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Cloning pets...

Discussion in 'Fred's House of Pancakes' started by rflagg, Dec 30, 2004.

  1. rflagg

    rflagg Member

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    Ok, I started the gay marriage thread, I might as well start this one.

    About a week or so ago, it was announced that Genetic Savings & Clone, a US company, had their first customer. A woman (unidentified) paid them their standard fee of $50,000 to successfully clone her recently deceased cat. The 'new' cat, a genetic duplicate of the original, according to the woman, 'is exactly the same in every manner' - this time the kitty is the same color as well (unlike Cc, the first cloned kitty).

    A good deal of people were upset at this woman, because as many said, $50,000 would've saved a great deal of stray and homeless kitties, and doing so in her recently departed friend's name would've accomplished so much more. I personally can certainly understand that, as I work with a good deal of rescue groups that are constantly struggling with keeping up funds.

    However, being an animal lover, I can also understand where this woman is coming from. My best friend from childhood, my dog Max who died when he was 16 and I was 25 - he and I were so close, and I know that if I had a large disposable income, I'd be quite tempted (my mom still holds onto a small clump of his hair because she also misses him so much).

    The emotional part of me doesn't care what the intelligent part of me says - and here's what the science in me says: You can make a genetic duplicate of anything with cloning, and genetically speaking, they will be the same. However, unless they face the exact same circumstances, choices, failures, and so on, they will be radically different from a physical, emotional, and most importantly, spiritual aspect. For example, let's take cloning a pine tree - the cloned tree will, even if it grows right next to the 'parent' tree, will still have slightly different minerals in the soil, will face slightly different weather, it may face more or less dangers, bugs, etc. than the other. Therefore, it will never, nor could anything ever, be an exact duplicate of it's original. The same goes for a cat or dog. Unless you clone the cat's mother, and the mother's mother, and so on, and put them in the exact same positions and consequences of everything the original went through, there can be no true clone. The clone may look different, but it absolutely, positively, will feel different and react different and *be* different.

    I know that even cloning could not bring back my Max from childhood. I know that if I had $50,000 to spend, I'd more likely donate it all to rescue groups than clone my dog. That being said though, I can understand the want, even knowing he would be different, I can understand why people would pay the money to clone their pet.

    Obviously, this issue is conflicting for me. But I feel the bottom line is that while the money could be spent better elsewhere, if people feel this is something they need to do, then they should be allowed to. What do you think?

    -m.
     
  2. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    Was this "announced" in The Onion?

    I agree with you that a cloned animal, though genetically identical, would have an entirely different personality. Also, some aspects of the individual are determined by environmental influences.

    The moral question is somewhat misdirected, however, in my opinion. The real issue is the entire complex of frivolous things that rich people are permitted to spend their money on while the poor go hungry or homeless and have no medical care, the environment deteriorates, and cute furry animals suffer.

    The question should be: Should we, as a society, permit the wealthy to do as they like with their money, or should we take it from them to use in socially beneficial ways?

    The woman who cloned her cat probably would not have used that $50,000 to rescue homeless cats and dogs. She probably would have spent it on some other frivolous whim, which she has a perfect right to do under a capitalist morality.

    Sadly, in America, this discussion cannot even be held without accusations of "communism."
     
  3. TonyPSchaefer

    TonyPSchaefer Your Friendly Moderator
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    According to Karl Marx, that woman's $50,000 could have been used to feed many starving families.

    According to Dickens, the woman could have been used to feed a few starving families.

    We rescued Nina from a shelter. She was thin and undernourished, having just delivered a litter of what must have been the most adorable kittens ever. I could not, in clear conscious, perform an act so selfish as cloning her knowing full well that there are many other animals in shelters who would make excellent companions.

    Science provides us the opportunity to do many wondrous and amazing things. Decency provides many of us the restraint from doing most of them.
     
  4. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    I've got pages of stuff I'm tempted to write to argue almost every line above, but I'll refrain b/c I see it amounting to nothing more than a rich vs poor issue. I'll leave one main thought. If the ability to spend hard earned money on frivilous things was taken away...what would be the motivation for working hard?

    Also, what, exactly, is the distinction b/w what you propose and communism...I won't accuse you of promoting it without giving you a chance to define the terms.
     
