Law

"Killing the Patient: Arguments For and Against the Personhood of the Embryo" PDF
by Christian Brugger Ph.D   
christianbrugger.jpgPart I - The unjust treatment of human embryos in the U.S. and in the world is an unspeakable moral catastrophe rivaling some of humankind’s greatest evils!
Read more...
05/02/2008
 
Bovine Frankenstein: UK and the Controversial Bioethics Law PDF
by Christian Brugger, Ph.D.   

Genetically Engineered Cow

Lest anyone is tempted to think that the debate over hybrid embryo creation is premature, the troubling announcement on April Fools Day (4/1) that a research team at Newcastle University in England had successfully created the first part-human part-animal hybrid embryo (cow egg, human somatic cell nucleus) in the UK will make clear how late in the day the time actually is.  The embryo survived for three days.  Parliament will debate next month the morality and utility of socially sanctioning the creation of such embryos. 

Read more...
04/04/2008
 
On religious objections to the use of vaccines derived from aborted fetuses - A case study PDF
by Joe Capizzi, Ph.D.   
Image

Recently a Catholic U.S. Coast Guard officer filed suit to prevent being forced to receive a vaccination he believed morally objectionable since the vaccine derived from the remains of an aborted child. The officer, Lt. Cmdr. Joseph Healy filed a complaint just last week, charging the government with using “its own arbitrary judgment of what constitutes Catholic theology while permitting religious exemptions to others.”

Read more...
01/15/2008
 
Neither Man nor Beast - Britain allows scientists to create human/animal hybrids PDF
by William L. Saunders, Esq.   
Image

On Sept. 5, a government agency (called the Human Fertilization and Embryology Agency or HFEA) decided to let scientists, mad or otherwise, create human/animal hybrids. Let me repeat: Science fiction will become science fact very soon; and man and beast will be combined into one.

Read more...
11/12/2007
 
When a Consensus Isn't a Consensus PDF
by Bill Saunders, Esq.   
Sixty scientists, doctors, philosophers, lawyers, scientific journal editors and federal regulators met in England last month to produce a "consensus statement" on stem cells and ethics. But what they produced is hardly something we should all agree to.
Read more...
03/15/2006