The Perfect Gift: a Clone of Yourself? 150
Tom Bailey writes "It appears that a UFO cult is creating a company for cloning people. It costs only $200,000. They believe that humans are clones of aliens. You can check it out at www.clonaid.com. You have to wonder if these guys are really serious. I'm going to ask my parents to get me a clone for my birthday." Very strange. Is this science, humor or pure wackiness?
Re:Don't Laugh, they are for real (Score:1)
Re:The creepiest part to me (Score:1)
I can't believe how ignorant this statement is. Why do you think that everyone has to think exactly like you? I see nothing wrong with cloning whatsoever, its the next step in our evolutionary process.
Identical twins (Score:1)
Re:clones (Score:1)
Let's be tolerant of others, shall we children? That means Christians too.
But Clones are People! (Score:1)
Have you ever met a twin who was an android? Did the two twins get double the work done in half the time? Did you ever meet a twin who was not an individual? Would you consider harvesting organs from your twin?
Cloning is not a bad idea, other than the fact it might make the human gene pool very shallow, but all these "potential applications" of the "technology" are stupid.
Dangerous sect (Score:1)
Well, this is just to say, do not take their site as scientific evidence. We might be able to perform human cloning (or cloning of damaged organs) sometime, but I doubt it'll come from them.
In the meantime, we can play gods by hacking code and controlling what it does
Re:Nice web design.. (Score:1)
The corresponding website is hardly religious material, though...
Oh, the clonaid.com whois record seems to check out, too.
Re:well, clones, eh? (Score:1)
An open field? (Score:1)
It is true.. but not quite yet. (Score:1)
People will be cloned, and clones will be cloned, and it will be a lucrative business. Not only that, but genetic information in general will become quite the commodity. After all, wouldn't you want a daughter with Nat Portman eyes and Love Hewwit chest? Well, you may not, but a helacious number of humans in that time did. And there were plenty of companies eager to make a buck and do it.
Well, not only is code itself hot digits, but tools to modify and view genes and genetic material in general are also quite hot. Thankfully, a good number of these are open source, so the companies are forced to make their bucks elsewhere.. (hardware and services). Genetic coderz make big bucks, and the skills are even more rare than computer coderz today. (keep that in mind when your children start looking at majors in college)
So, get your genome sequences today, it may be worth a pretty penny tomorrow..
Re:Cloning is NOT THE ANSWER to your troubles! :-) (Score:1)
Re:Finally - Gold Cross is close at hand (Score:1)
Re:Illegal? (Score:1)
--
Index of Alternative Operating Systems
Re:And now, it's time for a musical intermission. (Score:1)
Re:Don't Laugh, they are for real (Score:1)
i'd hate my clone (Score:1)
Re:Can I get a discount? (Score:1)
Look Exactly like you - NO! (Score:1)
Dolly was NOT a clone! 3 reasons (Score:1)
1 They used another sheeps egg and implanted nuclear material into that egg. The host egg has it's own mitochondrial DNA and NOT Dollys'. There is a fair amount a variability in mitochondrial DNA which can and will lead to functional differences of the cells.
2 They used cells from Dolly that were already "aged" in her body. Cells have spacer sections (end caps is probably a better representative) on the ends of each chromosome called TELOMERES. They are long repetative segments that shorten with every subsequent division of the cell. They probably serve as some time keeper to prevent the cells from living too long and mutating to much (i.e. cancer prevention). Dolly is aging prematurely probably as a result of this.
3 - The implanted cell that they used has had it's own mutational events different from all of the rest of the cells in the body. An analogy would be to look at your skinn. Superficially it looks the same everywhere on your body, but up close you can see that it's different everywhere. Imagine your elbow skin on your face - looks different eh?
Re:well, clones, eh? (Score:1)
In undergrad a few years ago at University of Rochester Ian Wilmot (the Dolly guy) spoke and talked about some of the procedural stuff, which wasn't all that inovative. But he talked a lot about social impact and potential applications. Some of the examples he used: if a family has a child and he is killed in a car accident, cloning him from stored cells is not going to give you back the same child, or anything close to it. However, for a couple who are unable to concieve a child, this may be an applicable in vitro fertilization technique.
Mike
you want bad? (Score:1)
Its downright shocking... complete with crappy midi music (:P
[ c h a d o k e r e ] [dhs.org]
raeilan's on sex.. (Score:1)
Anyway, this religion doesn't seem to be based on anything less rational then Christianity, and it looks a lot less dangerous.(based on the philosophy on there website). I'm an atheist, but I don't see why you could condemn these people and not Christianity...
