.
So they have to be 'breathing' before they are people....Let's dig up your grandma and start with her :up: She won't mind, she's not a person anymore.It probably will not surprise anyone here that I support the research. I cannot see the supposed equivalence of a clump of cells to a person, so when asked if I would trade living breathing people for more embryos, the answer is a firm and clear 'no'.
So they have to be 'breathing' before they are people....
Let's dig up your grandma and start with her :up: She won't mind, she's not a person anymore.
It was a sympathetic post, trying to explain on an emotional level why this is such a polarizing topic. To me, and you can argue the facts, but not the emotion, this would be like digging up all of those who died in concentration camps so that we could live a little longer. I'm just going to be against it on humane issues.Good grief, you don't recognize a figure of speech when see one?
I think she might object more than you assume. And I don't see any reason to make this personal.
Assuming that you're awkwardly trying to refer to one of my dearest deceased, you're still barking up the wrong tree. I don't place a lot of value in corpses, and I don't feel any attachment to the remains of loved ones. But for those who do, I would point out that the families have rights to the burial plots and the remains of their loved ones, and they exercise those rights against trespassers. So it's nothing against, or even relevant to my view on embryos.
I will add though, that if, hypothetically, the remains of a deceased loved one would help a living person to survive, I would happily donate them. Not true of a living loved person, who would, once again, object more than others.
Snipping the rest because I can't find the relevance of any of it.
You know stem cells don't have to come from an embryo, right?...you know stem cells can be grown in a petri dish, right?
According to the research thus far we could eliminate zero diseases from embryonic stem cells, but adult stem cells have actually led somewhere.How many diseases could we have eliminated by now if stem cells could have been brought to the forefront of medical research twenty years ago?
So we take the life of an unborn child? You're a moron.But, of course!
Jesus said he came that we may have life, and have it more abundantly. This research and knowledge is given to us to help people have greater life. Blessed be.
It was a sympathetic post, trying to explain on an emotional level why this is such a polarizing topic. To me, and you can argue the facts, but not the emotion, this would be like digging up all of those who died in concentration camps so that we could live a little longer.
I'm just going to be against it on humane issues.
Btw, if my grandma wasn't an organ donor, I couldn't say 'yes' regardless of the good it'd do.
Even in death, she has certain rights to what happens with her body that I don't believe we have a right to usurp (even if I believed the grave was the end - doesn't effect my ethics one way or the other).
Stem cell research does not count as abortion if such seeds and eggs are never issued inside the womb to grow in the first place.
Absolutely. That was inevitable. Only those on my side of this debate are going to pick that up.If you were going for sympathy, you missed big time. I don't really buy it, honestly.
True, but that's the whole point. It isn't just emotional, but our position is definitely emotionally involved. Anybody coming into the debate is going to have to address killing babies, whether it is wanted or not. You simply have to address our sentiments and values.And you're right, you can't argue the emotion.
I simply cannot agree with you.Which makes it a little more perplexing when you try to do just that. There's no reason to drag my grandmother, or Holocaust victims into this. There's simply no relation. If you're trying to say that it's a similar emotion, then I simply can't relate, and I think you're being absurd.
Mine? (see above)Then I think your sense of humanity is broken.
Neither here nor there. My father-in-law doesn't want to donate. When he is gone, I will respect his wishes for his own body. I am an organ donor however.Organ donors are on the brink of death. They still have the right to direct their medical care. And even then, their next of kin have a lot of rights to make decisions for them.
This is true, and I have no problem with a parent making the decision, but if they had an abortion, I am against that. Scenario: If my baby required a heart and one was available from an abortion, I'd choose to wait. Such a horrible thing would tie to and conflict my feelings for my child for the rest of my life.And yet, those rights are fairly limited. For instance, if she asked to be packed in ice and kept in the middle of your living room, you wouldn't be under any obligation to do that. And ultimately, if someone does desecrate her remains in any way, it would be you the family that would have to take that up.
If their descendants who may have a vested connection object, yes. I'm concerned about the living as was my example with you. If in anyway it affects the living adversely, we should refrain. For instance, it would be wrong to dig up the sacred burial ground of certain tribes today.I'm curious how you feel about archaeological digs that deal with human remains? Do you feel that the long-dead people's rights should be observed?
Agree to that point, but it is specifically what it would mean for the living I contest. We wouldn't have gone immediately into a concentration camp to harvest body parts because they happened to be 'donors' on their drivers license. It is a similar cold-calouse that we are discussing the immediate use of an abortion 'victim' and that's the emotional angle. We deem them victims of a crime and the same said perps would pack up the parts, ship them off for more $ for their pockets, take a qualude, and sleep comfortably that night.It comes back to my thesis. A corpse is no more a person than an embryo. A person leaves an estate which has certain legal rights, related to winding down a person's life. After that, the rights to their material belongings devolve to their heirs.
The TheologyOnline.com TOPIC OF THE DAY for November 11th, 2011 10:42 AM
toldailytopic: Do you support embryonic stem cell research?
I agree.Is there something wrong with using stem cells from living adults? If I remember right, no useful information has come from an embryo, yet the adults have provided much information.
This is all a red herring, designed by the left to desenitize people to the act of killing children.
Absolutely. That was inevitable. Only those on my side of this debate are going to pick that up.
True, but that's the whole point. It isn't just emotional, but our position is definitely emotionally involved. Anybody coming into the debate is going to have to address killing babies, whether it is wanted or not. You simply have to address our sentiments and values.
Mine? (see above)
Neither here nor there. My father-in-law doesn't want to donate. When he is gone, I will respect his wishes for his own body. I am an organ donor however.
This is true, and I have no problem with a parent making the decision, but if they had an abortion, I am against that.
Scenario: If my baby required a heart and one was available from an abortion, I'd choose to wait. Such a horrible thing would tie to and conflict my feelings for my child for the rest of my life.
If their descendants who may have a vested connection object, yes.
Agree to that point, but it is specifically what it would mean for the living I contest. We wouldn't have gone immediately into a concentration camp to harvest body parts because they happened to be 'donors' on their drivers license. It is a similar cold-calouse that we are discussing the immediate use of an abortion 'victim' and that's the emotional angle. We deem them victims of a crime and the same said perps would pack up the parts, ship them off for more $ for their pockets, take a qualude, and sleep comfortably that night.
What are we discussing then? That's pretty much my whole contention.We're not discussing abortion.
Wrong. Again, it is about the same as a serial killer harvesting and selling body parts. If you lived in Germany in 1940, you'd have turned a blind eye then too? When does it become wrong?That's not really done right now. And I don't think your already questionable sense of humanity looks any better knowing that you'd let a living baby die because a dead fetus is somehow sacred.
What are we discussing then? That's pretty much my whole contention.