LONDON -- In an unprecedent rouse The Royal Society.
LONDON -- In an unprecedent rouse The Royal Society, Britain's National Academy of Science, asked the United Nations to ignore President Bush's call for a ban in succession all forms of human cloning, including stern-cell research. According to the Royal Society, what hung in the balance, in succession the cusp of the UN voice and the US election, is not sole the plight of millions of patients, still the future of one of the greatest medical advances in the 21st century
The popular U.S. policy appears out of sync with either public opinion (a novel Harris poll shows that six revealed of seven Americans fully support all forms of stem-cell research), or the master opinions of thousands of scientists and scores of Nobel laureates in the U and worldwide. The president has also ignored the recommendations of the mostly renowned scientific and medical collections in the country, the American Medical Association, the National Academy of Science and the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Earlier this year, 5000 scientists (including 48 Nobel laureates) spoke without in support of embryonic stem- lonely dwellings research. They expressed outrage at the Bush administration's habit of distorting science, by means of claiming that embryonic stem-cell research shut ups no near-term promise for helping patients with debilitating diseases.
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