Rally in Columbus: Michael J. Fox and Sherrod Brown
Posted by on October 30, 2006 at 01:06 PM
When Claire McCaskill debuted her newest ad, featuring the familiar face of Michael J. Fox speaking plainly and honestly to the camera about the importance of electing McCaskill, a supporter of stem cell research, over her opponent, Senator Jim Talent, who had voted against expanding federal funding for the research, it made news.
When right-wing pundits seized on the ad to personally attack Michael J. Fox, who was visibly exhibiting the symptoms of Parkinson's disease, (one of the many diseases that stem cell research has the potential to cure) it was appalling, desperate and despicable. Fox, a vocal proponent of medical research became the target of ugly attacks. It was suggested that he should have waited until his symptoms abated to film the ad, or that he was exaggerating for dramatic effect.
Their attacks backfired. Michel J. Fox stood up to these bullies and he has continued to speak out about the critical need for this research. As election day approaches he has traveled around the country to campaign for candidates who support stem cell research. Today, he made his way to Columbus, Ohio where he was joined by Sherrod Brown and a packed room of Ohio Democrats, for a rally in support of Brown's Senate campaign.
The event was scheduled to start around 11 am - but as these things often do - it started at about 11:30. The Ohio State Law School Auditorium was packed - every seat was filled - and many students and supporters had to be crowded into the aisles to find a place to sit or stand.
On the stage Sherrod was joined by a number of supporters, including some very impressive children who were there with their parents to show their support for the issue. Sherrod got things started by welcoming everyone for coming out to show their support. After his opening remarks we got a brief primer on stem cell research from a doctor and professor from Case Western University. Although the crowd seemed was pretty well versed on the issue, the doctor's speech served as a reminder of just how critical this issue is to medical advancements - and how many people could be helped by this science. Millions of Americans - boys, girls, moms, dads, grandmas and grandpas - suffer from diseases that could be cured by advances in stem cell research. This is why it is so unfathomable that President Bush used his first and only veto of his Presidency to block an expansion of federal funding for this life-saving science, standing in the way of hope for millions of Americans.
Sherrod:
Several years ago I was speaking with Dr. Copeland, Jeffrey Copeland, who ran the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta…he was outlining to me what he considers to be the milestones in public health...He said both the public health achievements and the medical health achievements that save lives don’t come easy. Getting from the problem to the solution is hard enough without any obstacles in the way, and that is why embryonic stem cell research is so important.
Stem cell research is obviously worth fighting for, and that is why what Michael J. Fox is doing is so very important – he has shown great courage and great passion...
Then Michal J. Fox took the stage. He had to wait a moment for the crowd to quiet down before beginning to speak, and he seemed almost embarrassed by the applause. He opened by thanking everyone for being there, including an earlier speaker, Tanner, a local six grade student, who shared his personal experience of living with juvenile diabetes. Fox emphasized how important it is to share stories of everyday survival, noting how even in his 40s he has to share his own experiences. He called Tanner an "inspiration".
Fox said being in Columbus was a homecoming of sorts. He reminded us that his popular character, Alex P. Keaton from Family Ties had called Columbus home, He joked that Keaton would be happy that Fox had worn a tie.
Then he got more serious - explaining his decision to campaign for Sherrod, and for other candidates like him, who were running against opponents who had voted against stem cell research.
Fox:
It's not secret I am a vocal advocate for medical research - but I am not alone - the majority of the House of Representatives, the United States Senate and over 70 percent of Americans support stem cell research - but Senator DeWine stood with the President and voted against stem cell research...
As you may know, I had a run-in with a less than compassionate conservative. I guess I'm not supposed to speak with you until my symptoms go away, or maybe I'm supposed to go away, but I'm not going to go away and neither are the millions of Americans and their families who live with these diseases...
The stem cell policy of President Bush that was supported by Senator DeWine is a rejection of the future of medical research. Well, forgive me for this, but it's time we get back to our future...a vote for Sherrod Brown for Senate is a vote for hope and for a better quality of life for millions of Americans...
I'm asking you as an advocate, and a husband and a father to all get active and to stand up for what is right -- what is right for the future of hundreds of millions of Americans who have or are touched by debilitating diseases.
