Reproductive Cloning is huge risk legally and financially, most of the operations that happen fail and have fatal results. “In animal experiments to date, only a small percentage of implanted clones have resulted in live births, and a substantial portion of those live-born clones have suffered complications that proved fatal fairly quickly.” (bio.edu). Given that animals have a hard time cloning with defects, a complex human would be a high risk and could be led to an even more fatal result if continued. Since animals are a risk, “A significant number of cloned animals, as well as surrogate mothers who carry clone pregnancies, suffer serious and painful diseases and deformities to produce each ‘successful’ clone.” (end.org). With this quote, it explains that mothers who carry these clones could suffer painful diseases and deformities, more than ninety-five percent of cloning attempts fail. Professor Wilmut, the person who made Dolly the first reproductive clone animal, said “ It surely adds yet more evidence that there should be a moratorium against copying people. How can anybody take the risk of cloning a baby when the outcome is unpredictable?”. Professor Wilmut successfully cloned an animal but Wilmut still realized that the process is faulty and unstable for human use. The start of human reproductive cloning wouldn’t be easy to find a good
Reproductive Cloning is huge risk legally and financially, most of the operations that happen fail and have fatal results. “In animal experiments to date, only a small percentage of implanted clones have resulted in live births, and a substantial portion of those live-born clones have suffered complications that proved fatal fairly quickly.” (bio.edu). Given that animals have a hard time cloning with defects, a complex human would be a high risk and could be led to an even more fatal result if continued. Since animals are a risk, “A significant number of cloned animals, as well as surrogate mothers who carry clone pregnancies, suffer serious and painful diseases and deformities to produce each ‘successful’ clone.” (end.org). With this quote, it explains that mothers who carry these clones could suffer painful diseases and deformities, more than ninety-five percent of cloning attempts fail. Professor Wilmut, the person who made Dolly the first reproductive clone animal, said “ It surely adds yet more evidence that there should be a moratorium against copying people. How can anybody take the risk of cloning a baby when the outcome is unpredictable?”. Professor Wilmut successfully cloned an animal but Wilmut still realized that the process is faulty and unstable for human use. The start of human reproductive cloning wouldn’t be easy to find a good