  5. rflagg

    rflagg Member

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    Daniel,

    While I do agree with you, and understand where you're coming from, I don't believe we'll be seeing anything like you describe in our lifetimes, in our children's lifetimes, and further down for quite some time.

    Communism was way ahead of it's time. The proof to that is just looking at what ideals are in Marx's theories. Communism as it exists on Earth is nothing like the Communism Marx wrote of. Because of this many attribute Communism as evil, when in fact it's most likely the next step the world will have to face, as one, to progress any further.

    America can only survive to a point (personally, I feel she is past her prime, that being the 50's) - for us to evolve as humans, as an entire race, will take the entire planet. And to do so, it will take eradicating the Earth of currency - certainly in the communistic sense. All people will do the job they wish to do, and everything will be provided for.

    But we're light years from that. Just look at the election as most recent proof. Today America has more in common with a Stalinistic Russia, yet that form of communism (lies, propaganda, enemies with everyone, etc.) is nothing like that of what Marx envisioned.

    Kind of like what Jefferson, Washington, Franklin, and others, envisioned for this country, and what it's turned out to today.

    -m.
     
  6. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    Evan: Nobody in the history of the world has ever gotten rich by hard work. Great wealth comes from crime. Or from inheriting the proceeds of crime. The hardest-working people are the poorest.

    I fully support the right of any person to spend earned money any way they like. Money that comes without work is another matter entirely. Curiously, the U.S. government taxes unearned income at a lower rate than earned income.

    G.B. Shaw once quipped that the only thing wrong with Christianity was that it had never been tried. The same may be said of communism. Especially since the first communist was Jesus. A communist society is a voluntary arrangement, without a coercive government, in which everyone works according to ability, and everyone receives according to need. Since this is a utopian ideal, it seems unlikely ever to happen.

    But I see no reason why people should be allowed to receive tens or hundreds of millions of dollars a year while others work two full-time jobs for less than it costs to house and feed a family.
     
  7. Kathryn

    Kathryn New Member

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    While I understand this woman's desire to keep her beloved pet as long as possible, there's just something wrong here. I've been "mom" to several much-loved cats during my lifetime, and it broke my heart to lose the "cat love of my life" four years ago. But having him cloned. It just wouldn't be the same, no matter how much the new cat looks and acts like him. I don't even want to give cats the same names as previous cats.

    I volunteer at my local animal shelter, and see many homeless cats in need of a loving home. I couldn't in all good consciousness "clone" or breed a cat instead of adopting a needy pet.

    On another tangent: would anyone consider making a clone of yourself? That way, you could bring yourself up in a different way, and see how much of a difference different nurturing could have on you. (I guess I wouldn't, because I'd hate to see "me" at my peak--12!--while "I" am going downhill fast!...unless I could speed up the growth process, get my clone to about 25, and have my brain implanted in her: she'd have to be created with only basic brain functions).
     
  8. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    It seems extremely unlikely that a cloned pet would act like the original. There are probably inherited factors, but too much of behavior is learned. The cloned cat would be like the two black guys who make themselves up like the two white women in the movie White Chicks: You could tell that the clone was intended to represent the original, but the similarities would be superficial, and the differences profound.

    But as for criticizing the woman who had her cat cloned, you might as well criticize someone who buys a Porsche: he could have boughbt a Civic instead and used the difference to save homeless animals. ... Or you could have bought a Corolla instead of a Prius and donated the difference to an animal shelter.

    People are selfish. We will give a little bit of money to "good causes," but we spend far more on ourselves (if we have it) than we really need to meet the basic necessities of life; and meanwhile cats, dogs, and people suffer.
     
  9. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    Daniel,
    I truely applaud your idealism...I have absolute belief that your values are wonderful and that you are a rare breed these days.

    I can't help but disagree, however, with some of your world view as applies to money and taxes and rich vs poor. To say that "no one" ever got rich from hard work is a pure fictional construct. But if you get to choose your own definition of crime then your arguement would hold water. Also, much depends upon what you consider 'rich'.

    Much in this world can be blamed on "the grace of God", but I'm a stronger believer in free-will. Circumstances can work against anyone, but there are a multitude of choices one can make. If one chooses a path that prevents them from making money or getting an education and they end up poor is that the 'rich person's' fault when he chose a path that let to wealth?

    I came/come from a pretty poor family. I went deep into debt from my first day of college, worked 2 jobs to pay my rent the last year, collected more debt through med school, allowed that debt to accrew interest as I spent 4 years as a resident bringing home about $25k/year. Then, 12 years later, I got a "real" job and started bringing home a 'reasonable' salary.

