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MATTERS OF LIFE AND DEATH Confirmed: Skin cream contains fetal proteins Company's anti-aging products built on cells harvested from aborted baby Posted: October 28, 2009 10:24 pm Eastern By Drew Zahn
A pro-life organization is blasting a Switzerland-based cosmetics manufacturer whose website openly admits some of its products were developed from the tissues of an aborted baby. Children of God for Life is a non-profit organization focused on the bioethics of embryonic tissue use in medicine and manufacturing. One of its current campaigns includes petitioning pharmaceutical companies to produce safe, effective alternatives to vaccines derived or cultivated from aborted fetal tissue. Deliver the pro-life message with a "Former embryo on board" magnetized bumper sticker But the organization's attention has now turned Neocutis, a company with offices in San Francisco which has developed a line of anti-aging products that include an ingredient the company has trademarked as Processed Skin Cell Protein, or PSP, developed from skin cells harvested from an abortion. "It is absolutely deplorable that Neocutis would resort to exploiting the remains of a deliberately slaughtered baby for nothing other than pure vanity and financial gain," said Debi Vinnedge, executive director of Children of God for Life, in a statement. "There is simply no moral justification for this." The website for Neocutis, which is privately held with estimated annual sales of in excess of $2 million, explains that its research began years ago, when scientists discovered fetal skin's unusual ability to heal without scarring. Scientists at the University Hospital of Lausanne, Switzerland, then created a process to extract proteins from fetal cells in the attempt to obtain an optimal, naturally balanced mixture of nutrients. The scientists then infused those nutrients into a line of cosmeceutical anti-aging products: Neocutis skin cream, Journée day cream, Lumière eye cream and Bio-Gel bio-restorative hydrogel – products Vinnedge is advising women to throw in the garbage before contacting Neocutis to voice their concerns. "There is absolutely no reason to use aborted babies for such selfish motives," Vinnedge said. "It is anti-life, anti-woman and counter-productive, as Neocutis is about to find out!" (Story continues below) Children of God for Life boasts that it has been a watchdog on pharmaceutical companies using aborted fetal cell lines in medical products and has received thousands of inquiries from the public on the use of aborted fetal material in cosmetics. But this is the first time, the organization says, that any company was bold enough to put the information right on its own website and in product literature. In fact, the Neocutis website openly explains the history of its PSP ingredient: "A small biopsy of fetal skin was donated following a one-time medical termination," the website states, "and a dedicated cell bank was established for developing new skin treatments. Originally established for wound healing and burn treatments, today this same cell bank also provides a lasting supply of cells for producing Neocutis' proprietary skin care ingredient Processed Skin Cell Proteins." The company adds, "No additional fetal biopsies will ever be required." But Children of God for Life finds little consolation in the company's statement. "You note in your literature that 'no further fetal biopsies will be needed,' as though the life of the one child you have exploited has no value," wrote the organization in a letter to Neocutis' CEO. "It is deplorable that you would attempt to mollify the public and whitewash your badly tarnished image so thoughtlessly." Vinnedge also told WND that companies aren't required to disclose their research history to the public, so there may be facts conveniently omitted from the Neocutis story. "What we don't know is how many other fetuses were involved before they perfected that one cell line," she surmised. "There's a possibility there were more." WND contacted Neocutis repeatedly for comment, but phone messages were not returned. A Businessweek web report says the company was founded in 2003 and its directors were identified as Frederic-Edouard Koehn, Patrick Hohlfeld, Diego Braguglia and Jennifer Pearson. Children of God for Life, however, is actively calling for a boycott of all Neocutis products, beginning a campaign to contact the company's investors and even offering free publicity to companies that will certify in writing their products are free from ingredients derived from aborted babies. "We know there are companies using moral sources for collagen and skin proteins," Vinnedge said. "We intend to publicly promote these other cosmetic companies competing with Neocutis that are willing to step forward and contact us."
Related offers: Get the magnetized bumper sticker with the pro-life message: "Former embryo on board" Open your eyes to the ugliness inside the abortion industry with "Lime 5: Exploited by Choice" ENDING ABORTION: How the pro-life side will win the war SUPREME FRAUD: Unmasking Roe v. Wade, America's most outrageous judicial decision Previous stories: Court: Boy can wear 'insulting' pro-life shirt Principal to boy: Strip off 'insulting' pro-life shirt Tearjerker: 5 alive after woman makes 1 brave choice Protests against abortion stir up Chicago pols Webcast targets abortion-funding mandate Congress seeks to force taxpayer funding for D.C. abortions Surgeon general pick: Train new doctors on abortions Obama science czar called for forced abortions Ginsburg: I thought Roe was to rid undesirables Prosecutor wants assault reporting law changed Video reveals Planned Parenthood's advice to lie County yanks future funding from abortionists Abortionists fighting to keep taxpayer money Planned Parenthood to patient: Lie to judge Video: Statutory rape concealed Prosecutors get Planned Parenthood video Hiding teen 'rapes' continues at Planned Parenthood 47 minutes of abortion sting video released Planned Parenthood pressured to give answers Abortionists: Here's how to evade reporting law Planned Parenthood counsels 'teen' to hide felony YouTube censors criticism of Planned Parenthood Planned Parenthood promotes casual sex to kids on website Candidates warned against Planned Parenthood money Abortionists defend agreeing to target blacks Black leaders: De-fund 'racist' Planned Parenthood Black pastors protest Planned Parenthood 'racism' Planned Parenthood: Wanting fewer blacks 'understandable' Fox News to feature teen who exposed Planned Parenthood 'Pedophile protection racket' still going strong Planned Parenthood access to public purse in jeopardy UCLA lobbies student for abortion 'Roe' pleads for Kansans to charge Tiller Drew Zahn is a news editor for WorldNetDaily.
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