Actually I wasn't aware that this was a stem cell product.
But I've got feeling that just being a Trump supporter would be enough to raise your ire.
I did a quick search to check your claim. It looks like they did a clinical test that involved kidney cells from an aborted baby. So, not based on embrionic stem cells, as you claim, though the testing people did use aborted tissue.
I wonder how much that happens concerning medical treatments or other products of which we have no idea?
Much love!
I would recommend whenever we encounter those with TDS , those who hate Trump, when Christians are not to hate anyone, we should never take their words against Trump at face value. We should test even those spirits. In this case with regard to the quote you responded to, doing so allows us to find out the statement is false.
Not only is it false but it is an original source slander against our president that has its birth place in of all places Twitter.
The fetal stem cell claims are false. Always, always, check any claims against Trump. Doing so typically affords the same result time and again, they're false. Below is a fact check source that is rather lengthy in the explanation as to why this claim is false. However, I think if we are able to read a short slander against President Donald Trump we owe it to ourselves and our brother in Christ to read the truth that refutes the slander.
Let it stop here. It is a sin to bear false witness against a brother in Christ.
Fact check: Trump's antibody therapy not made from fetal stem cells but fetal-derived cells used during testing
Miriam Fauzia, USA TODAY Published 1:47 p.m. ET Oct. 8, 2020 | Updated 1:10 p.m. ET Oct. 9, 2020
We rate this claim FALSE because it is not supported by our research. The experimental antibody therapy Trump received was not directly made from fetal or embryonic stem cells, rather antibodies obtained from SARS-CoV-2 human survivors and immunized mice engineered with a human immune system. Regeneron's official statement released in April, cited on Twitter as a basis for the claim, is a general position on stem cell research and is unrelated to how the antibody therapy is actually made. However, an embryonic-derived cell line, albeit not a stem cell, does appear to have been involved at least in the early stages of Regeneron's testing process, according to supplementary material published in June. The HEK293T cells used are an immortalized cell line derived from embryonic kidney cells but are not stem cells themselves.