    Now I have the priveledge of having my debt paid off (took 7 years of 2 physician salaries to do it). Now I bring home a goodly salary and can afford 'frivilous' things like travel, a lake house, a nice Prius, etc.

    So, in your judgement (or whoever the arbiter of such decisions is) did I 'earn' my wealth, aquire it by criminal means, or am I not rich? I pay at or above 50% of this income (not sure if I'm allowed to call it earned or not by your definition) in some form of taxes that goes to lots of various causes including Medicaid...where I then get to treat those medicaid patients and be 'paid' a grand total of $15 per patient seen. Certainly some are extremely deserving, but the ones coming in smoking 3 packs of cigarettes a day who haven't kept a single appointment with a pediatrician for their kid and then want me to write a prescription for Tylenol that would cost them $2 (less than a single pack of cigarettes) for their kid who has an ear infection at least indirectly caused by the cigarette smoking of tha parent just kills me.

    I don't intend to bash poor people, I know of and know many who are 'poor' and work their asses off and just don't have the means or intelligence or whatever to get out of their circumstances...but at least they're working and trying. But there are a lot of poor that are leaches on the system...at least as many as there are 'rich bastards' that you are so angry at.

    We're either going to need to wipe the world clean of all the selfish rich and poor to establish your utopia or we're going to have to let this capitalist society do it's thing. Rich people buying things like Porche's pays the salary of a lot of sales people and mechanics that deal with that kind of car. If we all drive Civics then there will be fewer jobs for car salesmen, and car repair people, etc.

    I'm not saying the rich are right in many of the things they do, but to make a ludicris blanket statement that the rich aquired their wealth through crime is just as bad as saying all poor people deserve their lot in life. Both are prejudice stereotypical statements...something I think you're above, Daniel.

    Utopia isn't going to happen...not ever, but the divide b/w rich and poor can become wider if we choose to be divisive, and it can narrow if we choose to work together.
     
  10. rflagg

    rflagg Member

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    Well written Evan, I certainly agree with you - I do believe there are a good deal of poor people, just as there are rich, who use the system to their advantage which amounts to being unfair to others.

    In defense of the poor, albeit a weak defense - those who use and abuse the system, their life affects fewer than say, the CEO of Enron. Meaning, more lives have been destroyed by those abusing the system as rich folks, than those abusing the system as poor folks.

    However, that just goes to the whole conundrum of "If you push this button, you kill 50 people but save one starving baby who would otherwise die" - who's to say what the value of each life is.

    While the poor can be leeches just as the rich can, I think you probably believe, like myself, that the rich have taken more advantages and done more damage than the poor - of course in your line of work, you directly work with a good deal of the poor who take advantage, while few if none of us ever have direct contact of the wealthy thieves.

    Despite the semantics of it all, I definately agree with your last statement - I hope that someday humanity can overcome this barrier, but the chances are dim. However, some might argue that's when humanity performs at it's best.

    -m.
     
  11. efusco

    efusco Moderator Emeritus
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    As you say, I certainly see the extremes of both sides. I have seen rich folks demand unnecessary and expensive tests backing up their demand with their 'excellent insurance' or a billfold packed with money or whatever. I've also seen some of the richest people being the most humble and polite accepting my advise without question and showing infinite respect.

    But I've seen the same with Medicaid...."I have medicaid, I want a CAT scan, they'll pay for it", and the next medicaid might come in just as polite and thankful for the help they're recieving as anyone might be.

    To try to divy up behavior by financial status is a fools task, it just isn't possible.
     
  12. GreenSteve

    GreenSteve Web Hosting Provider

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    Evan:

    Thank you for starting this very interesting thread. What excellent people use this forum!


    Daniel:

    I deeply admire your radical sense of justice, and I hear lots of frustration in your "voice". I must disagree that nobody ever got rich through hard work. I think I'm rich, and the only thing I ever inherited was a disposition to autoimmune disorders and curly hair.

    My father died when I was 14 years old. My mother had never worked outside the home. We were so poor that having meatloaf for dinner was a treat.

    Today I own my own home, I'm enormously overpaid, so much so that we managed to pay off a 30 year mortgage in 3 and a half years. I got here by working my butt off, and I'm very pleased it worked out this way.

