Knights of Columbus Applauds Presidential Veto of Stem-Cell Bill

7/19/2006

Supreme Knight Carl A. Anderson thanked President Bush for vetoing H.R. 810, the so-called “Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act,” which would have, for the very first time, provided federal funds for research in which human embryos are destroyed.

“This stem-cell bill is eminently worthy of President Bush’s first veto,” Anderson said. “It would provide federal funding for the very first time for research involving the deliberate destruction of living human embryos, a practice that is terribly wrong. It is profoundly immoral to create human life in order to destroy it, whatever the theoretical benefit might be. Actual benefits from stem-cell research have thus far come entirely from ethical research on adult stem cells, which has produced dozens of successful therapies for a variety of diseases.

“Every human life, no matter how small, should be protected in law. Unfortunately, in America the destruction of unborn human life is perfectly legal, whether in a laboratory or in an abortion clinic,” Anderson continued. “This bill would add insult to injury by forcing the taxpayers to pay for the destruction, and that is unconscionable.”

Anderson concluded, “President Bush has done the right thing in vetoing this measure, and it appears that his veto will not be overridden. The Knights of Columbus, one of the largest pro-life organizations in the world, appreciates the President’s action, and calls upon members of Congress to focus on stem-cell research that does not violate basic human dignity.”