Human Cloning1
"And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrilsthe breath of life; and man became a livingsoul . . . and He took one of his ribs, and closed up the flesh instead thereof; and the rib, which the Lord God had taken from man, made He a woman and brought her unto man."Human cloning is becoming one of the most controversial topics of our time. With recent technological breakthroughs, whole new fields are opening with amazing possibilities. Despite the great advantages that cloning can offer humanity, there are just as many negative aspects of the technology, which have given way to large anti-cloning groups who are gaining ground as to the future of this awesome power. In truth, cloning could very well be the best, or worst thing ever to happen to mankind. The possibilities of human cloning are vast indeed, but research in the area has been dramatically restricted in the United States and in some other countries. Pro-life groups that oppose free access to abortion have considerable political power, and were able to have all human embryo research banned by the Reagan and Bush administrations in most of the 1980's and the 1990's (religoustolerance). Although the b
Germany claims that the protocol would be weaker than the anti-research laws they already have, while Britain strongly supports their decision to enforce freedom. The egg will then grow into a genetic copy of the donor organism. "Dolly", a seven month-old sheep, was displayed to the media; she was the first large cloned animal using DNA from another adult. On December 14 1998, researchers at the infertility clinic at Kyeonghee University in Korea announced that they had successfully cloned a human. an was lifted during the first days of Bill Clinton's presidency, in 1997 he sent a bill to congress marked "immediate consideration and prompt enactment" stating that it would be illegal to create a human clone whether in private or public laboratories. Often, extra zygotes are produced that are either discarded or frozen for possible future use. Many of these pairs were able to develop to the 32-cell stage, but no further. Along with the US ban, nineteen European countries including Denmark, Estonia, Finland, France, Greece, Iceland, Italy, Latvia, Luxembourg, Moldova, Sweden, Macedonia, and Turkey, signed a protocol that would commit their countries to ban by law any intervention seeking to create human beings genetically identical to another human being, whether living or dead. "Clinton Act Draws Line At Human Cloning". Posted January 12, 1998http://www. It is likely this has already been successfully used on human embryos in secret.
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