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July 24, 2006

Senator Tom Coburn Discusses Stem Cells (in Warwick!)

Carroll Andrew Morse

After delivering a luncheon speech this past Saturday at the Crowne Plaza in Warwick, Senator Tom Coburn of Oklahoma was asked what he thought about President Bush's veto of the stem-cell bill. Here is Senator Coburn's answer...

Senator Tom Coburn: I've made it my goal to stay more informed on this issue than anybody in Washington. I've read the science. I've read the reports.

There's some things you should know. We've been studying pluripotent embryonic stem cells for 25 years as a nation and throughout the world. Despite this fact, there is not one treatment available today for anybody in the world from embryonic stem cells. You've spent, of your money, over the last five years, over a half-a-billion dollars on human embryonic stem cell research with no results and no accomplishments.

The second point you should know -- and you should tell to anybody who comes up to you and says Republicans and the President don't care about my child -- is that for every disease group listed in the debate, there is already an ongoing study with great results curing those diseases with adult/cord blood stem cells. That includes juvenile diabetes, that includes lupus, that includes Parkinsons, with ongoing human trials with tremendous results.

The final thing you should know is that the only way embryonic stem cells will ever be available to Americans will be with the taking of tremendous drugs to block the rejection from the body. That's part of the debate. The reasons they want hundreds of thousands of embryonic stem cell lines is to try to deal with the rejection issues in what's called the HLA system of antigens.

The wonderful difference with adult stem cells is you take your own stem cells. There's no foreign tissue. There's nothing foreign, so there's no rejection. With every embryonic stem cell program, there will be rejection. Even if you clone yourself, unless you are woman who clones yourself with your own egg, there will be rejection.

We've have a tremendous untruth spread, without the real facts of what's going on being told. There are 72 treatments and they're growing every day and that's before we get to the latest scientific discovery, germ cells, which are pluripotent (they can produce any tissue in the body) but don't have the side-effects of embryonic stem cells. That's just been discovered in the last six to twelve months.

So do we talk about what the truth is or do we talk about what's politically expedient? I had three members in the Senate after the vote come up to me and say you're absolutely right, but I couldn't vote with you because I had so much pressure from the disease groups and I had already committed my vote. Now think about that character trait. I'm not going to do the right thing, because I'm more interested in getting elected in than in doing the right thing. That's the mindset too often we see in Washington.

More information from Senator Coburn about the science and ethics of stem cells is available at the Senator's website.

By the way, for those curious about what Senator Coburn was doing in Warwick, I�ll be explaining that part later today...

Comments

Coburn's comments are very insightful and you won't hear the same information provided through the mainsteream media.

Posted by: Anthony at July 24, 2006 10:55 PM

Dear Anthony,

There's a very logical reason for that.

Remember, in Coburn you have an individual who believes that if a woman is raped, she must carry the baby to term. Then he calls him self a peditrician. Amazing what graduates of the University of Oklahoma Medical School, after they realize they don't wish to be accountants can come up with.

I think it would be a positive step to not allow him to call himself "Doctor" any where east of the Mississippi. Save the "flat earth" garbage for the red states.

Posted by: Bobby Oliveira at July 25, 2006 10:24 PM

Should we rename you Bobby the bigot? Have you ever been outside of Rhode Island? He has never made any remark regarding whether or not a woman who had been raped "must" carry anything. For you to assume as much says a lot about you. He believes all life is precious and is deserving of protection. That's a very mainstream view.

Dr. Coburn is probably the most brilliant member of the United States Senate, if not the entire Congress. Andrew has posted but a fraction of what he had to say to us. I was amazed (as was the audience) at his breadth of knowledge regarding stem cells, as well as a number of other topics. After his speech, which lasted about 20 minutes or so, he actually took a number of questions from people in the audience (now, that realy stunned us). Every single one of his answers was well thought out and free of spin. Rhode Island would only be so fortunate to have someone of his caliber representing us.

Posted by: Will at July 26, 2006 12:34 AM

Will,

You nailed it.

A few more Senators like Coburn and this country would really start to turn around.

Meanwhile RI has "if I only had a brain" Chafee and ...

"I'm a blueblood bred to remain in 'public service' because working in the real world is just too hard - even at a 'they gave it to me out of charity and political self-interest Edwards & Angell $350 hour job'" Sheldon Whitebread.

Though I'm not enamored of Laffey, at least he would be FAR less embarrassing to RI than the two clowns cited above!

Posted by: Tom W at July 26, 2006 11:07 AM

Dear Will,

I hate to correct you, but I have to: it's on his personal website. He only allows for abortion when the life of the mother is at risk. He calls it the one and only exception. Since that is the one and only, rape is not.

Since you probably didn't know about this, and I'd be happy to send you the link or review the language on the phone with you, I'll just ignore everything else you said for now.

Posted by: Bobby Oliveira at July 26, 2006 5:01 PM