Cloning is defined as a process of asexual reproduction of a group of identical-derived cells from a single ancestor (University Library, 2006). "For several reasons, including cloning risk, cloning should be banned globally, after cloning, cloning reduces genetic differences and is ultimately not ethical. Almost all clones are prenatal First death: Australia's first cloned sheep looked healthy and healthy on the day of death and could not find a reason during necropsy (Castro, 2005) "There are many There is a risk of you, you rarely find the cause of death.
However, concern about whether the clones are medically safe is a compelling reason to ban human cloning. Scientists cloned sheep, cows, goats, and mice, but the success rate was very low, and many clones died shortly after birth. No one has cloned a primate. Therefore it is clear that creating a human clone is accompanied by great risk. This book is provided by moralist Dr. GLENN MCGEE in a more comprehensive title. Dr. McGee explores the impact that these innovations have on the culture as a whole far beyond the impact of genetic and reproductive assist technologies (now and in the future) on individual parents and children. The first edition of the first edition of "Perfect Baby" had to prove the explosive growth of acquiring new information within three years from the first edition. The sheep clone Dolly was released one week after the first edition and resolved in the new version.
H. R. 2505 specifically prohibits "asexual reproduction" achieved through "somatic cell nuclear transfer" technology, which is used to produce dolly. This method can be used for scientific and medically useful cloning such as cloning of DNA fragments (molecular cloning), replication of tissues or cells in culture (cell cloning), or entire organisms of non-human animals or embryos I do not forbid the technique. This bill also prohibits laboratory customs such as parthenogenesis and "pairing".
Recently, a series of new laws banning or managing cloning has emerged all over the world. In some countries, cloning of animals is permitted, but human cloning is not permitted. Even though it may save people from many debilitating diseases, some advocacy groups are trying to ban therapeutic cloning. Since the birth of Dorie three years ago, additional sheep, cows, goats, pigs, and mice have been cloned. The desire to produce domestic animals with outstanding and useful characteristics has long been known. One of the reasons cloning is attractive is that it reduces the effort and time necessary for farmers to do for years, choosing and spreading the best cows. However, the success of this technique is not easy (efficiency is less than 2%) and it is almost impossible to achieve in other species such as chickens, monkeys and dogs.