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Wired Magazine, May 25, 2005
Gunning for Stem-Cell
Naysayers
by Kristen Philipkoski
A pioneer of grass-roots internet movements is
mobilizing a campaign to oust any legislator
who opposes embryonic stem-cell research.
John Hlinko, the brains behind DraftWesleyClark.com,
one of the most successful online grass-roots
political movements so far, is creating a political
action committee to raise funds and galvanize
support for embryonic stem-cell research. Hlinko's
new crusade is in response to President Bush's
threat to veto legislation supporting embryonic
stem-cell research
On Tuesday, the House of Representatives voted
238-194 to fund embryonic stem-cell research
using government money, and a similar bill
looks likely to pass in the senate. But Bush
promised that if the bill lands on his desk,
he will kill it.
That got Hlinko's goat. Hlinko, vice president
of marketing at PR firm Grassroots Enterprise
in Washington, D.C., was already laying the
groundwork for a pro-embryonic-stem-cell research
PAC, but news of Bush's veto threat accelerated
his efforts.
"If anyone really cares about this issue
... now is the time to put the 'ass' in 'grass
roots' and get off their asses and do something,"
Hlinko said. "We want to very strategically
do whatever is necessary to remove from office
those extremists who are frankly blocking stem-cell
research. Anyone putting theoretical possible
life ahead of actual life is someone who should
not be in office."
Hlinko plans to use many of the same tactics
that helped him raise nearly $2 million in
pledges nearly $2 million in pledges for Gen.
Wesley Clark's 2004 presidential campaign.
Hlinko said he recruited 50,000 volunteers and
attracted more web traffic than any presidential
campaign other than the one for Howard Dean.
He was interviewed by major media outlets,
including CNN's Crossfire and The New York
Times, and increased Clark's poll rating from
1 percent when the campaign began to 22 percent
when Clark announced his candidacy.
"This effort will make very heavy use of
the internet to go after these candidates,"
Hlinko said. "We will be extremely aggressive,
extremely efficient and extremely creative."
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