Jophiel wrote:
It's wildly inaccurate, stating that "The live embryos would be destroyed in their first week of development to obtain these cells." This reflect either a tremendous willingness to lie in your poll in order to get the answers you want or else a tremendous ignorance regarding IVF.
Huh? Are you arguing that had they stated that the cells could be harvested up to 6 weeks after the embryo first formed that you'd get lower numbers? Really? Cause I'd assume that limiting the time to the first week of embryonic development would tend to make people more ok with stem cell harvesting, not less...
Quote:
The process of fertilizing the eggs, implanting them in the mother, waiting to see if they take, and then determining what to do with the extras (provided they're not needed because the first ones didn't take) is longer than a week process.
They're talking about how long after the cluster of cells ceases to be a blastocyst and becomes an embryo Joph. It was pretty obvious from the question. I'm not sure of the exact techniques and timeline involved, but clearly if you're harvesting embryonic stem cells and the embryonic phase lasts about 6 weeks in humans, then you have about 6 weeks to do the harvesting. I'm not sure if all harvesting is actually done in the first week or not, but I don't see how the question at all biases the results towards opposition of the harvesting.
Not like omitting key details like whether we're supporting funding or just research and whether we think research in the entire field of stem cells is more important than protecting embryos. You know. Like the questions in the Pew survey...
The point is that when people are told exactly what is going on, they are less likely to support funding for embryonic stem cell research. Are you arguing that stem cells *aren't* harvested in the first week of embryonic development? Or that if you harvest them later, this will make people more likely to accept it? What exact information in that question was inaccurate?