    Communism is a type of social and economic model that could work very well if there were no human beings involved.

    Cloning:

    I see no moral dilemma in the cloning of a family pet. Certainly the lady could have useed her money to do good, but it was her money...

    Now on the subject of human cloning, I think it is an issue that requires great thought. I'm far from being a theist, and I share the skeptical views of religion put forth by ther long-ago communists of old (opiate of the people). I hesitate at the idea of cloning humans. Evolution is our friend. Random genetic variations are good. We need to avoid messing with the system, and we must respect life above all other things.
     
  13. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    You are mistaken about me. I am as selfish as anyone else. Like everyone else, I give a little to charity, and spend most of my money on myself.

    As for parasites who abuse the system: you (Evan) are in a job where you see only those who come in for medical care, whether appropriate or not. You don't see the vast majority of working poor who work backbreaking jobs, long hours, for less than the cost of rent on an apartment. People who, for a variety of circumstances, never had the opportunity to study for a career. And sure, a small number of them abuse the system, but what they take is nothing compared to the welfare the rich get. The multi-billion-dollar give-aways to corporations. Where is Ken Lay today? Is he in jail for stealing billions of dollars and wiping out the savings of thousands of hard-working people? Nope. He's sitting on top of the bank, laughing.

    But my main point in posting in this thread was to answer the folks who thought the woman who cloned her cat ought to have given the money to an animal shelter instead. As long as we live in a capitalist society, that woman has as much of a right to spend $50,000 on a cat as we have to spend $20,000 to $30,000 on a car.

    As for me, I didn't earn my money. I inherited it. By what right do I have all this money, which I never did anything to earn, while other people in the world have nothing? No right except the perverted capitalist ethic which places property rights above human rights. But, as stated above, I am just like everyone else, and I'll keep my money and spend it on myself while I can, and give away a little. The only difference is that I recognize that by any honest morality I have no right to more money than people who work far harder than I.
     
  14. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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    i also dont see a problem cloning pets. i think that the only way to learn anything is to push the boundaries of our knowledge.

    is everything therefore the right thing to do? hell if i know, but i will never find out until i try and fail. its my belief that its impossible to reason out the ramifications of such a situation as complicated and far reaching as this.

    also, we dont know enough going in to make intelligent decisions and will never know unless we try it. i hear things like we could create genetically altered corn that might cause some sort of plague that would wipe out millions before we find out that the corn is the source is too far fetched for me to believe and basic b.s. spun by alarmists who only wish to raise questions to invoke discussion.

    but if we looked at the worst case scenario of everything, then we would still be living in caves. would you have cancelled the space program back in the mid 60's if you knew ahead of time that a few dozen of the best the US has to offer would die?? some would argue that losing one life is enough to shelve the project.

    im sorry, but we owe our very existence to the pioneering spirit of the scientists who are willing to take the risk, be ostracized for the actions and beliefs, and maybe fail miserably.
     
  15. Wolfman

    Wolfman New Member

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    Daniel, I take exception to your statements that nobody has gotten rich by hard work. My first job was a paper route while I was in middle school. Once old enough, I went to work for Target, pushing shopping carts. This job made me able to purchase my own car, maintain it, insure it, as well as play. I did this job through high school and college. After college, I moved on to building and repairing PC's. After a while, I took a break from electronics, and drove trucks. Now I'm back in the electronics field, monitoring the wireline side of the Verizon phone network. I make a nice chunk of change every year, and not one red cent of what I make is "given" to me - I WORK for it.

    I also watched my father build what is nothing less than a substantial real estate home rental "business." I remember him coming home from his "day job", only to grab toolboxes, go fix furnaces, unclog drains, repair appliances, fix sump pumps, clean vacant homes for new rentals, show vacant homes to perspective tenants, etc.

    Not one red cent of his wealth was given to him, he worked for every bit of it. After he nearly died from a staph infection a couple of years ago, and due to a former manager's wife where I work now losing 65% of her fathers estate to the money grubbing government through both inheritance, death, and income taxes, my family got together to pursue avenues to keep my fathers assets intact when the inevitable happens, and they pass away.

    I want my fathers estate to remain intact. His hard work does not belong to the government - it belongs to US - the family. Us four brothers all want it to remain functional as the house rental business it is, where it can keep providing housing, and provide us with an additional income, once the estate has transferred to us, when our parents have passed on. Who knows, that income will be what keeps us off of the welfare roles if something were to happen to one of us, rendering us unable to work.

