Media Play Ginger Rodgers to Big Biotech Fred Astaire: Employ Yet Another Euphemism for Human Cloning Research

I can't remember an issue in which there was so much intellectual dishonesty or malpractice in media reporting than the embryonic stem cell/cloning debates--and that's saying a lot! For example, when the Stowers Crowd began using the junk biological term "early stem cells," the Kansas City Star jumped right on that bandwagon.
When Big Biotech began using the term "therapeutic cloning" to distinguish using embryos created through somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) from the same technology undertaken to bring a cloned baby to birth--called "reproductive cloning"--the media jumped right on board, creating the false impression that these were different types of cloning. Because these terms misled rather than edified, the President's Council on Bioethics urged scientists and media to use more accurate terminology--"cloning to produce children" and "cloning for biomedical research," so that a rational ethical debate based on critical thinking could be engaged. But that was precisely what Big Biotech and the media did not want, so those terms were never used--as far as I know--in media reports about the cloning debate.
When the "therapeutic" part of the advocacy phrase therapeutic cloning didn't bring public support, but the "cloning" part brought public disfavor, Big Biotech decided to just call it somatic cell nuclear transfer--which is at least accurate--with the intent of confusing the public as to the point of that process, e.g., making a human embryo asexually, aka cloning. And once again, the media went right along. Adding insult to that injury, the media also often reported the nonsense that SCNT makes "stem cells," rather than embryos.
Even that was too accurate, so pretty soon human cloning research and ESCR were both merely called "stem cell research," which had the benefit of confusing it with adult stem cell research from which most notable human benefits were being derived. It got to be a game with me: If the media announced a "stem cell research" advance, I knew it was adult stem cells. If it was an ESCR advance, they generally called it "embryonic stem cell research."
And now, a new term for cloning; "stem cell research using aborted human eggs." South Korea is going to again allow human cloning research--SCNT--after banning it in the wake of the big Hwang Woo-suk scandal. From the story, and this is a medical media site:
The national committee on bioethics said it agreed to approve a new research project provided its scientists met certain conditions. A team from Seoul's Cha General Hospital had sought approval for its stem cell project using aborted human eggs to develop cures for grave human diseases.This version made other stories, such as Focus News. And in a truncated version in The Age:
South Korea has conditionally lifted a three-year ban on stem cell research using human eggs.From which the NYT reported:
South Korea has lifted a ban on stem cell research using human eggs, but the national committee on bioethics is doing so conditionally, and only for scientists who agree to certain restrictions.But, credit where it is due, the AP got it partially right (the wrong part is the first sentence, the accurate part, the second):
South Korea will lift a three-year ban on human stem cell research, a presidential advisory committee announced Wednesday. The government outlawed research in 2006 following a scandal involving disgraced cloning expert Hwang Woo-suk, who claimed to have created stem cells from cloned human embryos. Hwang scandalized the international scientific community when it emerged that scientific papers outlining his claim relied on faked data.Somebody speak to that AP reporter!


9 Comments:
Now, Mr. Smith, you have gone TOO FAR!
How dare you insult our adorable Ginger and darling Fred by drawing an invidious comparison to the nasty Media and horrid Big Biotech!
Perfect partners, for sure, but better you should make a comparison to...oh, ah...to Burke and Hare...to Leopold and Loeb...to Bonnie and Clyde...to De Niro and Pacino...to Elmer Fudd and Bugs the Bunny...anything, anybody but Fred and Ginger!
;o)
Well, I am dating myself. I saw Fred and Ginger dance together once. I met her briefly and him three times. He was a true gentleman and even remembered me between the first and second times, which were about a year apart.
What the deuce are "aborted human eggs"?????
That's just absolutely crazy. You can abort a human egg. There isn't even any resemblance between the medical procedure for harvesting human eggs and a surgical abortion. Women who donate eggs aren't even pregnant, so how could they be having an abortion? They have merely hyperovulated. It don't even make good nonsense.
Trivia bit on Fred Astaire: As the story goes, Gene Kelly was very nasty to Debbie Reynolds when they were making _Singin' in the Rain_ about the fact that she couldn't dance. She had to do only a little dancing in the movie, but Kelly was not a patient person, and Debbie's forte was singing. Fred Astaire found her one day under a piano on the set crying over the whole situation, and he taught her to dance. I definitely hope this is a true story.
Sorry, that should be "you can't abort a human egg" above...Sigh.
I hadn't heard that one, but it is something he would do.
The night I met Fred and Ginger, Donald O'Conner was a little under, shall we say, the weather. Reyolds gently pulled him off stage before he made a fool of himself.
(I was playing with the stars because I won tickets to attend the gala premier and party for the release of That's Entertainment, which was also the 50th anniversary party for MGM. What a night.)
Do they mean using eggs from aborted female fetuses?
John Howard. No. While it is theorized that the egg dearth problem interfering with human cloning might be fixed by using immature eggs from aborted female fetuses, woman cadavers, or ovaries removed from women, that remains theoretical, although work is being done toward that end.
This was to obscure what is being planned. There is no other reason to use the terminology.
Dear Mr. Smith,
You lucky duck!
Gene Kelly was a superb dancer and choreographer, but he was not known for getting the results he wanted in any gentle manner.
Fred Astaire, to my knowledge, never had a harsh word to say to or about anyone -- not even on the rare occasion when his partner was, shall we say, not especially gifted as a dancer. (Joan Fontaine comes to mind...but she wasn't in a position to refuse a role opposite Fred. She knew the score, so did he, and so did the audience. No use in rubbing it in.)
Cyd Charisse once said that when she got home after a day at the studio, he husband could tell at once with whom she'd been dancing. If it was Gene Kelly, the dear girl would be black and blue from head to foot; if it was Fred Astaire, she wouldn't have a single mark on her.
Back to the subject -- sorry, mr. Smith, but you started us on Fred and Ginger. Never underestimate the effects of spontaneous mutation. That happens a lot, in cloning animals, and presumably will happen with attempts to clone humans. Embryonic stem cells appear to have a tendency to mutate and form tumors and other abnormalities. We may have to read some horror stories before this tendency is acknowledged by Big Biotech and by the Media. Both are doing their best to obscure this finding.
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