A waste of money?

Earlier in the week -
The private members Bill on embryonic stem cell research has passed the Senate.

Liberal Senator and former Health Minister, Kay Patterson's Bill would implement the recomendations of the Lockhart review into stem cell research, which said that a new process of embryonic cloning should be allowed.
This morning I heard the following news report out of the UK and have been hearing about it since then, initially I thought it would be a win for the Stem Cell supporters.
Blind mice have had their sight restored by a stem cell research breakthrough in the United Kingdom. British scientists transplanted stem cells at a key stage of development into damaged retinas.

The next step is to figure out how and why it works - and whether the transplanted cells work in the longer term.
However after looking around on the internet, I found this, I wonder if the embryonic stem cell research supporters are just clutching at straws, hoping no one takes the trouble to look up the facts.
British and American scientists have restored vision in blind mice by transplanting light-sensitive cells into their eyes in a breakthrough that could lead to new treatments of human eye diseases.

The mice suffered from eye damage called photoreceptor loss which occurs in macular degeneration, the leading cause of sight loss in the elderly, and other eye disorders.

But instead of using stem cells, which could form into any cell type, the scientists transplanted cells that had reached a later stage of development toward becoming photoreceptor cells.
I didn’t know much about stem cell research, until I read Ann Coulters Godless, from what she says, Adult and Embryonic stem cell research has been around since the 50s, but only adult stem cells have produced any results, currently used to treat more than 80 diseases.

While embryonic stem cells have only had limited success in rodents. Coulter puts it another way, “It was as if, thirty years after the invention of electricity, they were still trying to get someone to fund their research on candles.”

If both the stem cells research has been around for 50 years, why do embryonic stem cells have nothing to show for, has it simply been banned world wide? What about the private sector, one would assume they would be happy to fund promising research if it could produce a cure for even one of the many diseases afflicting mankind.

What about Europe, have they had any success with embryonic stem cells? Anyone else in the world cured any disease using embryonic stem cells, are we really being stupid and old-fashioned.

Or are we just using the tax payers money to fund something in Australia that hasn’t worked anywhere else so leftists can feel good?

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