The article presented and discussed the veto letter of USA President George Bush with regards to the House of Representatives Bill No. 810, which is named as the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act of 2005. President Bush acknowledged the great possibilities that science can offer in treating or diagnosing diseases and improving the lives of millions of people. However, he stressed the point that science also offers temptations to maneuver human lives, and as a result, will violate human worth and dignity. He encouraged the people to defy this kind of temptation. President Bush also made a positive remark that through right scientific techniques and policies, scientific development can still be accomplished without the need to sacrifice the ethical responsibilities of the people to the nation as well as to their fellows, and still be able to maintain such ethics.
In the article, President Bush emphasized the policy he lay down in 2001 about the stem cell research. He accentuated the statement that only embryonic stem cell lines derived from embryos that had already been destroyed can be made use in the research. Since there was no funding at first, his administration had made available more than $90 million just for the research on stem cells. He highlighted the significance of the policy he decreed, which permitted vital research to progress and America to lead the world in embryonic stem cell research without promoting the further obliteration of living human embryos.
President Bush commented that the Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act of 2005 would upend the balanced policy he ordained. He related it to the scenario that American taxpayers would be obliged to finance the intentional eradication of human embryos. He made clear the idea that destroying human embryos would be a crucial error and would unnecessarily pave way to a conflict amid science and ethics, which would eventually create damage and harm to the Nation.
Further, President Bush placed emphasis on the fact that evolution in research can improve in an ethical way, an example of this would be the actual extracting of stem cells from children, adults and the blood in umbilical cords without endangering the donors lives. Those stem cells are presently being utilized in medical remedies. He also said that researchers are studying new methods, which may permit doctors and scientists to generate adaptable stem cells with the absence of sacrificing human lives. He pushed these notions forwardly to be explored continuously so that nation can improve the cause of scientific research, and at the same time, living up the ideals of humane and decent society. He held the principle of harnessing technology without being enslaved by it, and made assurance that science serves and will serve the cause of human race.
Lastly, President Bush necessitated the vision that created the willingness of the people to look for the righteous ways of progressing ethical medical research. So it also should follow that the people must be determined to refuse the incorrect and unethical methods being impliedly proposed by the bill.
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