[ c h a d o k e r e ] [dhs.org]
Re:Raelians and clones-crazy? (Score:1)
Yes.
Some things are more reasonable then others. Some things are very, very close to 100% reasonable (evolution, that the holocaust happened). And others are very close to 0% (creationism, that the holocaust didn't happen). And other things are in the middle somewhere. (ambiogenisys? did Clinton knowing sell nuke secrets to china?)
Science is about getting as close to 100% as you can. Once something is close enough, its 'true' and 'proved' for all intents and purposes.
[ c h a d o k e r e ] [dhs.org]
Sex with a clone of yourself... (Score:1)
But what would happen if you had children with your clone? Wouldn't the kids also be clones (all the same DNA as you). I suppose that recessive traits might show up, but you could remove all non-expressed genotypes from your mate when you crate her. You wouldn't have a true genetic clone then, but you won't if you switch X and Y, and you'll still have a phenotypic clone, witch is really what most people are interested in
[ c h a d o k e r e ] [dhs.org]
It's serious (Score:1)
Re:well, clones, eh? (Score:1)
Re:clones (Score:1)
Why must you say something so harsh? These sound like the words reserved for an enemy.
Do you believe that Jesus is the son of God? If not, why would you hold such contempt for what you believe to be just a man?
In light of your horrible comment, you might want to check this link [chick.com] before the day is out.
Neurotic
Re:well, clones, eh? (Score:1)
I thought that as well, but there's the "transfer memory and personality in this person" bit. Basically, what they're saying is that they're looking for technology more than just producing a genetic identical, but a real 'clone' in the Multiplicity sense of the work.
However, I think the whole thing is either a hoax or a scam.
Re:Nice web design.. (Score:1)
Disgusting (Score:1)
The really disgusting thing, though, is that they're part of the reason that genetics and cloning scares me. They charge outragious prices (rounghly £120,000 sterling, around eight times my yearly salery) which serve to not only widen the gap between the classes, the rich and the poor, but to create split humankind into almost two different species - those that can afford modifications, and the rest of us that cannot.
Bloody freaks, hope UFO's come and shoot the hell out of them !
Re:Raelians and clones-crazy? (Score:1)
First of all, I do believe in God, but I am by no means a religious bigot... I just like a good argument
Anyway, you go on about not believing everything you read, which is basically what the bible is about. Fair enough, science knows all answers, doesn't it ?
Hmm, could you meet me in person and prove to me that we can go to the moon with our space rockets ? I've never been there, so how do I know that we can.
Also, prove to me the Earth is round... the laws of gravity would cause the appearance of a curved Earth when you look to the horizon, but how do I know any different.
This is all very 1984-ish but until you can actually *prove* one way or the other, please don't try to provoke pointless arguments.
Oh, just one last little bitching... prove to me that any scientific theory is true for *all* occurences... that's proove as opposed to merely suggesting that it's likely.
Re:Raelians and clones-crazy? (Score:1)
Anyway, you may cite the seven (or six, thing about it) day creation theory, but don't forget that the Cathlic Church has now declared the big bang theory as being ok with them.
As for the trusting scientists and media... you can't do that if you're going to throw away the bible under scientific findings. Prove to me that carbon-dating is a perfectly-proven method. As you said, you can't. Fact. You can proove mathmatics but not science.
Anyway, these Raelian guys are *reall* screwed up, and it's not often you'll hear an Englishman say "screwed"
Re:Nice web design.. (Score:1)
Nice web design.. (Score:1)
//Phizzy
But can he be 1/8th my size? (Score:1)
Dear my! What are those things coming out of her nose?
Spaceballs!
Re:Illegal? (Score:1)
Personally i think that it would be extremly weird to have a kid that looked "exactly" like me.
Re:From Tabloid to Horror.... (Score:1)
Or clones of Al Gore!! No, wait, we already have enough wooden Indians.
My own Mini-me (Score:1)
Sorry, I only *just* saw Austin Powers 2..
Read the article before posting! (Score:1)
...
"The Bahamas-based Company plans to build a laboratory in a country where human cloning is not illegal and will offer its services to wealthy parents worldwide"
...
Who cares if it's illegal in the yankee police-state, when the rich can route around the law?
