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Francis Collins

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Collins is also an advocate for therapeutic cloning without the use of embryonic stem cells. In 2020, he was awarded the [[Templeton Prize]].
Collins is on record stating he does not definitively believe, as most pro-lifers do, that life begins at conception, and his tenure at NIH has been marked by extreme [[Pro-abortion|anti-life]], pro-LGBT policies. Other than his proclamations that he is, himself, a believer, the [[NIH]] director espouses nearly no public positions that would mark him out as any different from any extreme [[Left]]-wing [[bureaucrat]]. He has not only defended<ref>https://www.science.org/content/article/nih-chief-defends-use-human-fetal-tissue-opponents-decry-it-congress</ref> experimentation on fetuses obtained by abortion, he has also directed record-level<ref>https://www.firstthings.com/web-exclusives/2021/10/the-cautionary-tale-of-francis-collins</ref> spending toward it. Among the priorities the NIH has funded<ref>https://www.ncregister.com/blog/how-aborted-children-are-used</ref> under Collins — a [[University of Pittsburgh]] experiment that involved grafting infant scalps onto lab rats, as well as projects that relied on the harvested organs of [[aborted]], full-term babies. Some doctors have even charged Collins with giving money to research that required extracting kidneys, ureters, and bladders from living infants. <ref>https://www.dailywire.com/news/how-the-federal-government-used-evangelical-leaders-to-spread-covid-propaganda-to-churches </ref><ref>https://illinoisfamily.org/religious/how-the-federal-government-used-evangelical-leaders-to-spread-covid-propaganda-to-churches/</ref>
== See Also ==
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