After the brief speeches the event morphed into a meet and greet. On stage, Michael J. Fox talked to the children and their parents who had come out. Sherrod and his wife, Connie, talked with the supporters who swarmed the stage.
All in all, it was a short, yet inspiring event. It was amazing to see the variety of people who have banded together to campaign on this issue - from sixth-grade student Tanner, to a mother who brought along a hand-written sign that said, "My Dad has Parkinson's - Support Stem Cell Research", to the medical students in the audience who were clad in scrubs. Then there are people like me. People who just believe that this potentially life-saving medical research should be supported to the fullest extent possible by our government. People who believe millions of Americans should live everyday with hope for a cure, and who believe that our country should be leading the way forward in this fight.
On the web:
Michael J. Fox Foundation
Brown for Senate
Comments (11) «
I watched Michael J, Fox on tv and thought to myself, What guts this young man has! Then I watched Rush's sorry exahabition, mocking Michael J Fox. In my own case, today was like some other days, I started off ok, took two of my grandchildren to lunch and was getting around pretty good. After we retutned home, " I hit the wall" and had to rest. One of the side lights of the cancer I have been battling for seven years is advanced degenerative bone diaese. After i woke up, the grinding pain was with me and I was again reminded of how important this research is.
The Republicans in Congress stole over 100 billion (that "B" as in bully boys) of the tax payers money in just two years, and Bush did not veto a sinle piece of this legislation. Instead, he used his first and only veto, to stop this research. There is such a thing of setting bad "Karma" in motion, all these currupt people in this administration are going to reap what they have planted.
Why do Democrats in the Senate stay with Joe Lieberman and betray the CT Democratic party election? I've sent every Democratic Senator this article that calls them on their betrayal and failure to lend support to Ned Lamont. No money from any of the Dem re-election committees - none for Lamont. No rallies in CT except from Kerry & Kennedy, and Edwards & Clark. Grassroots progressives all over the country are watching this race and we won't forget how little the Dem senators care about the CT voters and Dem Party. Like Joe, they just don't get loyalty to the team and the respect for the rules.
"It is this willingness to say or do whatever is necessary to hold on to his U.S. Senate seat, damn the consequences to what he claimed to believe last year or even last week, that makes Lieberman, a smarmy, power-hungry little yapping poodle of a politician, the perfect poster-boy for the amoral might-makes-right culture that currently animates our political system."
http://www.alternet.org/story/43428/
Joe Lieberman's Endless Hypocrisy By Cliff Schecter, AlterNet. Posted October 30, 2006.
Amazing and appalling to hear opponents of this legislation say over and over again, "This kind of research shows no promise."
And "We should be spending our money on treatments that show more promise."
Why would we even be talking about it if it showed no promise?
Would scientists competing for limited research funds be working on stem cells if it showed no promise?
Do people like Fox think its worth their precious/dwindling time to go on the air in support of something that shows no promise?
Yet they repeat this mantra over and over, in the hopes that the ill-informed will eventually believe them.
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We were told it was for WMDs.
We were told the war would be short.
We were told Al Qaeda had training camps in Iraq.
We were told it would decrease the terrorist threat.
We were told it would stabilize Israeli-Palestinian relations.
We were told it would cost "something less than $50 billion."
We were told things would be better than they were under Saddam.
We were told we would be welcomed like liberators by the oppressed Iraqis.
We were told we would be supported by a "coalition of the willing".
We were told major combat operations were over, "mission accomplished".
We were told if we didn't support the war we were un-patriotic fools who didn't deserve to live in America.
We were told things were improving in Iraq.
We were told the insurgency was mostly non-Iraqis.
We were told Iraq would be a shining beacon of Democracy in the middle-east.
Bush. Cheney. Rumsfeld. They tell it like it ain't.
Americans will take a lot of malfeasance, but they get super-pissed when some lard-ass like Limbaugh casts aspersions on Marty McFly.
Hey, whatever it takes.
I actually have something to offer to this debate, being a biochemist by training. I don't troll for readers on other sites, but I did write a post last week that puts Missouri Amendment 2 and stem cell research into plain language. It can be found here if anyone is interested.