Re:Don't Laugh, they are for real (Score:1)
People are not gifts! (Score:1)
Why is it that when you use the word "clone" everyone loses their minds?
-Peter
Re:Clones (Score:1)
So is it available or not? (Score:1)
CLONAID purports to offer a nice variety of cloning services, including
However, they then go on to state,
So they're selling services that they admit they can't do. Someone should call the Better Business Bureau. (Or Blade Runner, maybe.)
Re:Clown Aid (Score:1)
Advantages of cloning (Score:1)
If we could clone people and do testing on them, it would be very beneficial to medial research... all of the genetic variance would be gone, so you could easily find the difference in medicines -- amongst other things. Psychologists would love it too.
OF course, looking at our current laws this wouldn't quite work. But in theory those are the benefits.
Re:Sex with a clone of yourself... (Score:1)
I wouldn't mind a clone to help me finish off my game of Blast Corps though.
(having nothing to do with opposite sex clones or the boinking thereof)
They're entitled to their beliefs... (Score:1)
So they believe something extreme. I challenge someone to prove we aren't clone's of aliens. Or to prove that we are. It's all a matter of belief :)
Illegal? (Score:1)
Re:Cloning is NOT THE ANSWER to your troubles! :-) (Score:1)
Eraser_
Re:Shrink me! (Score:1)
A they have clonapet!... Shrink my dog
And shrink the great and wonderful blue pen [crosswinds.net] !
Re:well, clones, eh? (Score:1)
Mixing the fictional memory transfer with the (partially) factual cloning method doesn't do alot to convince me. It makes the whole thing seem convoluted and idealistic.
So, in closing, I think the whole thing is either a hoax or a scam.
Re:well, clones, eh? (Score:1)
Both of the monkeys survived, however they were also both paralyzed from the neck down.
I can say that someday in the future this could be done with humans, and perhaps cloned bodies.
In order for this to be ethically viable, I think that a clone would have to be grown that only has a brain stem. Removing the brain of a human with a forebrain (the thinking part) would probably be murder, and the process would be illegal.
Raelians and clones-crazy? (Score:1)
Who or what created your God? Did He just appear out of nowhere? Then why couldn't the human race have appeared out of nowhere? It makes much more sense to believe that life on earth was created by another society than from one mysterious omnipotent being.
Espcially when you consider we are nearing the same achievment.
Between genetics and neural networks, we will (relatively) soon be creating our own species. The AI ones will doubtlessly live in a computer. Every played Creatures? What makes something alive?
And as for the genetics, what better way to test the theories of evolution than to plant cells and organisms on another planet, then wait(for a REALLY long time..) to see if they evolve into intelligent beings.
I find it funny to read the hippocritical posts calling the Raelians stupid, coming from people who actually believe the apothrycal Bible and in a single God. Despite a multitude of evidence that the Bible is blatantly fallacious. Everything on earth was created in seven days, including humans? Even though the earth has been around for billions of years before humans appeared?
Riiiiighhtt..
I hold no religious beliefs. There is no evidence yet to prove where we came from. So far Darwinism is the most reasonable theory, there is no denying that evolution happens. The question is how did the first cells appear, and could evolution really do *this much*, over any period of time?
Also: the only reason human cloning should be illegal, is because it has been tested so little with animals. For instance the question: will the clone start out with a shortened lifespan? This idea is that cells have a sort of lifespan clock. The cloned organism would start out with its lifespan reduced by however long its clone-parent had been alive before being cloned. Once cloning is perfected, there is no reason to prevent any stupid/crazy millionaires from cloning themselves. Its their own fault if they're too stupid, like many people on this board, to realize a clone will only look the same. The brain will grow, from a baby, into an entirely different person. Might as well just have sex instead of cloning!
Re:Raelians and clones-crazy? (Score:1)
>>Hmm, could you meet me in person and prove to me that we can go to the moon with our space rockets?
>>I've never been there, so how do I know that we can.
I have a certain amount of faith in the media/government/humanity as a whole. I don't think the whole space thing could feasibly be a conspiracy, although it is technically possible.
>>Also, prove to me the Earth is round... the laws of gravity would cause the appearance of a curved
>>Earth when you look to the horizon, but how do I know any different.
If you follow the non-conspiracy side of the above belief, then we actually have proof the earth is round, pictures taken from satellites. The real answer is to the next question though..
