A fascinating view of animal cloning and the threat of human genetic
engineering. The one may lead to the other.
GM WATCH daily
http://www.gmwatch.org
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EXTRACT: The Food
and Drug Administration (FDA)'s draft risk assessment leans heavily on the work
of animal-cloning companies Cyagra and ViaGen. Over a quarter of the 700-page
draft is a data dump from those two -- a fact that the New York Times failed to
mention, even when quoting the president of ViaGen saying "I think that this
draft is going to provide the industry the comfort it needs."
GM WATCH
NOTE: You can respond to the FDA's call for public comment here:
http://www.organicconsumers.org/rd/clones.htm
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from Pete
Shanks, author of Human Genetic Engineering: A Guide for Activists, Skeptics,
and the Very Perplexed
Hi there
The Center for Genetics and
Society (CGS) now has a blog, at http://www.biopoliticaltimes.org/, where
various members of the CGS staff post and so occasionally do guests such as
myself. The central topic is human biotech, but broader connections are often
drawn. The intro is at
http://www.biopoliticaltimes.org/2006/10/welcome.html.
I recently put up
an item about the connections between the Food and Drug Administration (FDA)
livestock-cloning report and the cloning companies and in turn their founders,
who have human GE interests.
It's at
http://www.biopoliticaltimes.org/2007/01/cloned-meat-hidden-agendas-behind.html
and also copied below, but without the links and formatting. [We've added some
of the links below - ed]
It's public comment time at the
FDA...
best
pete
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Cloned Meat: the hidden agendas
(behind the other hidden agendas)
posted by Pete Shanks
http://www.biopoliticaltimes.org/2007/01/cloned-meat-hidden-agendas-behind.html
Who
is pushing to legalize cloned meat? Follow the money -- and there are strong
connections to human genetic engineering.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA)'s draft risk assessment leans heavily on the work of
animal-cloning companies Cyagra and ViaGen. Over a quarter of the 700-page draft
is a data dump from those two -- a fact that the New York Times failed to
mention, even when quoting the president of ViaGen saying "I think that this
draft is going to provide the industry the comfort it
needs."
http://www.fda.gov/cvm/CloneRiskAssessment.htm
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/12/28/business/28cnd-clone.html
ViaGen
is part of the Exeter Life Science Group, owned by billionaire John Sperling,
who also financed the notorious Genetic Savings and Clone (GSC). Viagen's chief
scientist, Irina Polejaeva, was once GSC's, and when GSC closed ViaGen took over
their gene banking operation. The cloned pets were rightly described by Wired as
"a footnote to John Sperling's grand plan" -- and so are the cows and pigs. The
plan is people -- living
forever.
http://www.genetics-and-society.org/resources/items/20020429_fortune_warner.html
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.02/immortal.html
Cyagra
was a subsidiary of Advanced Cell Technology (ACT), of press-release infamy. ACT
sold Cyagra in one of its desperate grabs for cash, but chief scientist Robert
Lanza and his former colleague Jose Cibelli (a co-author of Hwang Woo-suk's and
a former consultant to the California stem cell institute -- it's a small
universe) are cited throughout the FDA report.
The surface agenda the FDA
addresses is public safety (though Stuart Newman [professor at New York Medical
College] says "it's potentially a health hazard"); the agenda hidden in plain
sight is that of commercial interests; and behind that lies the specter of human
genetic engineering. It's a mutually reinforcing spiral: The animal cloners have
been relying on human medical research (and of course feeding the starving) to
make their work seem less unacceptable -- and the human cloners rely on the
animal work to make theirs seem more
reasonable.
http://www.thejournalnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070101/NEWS02/701010332/1018
The
public does not want cloned meat and certainly wants it to be labeled, which the
FDA says it cannot require. All the more reason to object now. The Center for
Food Safety has been opposing animal cloning for years. So has the Organic
Consumers Association, which has set up a handy site for responding to the FDA's
call for public comment.
http://www.organicconsumers.org/rd/clones.htm
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