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Re: Theos-World British MPs back animal-human embryo research

Oct 27, 2008 05:22 PM
by Cass Silva


I watched the beginning of the video - but I am not convinced about the Annunaki story - ring pass not does not allow one species to pass into another's domain

Cass




________________________________
From: Anton Rozman <anton_rozman@yahoo.com>
To: theos-talk@yahoogroups.com
Sent: Friday, 24 October, 2008 6:51:49 PM
Subject: Re: Theos-World British MPs back animal-human embryo research


Hi all,

Maybe here is a little bigger picture:
http://www.youtube. com/watch? v=AbgHyrmgRZM

Best regards,
Anton

--- In theos-talk@yahoogro ups.com, Cass Silva <silva_cass@ ...> wrote:
>
> Also it will prove that we are the ancestors of the apes and not 
the other way around - can you expand on the heliosphere
> 
> Cass
> 
> 
> 
> 
> ____________ _________ _________ __
> From: Martin <Mvandertak@ ...>
> To: theos-talk@yahoogro ups.com
> Sent: Thursday, 23 October, 2008 7:03:37 PM
> Subject: Re: Theos-World British MPs back animal-human embryo 
research
> 
> 
> I wonder if the Solar Lords will dig this, they didn't in 
Atlantis...the sun is btw very quiet at the moment and its 
heliosphere has shrunk more than 25% the last 25 years...this could 
mean part destruction of this earth by cosmic fire.
> 
> --- On Thu, 10/23/08, nhcareyta <nhcareyta@yahoo. com.au> wrote:
> From: nhcareyta <nhcareyta@yahoo. com.au>
> Subject: Theos-World British MPs back animal-human embryo research
> To: theos-talk@yahoogro ups.com
> Date: Thursday, October 23, 2008, 4:49 AM
> 
> Britain's lower house of parliament has approved legislation 
allowing 
> 
> scientists to create animal-human embryos for medical research, in 
> 
> the biggest shake-up of embryology laws in two decades.
> 
> Despite opposition from religious and pro-life groups, MPs in the 
> 
> House of Commons today backed the Human Embryology and 
Fertilisation 
> 
> Bill by 355 votes to 129. 
> 
> It will now go to a vote in the House of Lords, and could be law by 
> 
> November.
> 
> The wide-ranging bill, which has been debated for months, would 
also 
> 
> allow "saviour siblings" - children created as a close genetic 
match 
> 
> for a sick brother or sister so their genetic material can help 
treat 
> 
> them.
> 
> In addition, it gives lesbians and single women easier access to in-
> 
> vitro fertilisation (IVF) treatment by removing requirements for 
> 
> clinics to consider a child's need for a father.
> 
> Health Minister Dawn Primarolo told MPs the bill was about helping 
> 
> the one in seven couples who needed fertility assistance, and about 
> 
> research to deal with diseases such as Alzheimer's, which affects 
> 
> 350,000 Britons.
> 
> Hybrid embryos, created by inserting the nuclei of a human cell 
into 
> 
> an animal egg, can ensure a more plentiful supply of stem cells for 
> 
> use in research into treating conditions like Alzheimer's and 
> 
> Parkinson's.
> 
> "It is about research to deal with the dreadful diseases and the 
> 
> debilitating attacks on their health from which many in our society 
> 
> suffer," the minister told MPs.
> 
> "The bill is about combining science with an ethical framework that 
> 
> works on behalf of humankind."
> 
> Prime Minister Gordon Brown is a strong defender of the measures, 
> 
> saying Britain owes it to future generations. His son Fraser has 
> 
> cystic fibrosis, a disease that could one day benefit from embryo 
> 
> research.
> 
> However, 16 MPs from his ruling Labour party, including former 
> 
> minister Ruth Kelly, a staunch Catholic who quit the government 
this 
> 
> month, voted against the bill and religious groups warned it was 
the 
> 
> next step on a "slippery slope".
> 
> Nadine Dorries, a member of the opposition Conservative Party, told 
> 
> her fellow MPs that loopholes in the legislation raised the 
> 
> possibility of scientists attempting cross-breeding between humans 
> 
> and animals.
> 
> "Of all the experimental possibilities debated in the course of 
this 
> 
> bill, surely none is quite so utterly repulsive as the possibility 
of 
> 
> seeking to inseminate animals with human sperm," she said.
> 
> The debate was overshadowed by complaints from all sides that the 
> 
> government had blocked a discussion on reforming the abortion laws. 
> 
> Ministers suggested they did not think the current bill was the 
right 
> 
> time to do this.
> 
> -AFP
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Make the switch to the world&#39;s best email. Get Yahoo!7 
Mail! http://au.yahoo. com/y7mail
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