>>prove to me that any scientific theory is true for *all* occurences
Totally impossible. Any scientist could (I hope) tell you that. Science is just deciding on the explanation that works best. Until something is disproved, you just have to go by what makes the most sense.
So, for instance, the Bible has been disproved by scientific evidence such as carbon dating and fossils, which prove that the earth has been around more than 6 days(or whatever) longer than humans.
The society-from-society idea is more likely, seeing how our society is on a direct path to producing its own societies. Put that in reverse, and whats to say we didn't come from another society just like ours? What proof is there that we aren't three dimensional playthings on the screen of a four dimensional being's video game? Scary thought, eh?
Like I said (i think) in my original statement, the Raelians are pretty clearly wacko, as they didn't just hypothesize about possibilities, but seem to claim precise knowledge of the origin of human's. I was scared off their site before I could find where they claim to have found this knowledge. Probably the same place the bible came from - some wacko's head.
In defense of the bible though -- it is quite useful as a moral and hygenic guide, whether or not you realize it's all apophryical.
Oh come on (Score:1)
Furthermore, that really is the worst website design I've ever seen, and I've seen some pretty bad website design (who hasn't). -myopic prowls
Twins are the same person? (Score:1)
The real reason people want clones - 2nd chance. (Score:1)
The real appeal is everyone's hidden suspicion that "I could have really been somebody if
Here's the kicker - they could be right in some respects. The intellectual and emotional environment matters. A child raised with great attention to fulfilling potential may fair better than one raised, well, by self-absorbed yuppies or by 50's era conservative patriarchs who are secretly jealous of their child's opportunities.
More likely, however, would be a child constantly condemned by the overexpectations of its parent/twin who's attempts to live vicariously through the clone would stunt its ability to mature.
From Tabloid to Horror.... (Score:1)
Spare Parts (Score:1)
Can they really do it? (Score:1)
(1) Morality. Even if the company feels absolutely justified in doing what they apparently plan to, many people, while whimsically wishing for a perfect clone of themselves, could well still <I>feel</I> it wrong to use the company's services. People who think the company's actions morally wrong might (read: will) create some sort of protest. And the protest will likely be <I>big</I>.
(2) Legislation-- existing and future. Although cloning might be legal in some other country, that does not mean the United States will allow it even so. Maybe the company could lawfully carry out their activities in some other country, but (new?) US laws might just render it impossible for them to service US citizens.
(3) Technology. Ironically so, but yes, technology might be a factor. I might be mistaken, but as far as I know, though it is possible to clone just about anything, the cloned being will not live long because of the 'genetic age' of its cells. Or something like that.
There are probably even more reasons why the company might not be able to carry out its plans. Frankly, they sound wacky to me, and I'm not sure just how many folks would buy the company's pitch. I wouldn't.
Who needs cloning (Score:1)
- - - -
Re:Don't Laugh, they are for real (Score:1)
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Where is the cult to transfer my sentience? (Score:1)
Re:Don't Laugh, they are for real-- THIS IS A CULT (Score:2)
One of their fundamental beliefs is that we are all descendants aliens, which are/is "God".
The word elohim in hebrew means "the heavens", which they claim is misrepresented and really means "the things in the heavens", and for Rael I guess that means little green men.
BTW, these people are a real nuisance in the downtown core of Montreal, getting in the way and distributing their books (propaganda). So far, they doing better than Hare Krishna's and those cult of the Solar temple dudes.
They have a great marketing/propaganda engine.
I think they believe in the free sex thing (Read: orgies), but I cannot confirm this. Check out their website (www.rael.org) for a good chuckle.
Also, the only reason they would want $200k is to finance Rael's expensive taste for mansions for his orgies.
Do you REALLY think a person is going to be cloned succesfully in the next 5 years? Think about it.
Hopefully next time this won't be posted on
Duh. (Score:2)
I mean, he doesn't live here on Earth does he?
Re:well, clones, eh? (Score:2)
<i>... what rights does a clone have? Are they still part of the human race?</i>
A individual cloned from an original is the same genetically as the original and therefore of the same species. What a stupid question!
<i>How exactly is their relationship to the original described (different relationship, different rights: ex: married, sibling, no affiliation)?</i>
A individual cloned from an original is the same genetically as the original and therefore they are identical twins in everyday parlance.
