Japan to Allow Human-Nonhuman Mixed Cloning
Sara Chan writes: "Japan has decided to allow combined human-animal embryos to be produced through cloning, which could result in mixed-species creatures. The intended purpose is to permit transplant organs to be produced in specially-bred animals. The original story is in a Japanese newspaper, but you can get an English summary here."
We got too many trolls already.
Bart: "How would I go about creating a half-man, half-monkey-type creature?" Ms. Krabapple: "I'm sorry, that would be playing God..." Bart: "God schmod. I want my monkey man!"
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How else are they gunna make all that anime into live cinema. You need animal-human hybrids.
A rabbit in the hand is worth 4 in the cage
Is this a step forward for mankind, or a step backward?
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I find this disturbing. And I'm one of the people who can't understand at all why people are bothered by the idea of 'regular' cloning; I mean it really makes no sense to me. But allowing chimeras to be created? That's just something I never thought anyone would do.
Or am I misunderstanding what's actually going on. Are they simply doing things like creating human hearts in monkeys and the like? As with the tobacco plants we rigged up to create hemoglobin or insulin or whatever? I don't really see a problem with that, I guess.
I do see that they plan to ban 'regular' cloning, so I guess they don't want the whole 'mad scientist' thing going on. If it could really be used to ultimately cure sick people and make people more healthy then really (imo) it would be unethical to disallow it.
autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
My roomate has a thing for cat-girls and he's pretty excited right now. I however don't like this idea one bit. I mean most wild animals can kick a human's ass. Imagine a lion/man or and elephant/man. Smart and powerful. They'll take over. Just like exo squad, if you've ever seen it.
The GeekNights podcast is going strong. Listen!
IANAGeneticist, but my understanding is that insulin for diabetics is produced by injecting human genes into e. coli bacteria. So, aren't we already making human-nonhuman (in this case, bacteria) hybrids?
Which is exactly why we should get our legislature off its stupid ass and pound some sense into them. If we don't do it, someone else will, and profit greatly from it. We should be leading the way in genetic engineering technology, not following.
The next worldwide industrial boom will be Bioengineering. If people are willing to pay $1000 for a CPU upgrade, imagine what they would pay for blue eyes. Or broad shoulders. Or a high IQ. Or thick hair that will never fall out. Or straight teeth. The list goes on and on.
We need to be positioned well in this industry.
Knunov
Why do users with IDs under 100,000 or over 700,000 usually have the most worthwhile comments?
Japan's first transplant procedure in 1968 resulted with the doctor being charged with murder because it wasn't clear if the donor was brain dead.
Aparently the taboo has something to do with Japan's Shinto and Buddhist beliefs. Here's a link: Japan Legalized Organ Transplants from Brain-dead.
Superficial reading of the Ananova article would give one the impression that they are talking about a partly human chimera (it is hard to read "combined human-animal embryos" any other way); which would be a horribly unethical monstrosity.
What they're undoubtedly talking about (though I can't verify it since I can't read Japanese) are transgenic animals which express human proteins which is nothing new and posses no real ethical challenges (other than those involving the safety issues of xenotransplantation such as the real posibility for introducing various pathogens into the human population).
I have a PhD in Nuclear physics and I am a chartered engineer.
Three mile island came within seconds of a melt down. It demonstrates conclusively that the nuclear industry was nowhere near as safe as it had claimed. I don't accept the spin from the PR flaks of the nuclear industry that we have to trust them until they kill 5,000 people for real.
If the dice had rolled only slightly differently, the operators at Cherobyl might have succeeded in shutting down the reactor, had the three mile island operators not been lucky the reactor might have gone. The design flaw at Chernobyl was one that could not have been predicted with the design tools available in the USSR or the US when the plants were built. It was an area of positive feedback in the control regime that could only be detected using 3d modelling. That did not become possible until the introduction of the first CRAY series - and even then it took quite a long time for the simulation software to appear.
Moreover, the placement of any potentially hazardous industrial complex on three mile island should never have been allowed, let alone a nuclear plant. The bridges to the island simply cannot support an evacuation in an acceptable time. Building a nuclear plant that close to manhattan was gross negligence.
I used the term 'intrinsicaly safe' in a technical sense, no light water design is intrinsically safe, there is a critical mass that is damped down to prevent runnaway. If the safety systems fail and do not fail safe as planned you get a heck of a bang.
The Canadian CANDU heavy water system is intrinsically safe. It employs heavy water as the moderator, if there is a failure of the pressure vessel etc, etc the glass containers shatter and the moderator drains away shutting down the reaction. In pebble bed each fuel element is encapsulated in a moderator shell, again no critical mass, no chance of a big bang.
Do not assume that because there are some ignorant critics of nuclear power that all critics are ignorant. If the nuclear industry had not told so many blatant and deliberate lies in the 60s and 70s there might have been fewer ignorant critics today.
Jim Cramer (The Street.com) has a rule - financial irregularities means sell. Basically when ypou have been lied to by the management of a company it is time to take the exit door (e.g. Enron). In the UK the Thatcher govt. discovered during their privatization of the electricity industry that far from being low cost, the nuclear stations were barely economic on an operating basis - there was no possibility of paying of the original capital costs or eventual decommissioning costs. As a result a government that started ideologically committed to nuclear power discovered that the books had been cooked and they could not sell the plants to anyone at any price.
Further, the irrational fear of nuclear-anything means that most Americans miss out on some important technologies: for example, all of the E coli outbreaks of the last decade could have been prevented through irradiation.
Irradiation is banned for good reason. If you irradiate food you kill off the bugs but not the toxins they create. If technology allows food that is unfit for human consumption to be passed of as fresh you can be 100% sure that it will happen in the US.
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A country has the guts (and yes, I'm not surprised it's Japan), to go about ignoring the stupid religious morals set by the US in regard to cloning animals/humans with the specific end of using them for organ harvesting.
I'm one step closer to being able to have a genetically perfect pancreas transplant, which means I'm a step closer to being able cease these stupid insulin injections 4-8 times a day.
Looks can be deceiving. Or CAN they?
I don't know. This idea that men are the wimps of the animal world is a bit overdone, I think. Pre-human North America was chock full of huge critters that would make the Serengeti look like a suburban park. Then people got here and wiped 'em all out in a geologic wink of an eye. Let's face it -- even armed with weapons made from sticks and flint chips man is the most dangerous animal on Earth.
Of course it's the giant brain, opposble thumb and social cooperation that makes man really formidable, but it's hard to imagine a chimera that takes full advantage of human and, say lion capabilities. Can you have the lion's formidable claws and still keep dexterity? Or its powerful killing jaws and a mouth capable of articulating language?
Even some characteristics that at first seem like liabilities aren't. Our lack fur, scales, and general light build for example. On one hand, it leaves us relatively defenseless. On the other hand, it makes us offensively more formidable. A well trained runner can chase most game animals until they collapse of heat prostration.
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