Really? You must not have looked very hard... There are plenty of reasons why someone would want to clone a human. Here's an essay on why an infertile woman with no viable eggs wants human cloning as explained by her husband . I'd also like to question your contention that making partsof humans is "unethical". We've been doing that for several years now...
Personally, I agree with the esteemed scientist, Stephen Hawking when he says, "The fuss about cloning is rather silly, I can't see any essential distinction between cloning and producing brothers and sisters in the time-honored way."
I found it interesting that this article talks about piggybacking mp3's on instant-messaging services. I must confess, I've shared a lot of files this way. You don't see the record companies going after MSN or AOL, do you? I think it'd be interesting if a new version of Napster came out that was a "chat" program that "happened" to allow file sharing. I think they could make a strong case.
You're assuming that the newspaper did not give a false affadavit. That seems to be the latest fad.
Really? You must not have looked very hard... There are plenty of reasons why someone would want to clone a human. Here's an essay on why an infertile woman with no viable eggs wants human cloning as explained by her husband . I'd also like to question your contention that making partsof humans is "unethical". We've been doing that for several years now... Personally, I agree with the esteemed scientist, Stephen Hawking when he says, "The fuss about cloning is rather silly, I can't see any essential distinction between cloning and producing brothers and sisters in the time-honored way."
There may be more to the world than Korea, but it seems that that's where all the action is. Parallel lines eventually meet.
I found it interesting that this article talks about piggybacking mp3's on instant-messaging services. I must confess, I've shared a lot of files this way. You don't see the record companies going after MSN or AOL, do you? I think it'd be interesting if a new version of Napster came out that was a "chat" program that "happened" to allow file sharing. I think they could make a strong case.