<i>Besides, I thought some high council on human rights met and discussed this issue (of human cloning) when Dolly was created and deemed that cloning humans was illegal.</i>
This is to be performed in one of those countries which doesn't subscribe to such agreements. There are plenty of such places, I think St. Kitts in the Caribbean is one of them.
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:well, clones, eh? (Score:2)
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
Re:So what? (Score:2)
Consciousness is not what it thinks it is
Thought exists only as an abstraction
A clone of your husband? (Score:2)
Jesus Christ! Can I please not imagine that? That's about the freakiest thing you could possibly do with a clone(almost). Think of all the psychological issues both the mother and child would have, not to mention...ew! ewwww! What a messed up concept.
-lx
And now, it's time for a musical intermission. (Score:2)
Oh, give me a clone,
a clone of my own,
with the Y chromosome changed to X.
And when it's full grown,
my very own clone,
will be thinking of nothing but sex.
Chorus:
Clone, clone of my own,
with the Y chromosome changed to X,
and when it's full grown,
my very own clone,
will be thinking of nothing but sex.
--
Dolly *was* a clone! But he's right... (Score:2)
1. In terms of being a genetic match, the changes in mitochondrial DNA are a very small fraction of her total genome. I don't know about sheep mtDNA, but the entire human mitochondrial genome is only about 16.5kb (Tiny -- you could print the entire thing out on about 5 pages, single sided), and the number of polymorphisms in the mtDNA is probably only a handful of nucleotides, so she's probably something like 99.99999% a clone.
Spineboy is right, though -- there *could* be some very important functional differences in that little bit. You could solve that problem by using egg cells from Dolly's "mother" to clone her.
2. Dolly's "premature" aging has been widely reported, but that is a premature conclusion. She has somewhat shortened teleomeres -- which does not automatically translate exactly to being aged.
Her cells should have a lower hayflick limit, but, what we need to demonstrate premature aging is a sufficiently large number of cloned organisms. Then we will be able to get a statistical measure of changes in their lifespan.
3. I think spineboy is confusing two different things here. The skin on your elbow may have had a different pattern of gene expression than the skin on your face, in the same way that that it would have a had a (much more drastic) difference in expression than, for instance, a muscle cell. In addition, the two cells grown and developed in a different environments, which changes their behavior.
The idea behind somatic cell cloning is that the egg "reprograms" the implanted nucleus's gene expression. However, we can't be sure at this point if the expression has returned to 100% embryonic-like (it probably hasn't), and he's got a valid criticism there.
I think what spineboy originally meant was a somatic mutation. In that case, you might find one in, say, an old age spot or a cancer -- so yes, Dolly's nuclear DNA might not be 100% identical, either.
another musical intermission: (Score:2)
Re:The Raelian Website (Score:2)
On 13 December 1973 French journalist Rael was contacted by a visitor from an other planet, and asked to establish an Embassy to welcome these people back to Earth.
There are a lot reasons of people in the '70s were contacted by alians but that's anohter story.
The extra-terrestrial was about four feet in height, had long dark hair, almond shaped eyes, olive skin and exuded harmony and humour. He told Rael that "we were the ones who made all life on earth, you mistook us for gods, we were at the origin of your main religions. Now that you are mature enough to understand this, we would like to enter official contact through an embassy".
We are all clones of four foot tall dark haired alians with almond shaped eyes and olive skin. Yet we are generally between 5 and 6.5 feet tall. We are blond, dark haired, redheads, etc. None of us have almond shaped eyes (at least not compaired to what they are talking about) and human skin color ranges dramaticly but I wouldn't have thought of olive.
Maby it's just the nature/nurture thing but what percentage of humans ``exuded harmony and humour''?
--Ben
Finally - Gold Cross is close at hand (Score:2)
All we need now is a method of transferring memories and the rapid aging, and we're set!
Of course, in Car Wars this service was "very expensive" (quote from the rules) - $10,000.
Re:Can they really do it? (Score:2)
About 10% of the people in this country see nothing wrong with cloning. I define morality for myself as not doing something that brings harm to anyone. Cloning, in and of itself, can do no more harm then identical twins, by definition. I have no desire to have myself cloned, but I don't see how cloning causes harm. (And I don't want to hear about what 'might' be done, most of the scenarios could happen without cloning, and there are plenty of technologies that can harm lots of people, such as nuclear tech. That doesn't mean we shouldn't use nuclear power).