    As for this gal, and her spending $50k to clone her pet. That's her business. I can personally think of one dog, that I would have loved to do the exact same thing with. He was a dog pound rescue, and there will never be another dog capable of filling his paws.
     
  16. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    This is an excellent thread!

    First, my folks always picked up strays for pets. That was long before animal shelters. Since they were both raised on farms, I guess they had respect for animals.

    Second, I also have chosen my pets from animal shelters. My present companion, "Boo Boo," is a 3 year old male cat of indeterminate parentage. I got him at the animal shelter when he was 5 months old. His previous "caregivers" had thrown him against the wall a few times when he was a kitten, so he has a gimpy rear leg.

    If this rich broad wants to spend 50 g's to clone her beloved kitty, whatever. If she wants to clone a goldfish, whatever. I never would, but that's just me.

    As far as the issue of fairness in the world, I firmly believe the world could be just, fair, and predictable. It's very easy to accomplish: take away all the humans. Once us greedy, selfish, conspiring humans enter the picture, all bets are off.

    It really doesn't matter what belief system a person claims to believe in, it really doesn't matter what "ism" they subscribe to, in the end, we're all the same. True, a handful of people out there are truly trustworthy and honest and even nice. Some are wealthy, some are horribly poor, and some are somewhere inbetween.

    Unless all the stars align, the massively wealthy probably had to bend/break more than a few rules to get their loot. I've always followed my parent's advice, and so far it has served me well:

    Don't break the rules, but make sure you use them to your advantage.

    Under the current stratification of "ism's" it appears our system can satisfy most people well. No, it's not the best for the environment, or even for our health or emotional/spiritual development.

    Considering how selfish, greedy, and conspiring human nature is, I doubt a truly "fair" system could hope to evolve. We're in this mess as, right at the heart of it, we wanted it. Nothing happens by random chance, we create things and we create situations.

    I think nature will eventually teach us a lesson. We seem to have conveniently forgotten how things like Bubonic Plague, the Black Death, or TB wiped out a substantial proportion of civilizations past. We're now facing the same thing with old diseases that have become resistant to current treatments, especially MRSA or VRSA.

    Anyway, this is turning into a downer. How about this: kitties, good. Cloning kitties, iffy. Cloning humans, ugh, who would want to?
     
  17. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    Wolfman:

    A long time ago my folks incorporated their business to minimise taxes and preserve assets/equity. Despite having only grade school education - they were raised in the Great Depression and had to work to support their families, they also saw the benefit to sound financial decisions.

    They also pressured me to incorporate too, something I grumbled about but now realize was a sound decision. When you consider that in excess of 2/3 of taxpayer money is p***** away, why give them any more than you absolutely have to?

    Have you spoken to a qualified taxation attorney to determine your best course of action wrt the family business? Please seek out qualified advice, as what appears to be a "minor" misstep can wipe out a family business.

    BTW: I also believe in growing assets for my older age. I rather doubt we'll have Social Security and Medicare when I'm in my 60's. It's bankrupt now.
     
  18. DaveinOlyWA

    DaveinOlyWA 3rd Time was Solariffic!!

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    its funny that we have seemed to pigeon hole on the amount of money that was spent and how the person may have or may not have arriven at the point at which they are able to spend the amount.

    i think if we found that some spend upwards of $25,000 a night on a hotel room for themselves more acceptable then maybe we are not looking at the situation correctly.

    facts are, i am not gonna tell someone what god to worship, im not gonna tell someone who to marry, im not gonna tell someone which hand to wipe their a** with either.

    the only thing i will say is that if you want to spend your money...

    SPEND IT ON ME!!!
     
  19. Wolfman

    Wolfman New Member

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    I am not 100% certain what my Father has done with the business. When we were discussing this issue, he was looking at putting the estate into a trust. The properties are being phased over to a management company to deal with the stuff that my Father used to do himself. We haven't discussed the issue recently, and it's probably a good idea to bring the issue up again. My folks are in extremely good health, so I expect them to be around for a good long while yet, barring some catastrophic event. Longevity is very much in our family amongst those who have abstained from tobacco use.
     
  20. jayman

    jayman Senior Member

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    HAHA yer funny!

    Seriously, good points raised though.