Never be afraid to try something new. Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark. A large group of professionals built the Titanic. Dave Barry
bigsleepj wrote: Unfinished stories never leave you, nor do they fester. They only grow better, like wine locked away in a deep dark cellar, waiting for you to bottle it and bring it to the light.
Heart of Sword wrote:I agree with ILoveArt on that one. Also, it might look like the pet, but it's still not him/her.
Never be afraid to try something new. Remember that a lone amateur built the Ark. A large group of professionals built the Titanic. Dave Barry
bigsleepj wrote: Unfinished stories never leave you, nor do they fester. They only grow better, like wine locked away in a deep dark cellar, waiting for you to bottle it and bring it to the light.
Felix wrote:And gungrave, XD I am sure you look quite the man-beast in a suit.
Destroyer2000 wrote:Well, if God didn't want cloning, or if it was seriously contradictory to what he wanted, he would not allow the technology to exist would he? Or at teh very least, work.
The real problems arise, as I said before, with the sanctity of life. A child should be a product of the love and unity of their parents, as God intended that relationship to be. Cloning desecrates that idea by removing entirely the unitive aspect and possibly as well the parental role altogether. God intends us to reproduce in the way that He created our bodies to do so, within a marital relationship that He designed.
termyt wrote:I don't really believe cloning is playing God. That's giving man a little too much credit.
Raiden no Kishi (post: 1218170) wrote:Also, I hope never to hear "Nate" and "prance" in the same sentence again . . .
Destroyer2000 wrote:Come to think of it, cloning would not be much different than artificial fertilization, would it?
Should an infertile couple be denied raising their own children if cloning becomes a viable option?
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