(2) Legislation-- existing and future. Although cloning might be legal in some other country that does not mean the United States will allow it even so. Maybe the company could lawfully carry out their activities in some other country, but (new?) US laws might just render it impossible for them to service US citizens.
Cloning is legal in the US (Why do people always think that it isn't?). There are no laws preventing it. Government money cannot be used to fund it, however.
As for #3, you're right. Cloning of humans can't be done right now, as far as I know.
[ c h a d o k e r e ] [dhs.org]
Re:But Clones are People! (Score:2)
Re:clones (Score:2)
Certainly, if I thought Jesus was responsbile for the way most Christians practice their faith, he'd be on my list of Most Contempable People. But while he might have been either an insightful mystic, or a mentally ill person who really believed he has the son of the Jewish god, I don't doubt that his teachings have been so distorted over the years that he bears little responsibility for "Christianity".
Can I get a discount? (Score:2)
Lame ripoff -- here's the original (Score:2)
He wrote this song, which is to be sung to the tune of "Home on the Range" and has some five or six versus plus the chorus. The real first verse goes:
Oh give me a clone
Of my own flesh and bone
With the Y chromosome changed to X.
And when I'm alone
With my own little clone
We will both think of nothing but sex.
The others are fscking hilarious.
I'm not going to type the rest because a) it's probably infringement or something, b) you should buy the book anyhow because it's really good, c) I'm tired, and d) now that this thread has existed for more than ninety minutes, all of
Asimov also mentions his guest speech to a Holmes appreciation society a few nights later, at which he brought the house down by singing an alternative version: "Oh give me a clone / Of the great Sherlock Holmes / With the Y..."
Oh, yay. (Score:2)
A religious movement aiming at cloning human beings sounds a little funny. I suppose that when the brainwashing doesn't produce a suitable homogeneous flock, there's always the option of just making copies.
And since when is a religion the friend of technological advances? Oh wait, this *is* a UFO cult, and there *are* those pesky Scientologists. So I guess there is a precedent.
I at least hope they'll clone Lazarus Long and have regular weekly orgies, like any advanced science-fiction civilization should...
Cloning myself. (Score:2)
Really, if I'm dead, what do I care if there's some clone of my original body walking around? It's not me, though it *might* look like me. Think about twins. They don't have 100% the same personalities, and they're basically clones when they're in the womb.
The Raelian Website (Score:2)
<ul>
<li> There are building a embassay to communicate with the Elohim
<li> The founder apparently used to be a Formula-1 Driver
<li> They have an online shop where you can buy their book
</ul>
Dana
Clown Aid (Score:2)
-Beware the lollipop of mediocrity. One lick and you will suck forever.
The creepiest part to me (Score:2)
Who would recreate a child who dies in an accident or incurable disease? Someone would have to have severe psychological problems to even consider it.
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Re:The creepiest part to me (Score:2)
You're not reading what I said. I didn't say there was anything wrong with cloning. I said there was something wrong with parents who would clone a dead child, as if that would cause that child to somehow be "reborn".
Put it this way... if you died, what would you think if your parents decided to take a DNA sample and just clone a new copy of you? And then just go on as if you had never existed, because after all, they have a brand-new one?
That is what they're saying with this "insurance" policy. If your child dies, heck, just create a new one! Good as new. Of course, the child isn't the same, and I find it creepy that there might be sick parents who would think the child was the same.
--
well, clones, eh? (Score:2)
It is weird to see a religious group so for cloning and actually providing the service. I wonder what added benefits the organization has (ie having the clone be a religious fanatic) that isn't transparent at this point?
I think cloning would be interesting because the clone would have a different life from there on and it would be kind of cool to see how the two humans, although genetically the same, develop as they take on different lives and experiences. I'm sure whoever is the first human clone will soon be sick of all the media following them around constantly... but, hey that's the price you pay for being first! =)
Re:well, clones, eh? (Score:2)
"Cloning will enable mankind to reach eternal life. The next step, like the ELOHIM with their 25,000 years of scientific advance, will be to directly clone an adult person without having to go through the growth process and to transfer memory and personality in this person. Then, we wake up after death in a brand new body just like after a good night sleep!
Cloning produces a genetically identical copy of an individual, not a consciouslly identical person, as you stated. Clones would differ only in the method of their birth, and in the psychological effects of having an older version of him/her. Not too different from twins, except for the fact that it didn't occur naturally. But I digress.