Thanks for the writeup. We left immediately afterwards, so we missed the meet and greet. Just finished my own write-up of the event here for anyone who is interested.
Thanks for the write-up. We left as soon as the speeches were over, so didn't see any of the "meet and greet".
Just finished writing up the event here for anyone who is interested.
Sorry. My first post went away and then, for no reason I can figure, decided to reappear.
Look, I already know that my comments are going to generate a virtual avalanche of abusive responses. None the less, I simply cannot let BlueGirlRedState's comments go unchallenged. Especially since she informs us that she is trained as a biochemist.
I followed your link to the location where you suggested that arguments for Missouri Amendment 2 were put into plain language. I was hoping that I might find an argument base upon hard science and objectivity, and was disappointed to find only the usual fare; an emotionally charged, pragmatic argument with incomplete and misleading science thrown in for effect.
Let's at least look at the objective side of your argument. What you have described here...
In SCNT, eggs are extracted and the nucleus is removed from the egg with a very tiny glass pipette. The same procedure is used to remove the nucleus of a source cell, and the nucleus is injected into the vacated (enucleated) egg cell. If we say just the right magic words in the perfect pitch and cadence, this cell will begin to replicate. At five days, we have a blastocyst of stem cells, and we can harvest those undiferentiated cells. Remember that word. It is going to be revisited a bit down the page.
... is in fact, cloning... exactly. In this process, the genetic information contained in the human source cell is being cloned. The use of the term blastocyst—to imply that this human embryo is something else—is a typical ploy in this argument. Zygote, blastocyst, embryo, fetus... these are simply terms we have designated to refer to human development in it's earliest stages. They are no different than infant, child, adolescent, adult, geriatric, etc... except that because the average person is less familiar with these terms, they contain far less emotional content.
The use of the term undifferentiated, has recently come into vogue. The argument being that because these cells have not differentiated themselves into the myriad of cells within our bodies having distinct specificity; blood, nerve, muscle, bone, etc, etc... this somehow disqualifies our recognizing and acknowledging this blastocyst, as the distinct, living, human organism that it already is. On objective analysis by any independent genetics lab, it will be determined without hesitation or reservation, that these embryonic stem cells came from a distinct, living, human.
So, start tapping away at your keyboards in a frenzied attempt to refute this statement... good luck. Just in case you can't, don't worry, you can always call me a blithering, extreme right wing, religious fanatic! Although this always causes me to laugh out loud—understanding that religion plays no role in this objective, scientific debate—you always seem to be able to rally around this battle cry just the same. I can hear the self congratulatory high fives and tickle fights already!
Democrats! Wake up! This is a human rights issue! Own it!
Dear Jonhn,
I'm not going to call you a right wing conservative nutbag but you are wrong. Regardless of what the science is, many defective fertilized eggs are destroyed every year in vitro fertilization clinics every year. These eggs could be used to fight dehabilitating ailments (parkinsons, paralysis, alzheimers) but instead you think it's okay to just throw them out. That is a pro-death argument. If you're going to come back and say well then in-vitro fertilization should be outlawed. Try telling that to a couple who biologically can't have children but wants to have them desperately. Somehow I doubt your self righteous hardy exterior has the guts to or would be that crass.
Cheers,
Randy
Randy, no one is calling for the outlawing of in-vitro fertilization. This technique has been a miracle for thousands of couples trying to conceive. However, this procedure needs to be conducted in a more ethical manner with less consideration for cost efficiencies and more consideration for the fact that these embryos—that are so cavalierly being created in bulk—are distinct, living, humans. Can this procedure be performed so that only the number of embryos intended for actual use, are created?
If our country followed your notion that science and objectivity don't matter and that they should take a back seat to personal wants and pure pragmatism, we'd still have slavery in this country.
By the way Randy, you and many others have a very unattractive tendency to start labeling people when logic no longer supports your rationale. If you want to label me as self righteous, if you feel that doing so gives you some sort of political sway with your buddies, have at it.
In the mean time, grab an eighth grade biology text and a copy of our Constitution's Bill of Rights and try to get your head wrapped around the real issue that we're talking about here; a person's fundamental right to their life as guaranteed in the 14th amendment.
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