|
|
Human
Cloning:
A Promising Cornucopia
By Randolfe Wicker
[Respond
to this article]
[article
originally published at clonerights.com. reprinted with permission
from R.Wickler]
- Human Cloning will Transform
Family Life and Create New Forms of Social Relationships.
- Human Cloning will Greatly
Increase Medicine's Curative Powers.
- Human Cloning will make Every
Individual Fertile and Increase their Reproductive Options
Regardless of Marital Status.
- Human Cloning will Force All
Religions to Redefine Family, Life, Parenthood and Even
Immortality
Who
Will Use the New Reproductive Technology? How will it Transform
Family Life & Create New Forms of Social Relationships?
Traditional married
couples who discover that either the
husband's or wife's ancestral medical history is riddled with
schizophrenia, lupus, diabetes or some other inheritable disease
may choose to conceive their children by cloning the healthier
mate.
Cloning will also allow every
infertile couple, single female or male with parenting impulses
to have children without involving the genes of a stranger. Any
such child would be a later-born twin of the individual or
spouse cloned.
A son or daughter who is one
parent's later-born identical twin would probably share a
special compatibility with the parent cloned. The other spouse
would likely find those genetically-based traits shared by both
the child and his/her spouse most agreeable.
Lesbian couples could share parenting.
Each could bear her mate's later-born twin. Each resulting child
would be both the physical daughter of one and the later-born
twin of the other.
Male homosexuals, some of whom
harbor intense parenting urges, could – with much greater
difficulty and expense--have later-born twin sons using paid
surrogate mothers.
Women, many of whom choose to be
single parents, could have their own eggs fertilized by
insertion of one of their own cells and thereby bear daughters
who will likewise be later-born identical twins.
The resulting close and
understanding relationships between them could be particularly
binding. A daughter-mother twin might find traditional
heterosexual courtship unappealing compared to life with mother.
She might decide to continue living
at home with mom, bear a third generation twin through cloning
and share rearing with her mother. Such shared parenting is
common among single parents and those who have divorced.
The only difference would be that,
for the first time in human mammalian history, we'd actually
have three generations constituting same-sex families.
Multiple cloning, which is still a
"politically incorrect" minefield even among those few
enlightened voices speaking up for human cloning, will occur.
However, they will be infrequent.
The fertility clinic in California
which offered Nobel Laureate sperm donors found that very few
people were interested.
Human beings want their own children
– children genetically related to themselves. This preference
is so strong that infertile couples spend thousands of dollars
per try, sometimes squandering a hundred thousand dollars
financing IVF and other efforts that ultimately help only one
out of four couples regardless of the number of repeated
attempts and expenses involved.
Today's popularized science fiction
fantasy foresees mad dictators enslaving hundreds or thousands
of unwilling female subjects to bear later-born twins of himself
–or an army of supermen. "Real life" scenarios will
be both more humane and democratic.
The closest example of an
acceptable (almost popular) circumstance validating human
cloning today involves replacing a lost child through cloning a
later-born twin. In my opinion, this is one of a very few
extreme circumstances where cloning opponents hypothesized fears
that "compromised identity problems" would plague
"any" child conceived through cloning might actually
be applicable.
Some parents may be so pleased with
one child, and unhappy with their other(s), they might chose to
have one or more later-born twins of their favorite.
Multiple cloning might occur on a
larger scale, producing a dozen or a hundred later-born twins of
a widely admired genius like Albert Einstein or Bertrand
Russell, a talented musician like Beethoven or John Lennon, a
creative master of writing or cinema like Vladimir Nabokov or
Steven Spielberg.
Cloning technology could be abused
by cultists like Waco's Branch Davidian leader David Koresh.
Koresh forbade all sex, even between married couples, in his
150-member compound.
All female members, including
13-year-old virgins, were only allowed to have sexual
intercourse with Koresh. Many of the children consumed in flames
with him were sired by him.
Multiple cloning, something I alone
among today's cloning champions advocate, would create
interesting and positive new relationships in our social
culture.
Ten, twenty or a hundred identical
twins, each a unique individual human being—some just infants,
others still teenagers and some mature adults—would all share
the same genotype.
Genetics, while not the sole definer
of individual personality and physical health, has been found to
shape color preferences, traits (shyness currently being the
most recognized 'inheritable' one) as well as verbal,
intellectual and artistic abilities.
Multiple twins, despite their
disparate nurturing and experiential backgrounds, would share a
special ability to understand one another and a greatly enhanced
capacity to communicate with one another.
They would comprise a type of
"genetic family clan." Even if they were scattered
across the continent, even around the globe, they would seek
each other out. Quite possibly some groups would have an annual
clan-family get together.
Should one of the clan twins become
orphaned through the tragic loss of the adult parents, their
clan-family would be an invaluable resource for adoption and
support.
Each of the four statements listed
under Human Cloning: A Promising Cornucopia
deserve book length exploration. This brief focus on how
"human cloning will transform family life and create new
forms of social relationships" speaks for itself. Stay
tuned for provocative examinations of the next three points.
Randolfe Wicker founded New York's Clone Rights United Front,
the world's first activist organization championing cloning as
the reproductive right of every human being, just days after
Dolly's appearance in February, 1997. He has defended human
cloning, testifying before both national and state congressional
committees. He also serves on the board of Atlanta's Human Cloning Foundation.
|
[Respond
to this article] |