Its pretty scary to see a group of people who believe cloning is the ultimate answer to our problems as a species. This view contrasts strangely to the overcrowding, overpopulation, and starvation present in many areas of the world. I would chalk it up to just another cult, but I can more than vaguely identify with the way they cling to and are dependent upon others. It says a lot about a species when it is not only able to recreate itself, but is also (at least partially) willing and even eager to.
My cult (Score:2)
I say we boycot this site.
--
Poor young clone (Score:3)
Come to think of it, several people have told me over the years that they've fantasised about being twins or that they envy me. This desire for a clone seems to be a more common one, whatever the reasons may be. I'm no psychologist but I figure that ultimately noone wants to die, noone wants to be alone, and everyone is pretty much programmed to spread their genes one way or another, anyway.
The things my brother and me have in common are reassuring, and genetically, we are exactly the same, but of course we've had many different experiences. But even if we'd done exactly the same things, we still would've turned out individuals somehow. Similarly, any clone that you make of yourself is not going to be yourself. I'm not religious, but I'll call the part that you can't duplicate the soul.
Technical difficulties with cloning aside (I recall having read that Dolly was born with genetic material that was as old as the 'mother Dolly', reducing her life expectancy, and that the egg carrier's RNA made the clone imperfect, or something like that), then what the heck is the use? Imagine being born and knowing that you're a clone of someone that is now 40 years of age or so. It's hard to really imagine how that would feel. Sure, you're an individual, and the different periods when you're growing up are going to make sure that you as clone are going to be even more different from the first edition than a twin would be. But just being able to see yourself 40 years older is a Cassandra-complex like nightmare that must be damn hard to deal with. I for one wouldn't want to do that to anyone, certainly not a tender soul so similar to myself. Personally, I think I'd be likely to loathe my blueprint.
Aside from that, nature says that as far as procreation is concerned, the idea is to take bits from 2 separate gene pools. To really help things along, we need real children. As much as I think I'm a nice guy, I do need to evolve. Clones don't add anything new.
Re:Don't Laugh, they are for real-- THIS IS A CULT (Score:3)
Re:Potential problems (Score:3)
Sure, it's all fun and games with your personal clones until they start demanding their own account on your machine...
[root@localhost
adduser: user froz exists
[root@localhost
adduser: user froz2 exists
[root@localhost
adduser: user froz47 exists
-----------------------------------------------
This would also give entirely new meaning to being the root user!
Human clones are real (Score:3)
Potential problems (Score:3)
[root@localhost
adduser: user froz exists
[root@localhost
adduser: user froz2 exists
[root@localhost
adduser: user froz47 exists
Some information (Score:3)
Also, the way they reinterpret the bible is interesting. IIRC, Salomon's hair worked as antennae for communicating with the Elohim. It was then cut off when he annoyed them for some reason or other.
Anyway, this cloning project existed already at that time. They were planning on setting this up on some Carribean island to avoid laws on cloning.
Don't Laugh, they are for real (Score:4)
But then again, I am a Discordian Druid...so who am I to judge, I am not a Brehon!
ttyl
Farrell
This is too perfect an opportunity (Score:4)
I want a clone;
A clone of my own;
With a Y chromosome changed to an X.
And if this clone of my own;
Has a mind like my own;
It'll be thinking of nothing but sex.
So what? (Score:4)
I fail to see why on Earth you'd want to clone yourself, because it's damn well not going to be your soul-mate or any other guff like that.
The Raelliens (Score:5)
and are in it for the hot chicks. This is not a Heaven's Gate type of thing, it's nothing like a sect... It's more of an excuse for orgies.
They are also actively involved in a few software companies, btw.
I don't think the cloning is anything serious though, they've been talking about it for
years. I wouldn't trust a "religion" where the leader (Rael) participates in GT Races with
his Dodge Viper.
Re:Illegal? (Score:5)
In the 106th Congress, we have:
Whew. That wasn't that bad, now was it.
Cloning is NOT THE ANSWER to your troubles! :-) (Score:5)
He replicated himself so that he could spend all his time playing. The clones would do his chores, do his homework, attend school, etc. However, it ended up with him doing all the work and covering up for the extra messes the clones created!
Remember, if you're devious enough to clone yourself, your clone knows this!
Besides, where will it end? The horror. What if someone cloned the people in those "Old Navy" commercials? No --- this is simply too much evil to unleash onto the planet.
We must stop at once!