 |
 |
|
|
| |
| |
| |
|
|
| Articles about Cloned |
| Sony Ericsson XPERIA X1 cloned | | 2008-07-05 18:07:26 | | And I was wondering when we'll see the first Sony Ericsson XPERIA X1 clone. It's here, and it has quite decent specs, and bit rougher (uglier) lines than the original device. The fake X1 sports the full QWERTY keyboard, 5 megapixel camera, 3-inch touchscreen that can display 16 million colors, and a built-in TV tuner. [...]... | | By: Free Shared Mobile | | |
| | | Sheep Have Been Cloned...Are Humans Next | | 2008-04-06 10:54:00 | | Sheep Have Been Cloned...Are Humans Next?Do you enjoy watching forensic science shows like CSI? Are you interested in genetics and the intricacies of DNA? Genetic engineering that deals with the human genome and DNA has become a hot bed for discussion in recent years. Advancements in forensic science have helped law enforcement to nab criminals and solve previous “cold” cases. Understanding the components of the human body and human nature is valuable information that is a welcome notion of safety for most.While many would agree that using DNA as evidence is a good idea, manipulating human genetics is another issue. Cloning has surfaced as a debate with moral and ethical implications. Sheep have been cloned. One rationale for cloning animals was to provide more food to starving nations. Is cloning safe? Is creating a replica of an animal ethical? What are the long term effects of cloning?Many people wonder if cloning humans will come next. Will it be a like a horrible old science f... | | By: Onlinelar | | |
|
|
|
| FDA Claims Cloned Animals Safe to Eat | | 2008-01-17 21:35:00 | | Is it just me, or does the title to this article seem disturbing to you? A little bizarre? Unappetizing?The photo is of Dolly, a stuffed replica of the first cloned animal in the world. Yummy! (Ick.)As a self proclaimed "greenie", I have been delving into facts about the food we eat, and the more I learn, the more I become repulsed, especially by raw meat. Let alone cloned meat! Can you imagine going to Morton's of Chicago, the famous steak house, and they bring over the presentation cart, and they offer you the Clone Rib eye?On January 16Th, the papers reported that the FDA declared cloned animals and their progeny safe to eat, and now they can make their way to a supermarket near you. I don't have any scientific evidence to support that drinking milk from a cloned cow or eating it will harm us in any way. But it seems to me that whenever the human race tries to take short cuts from natural evolution, things go awry. Didn't Europe ban genetically engineered crops? OK so cloned veggies are bad but live animals? No problem!The question is now, will they even label it? How will we know what we are eating? It seems to me that corporate America is so incredibly greedy that they would feed us anything for a buck. If you go to the market and pick up one of the most highly recognized food brands, you can see that the ingredients in the products are totally artificial and very bad for you, but they are used simply because they are cheap and us fat Americans will eat anything that tastes good.What are the implications to our health and to our environment? The health piece is up for debate, and environmentally, doesn't cloning mean more cows and sheep and pigs, faster and faster? We know that cow poop produces enough methane to help climate change occur nicely, so why more? How many more do we need? Has demand increased dramatically or something?But is cloning immoral too? If God didn't create it, who cares! We can make it ourselves? How do we know this won't lead to so... | | By: I Dream of Greenie | | |
| | Cloned Animals Meat safe | | 2008-01-16 12:33:00 | | Meat and milk from cloned animals is as safe as that from their counterparts bred the old-fashioned way, the Food and Drug Administration said Tuesday — but sales still won’t begin right away.The decision removes the last big U.S. regulatory hurdle to marketing products from cloned livestock, and puts the FDA in concert with recent safety assessments from European food regulators and several other nations.“Meat and milk from cattle, swine and goat clones are as safe as food we eat every day,” said Dr. Stephen Sundloff, FDA’s food safety chief.... | | By: Health201concious | | |
| | FDA Approves Cloned Food: Or Did They? | | 2008-01-15 10:55:00 | | I'll try to keep this one as centrist as possible and just give my thoughts, both pro and con on the subject and let the readers decide. I just caught a snippet about this news story this morning, and figured it may require at least a little looking into. CNN's few second clip merely mentioned that the FDA has approved cloned food products, but they won't be seen in stores for at least another year or two.Doesn't really say much does it, so it was necessary to find and read the actual article on the CNN.com site (read it HERE) to see what all the hub-bub was about. As it turns out, the FDA has NOT given the green light for immediate full scale production and distribution of a mass-cloned-cow industry. A 300 page report is being compiled regarding the subject, and the news flash was based on the paltry eleven pages thus far completed.Dr. Stephen Sundlof, the FDA's veterinary medicine chief has only mentioned that, "There's no evidence that meat or milk derived from healthy cloned farm animals can harm people, the Food and Drug Administration says in its first attempt at assessing questions about the emerging technology." Ah, so they are only in the initial stage of assessing questions about it. Good to know. What they are actually looking at for the moment is the PUBLIC reaction to the impact cloning may have on the food supply BEFORE moving any farther forward. As mentioned in many cases prior to this, they're looking at the "Yuck factor."But read the full CNN article HERE and educate yourself before judging this ideal. There are a few other links also available. Some are older, some recent. MSNBC, WashingtonPost, Yahoo, BBCNews, CBSNews.Now for my thoughts about it. Well, about the thought of using cloned foods that is. I do see some positive outcomes from the possibility of cloned foods.Take for instance 3rd world nations. We see quite often, many impoverished lands and the many peoples of them dying from starvation. With exception to India and a handful of... | | By: Hoopy Frood Dude | | |
|
|
|
| MSNBC.com: Monkey Embryos Cloned | | 2007-11-14 00:34:41 | | Source: MSNBC.com: Monkey embryos cloned, scientists say
Humanity is one step closer to human cloning. Recently, some researches in that state of Oregon claim to have successfully cloned monkey embryos and extracted stem cells. This is supposed to pave the way for the procedure to be done in humans.
This still does not make the controversy go [...]... | | By: JeffreyMD | | |
| | Tell FDA: No Food From Cloned Animals | | 2007-04-27 23:45:00 | | Tell FDA: No Food From Cloned Animals!The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has completed its review of food from animal clones and FDA regulators say that the agency will likely approve the sale of cloned foods this year.FDA’s action flies in the face of widespread scientific concern about the risks of food from clones, and ignores the animal cruelty and troubling ethical concerns that the cloning process brings. What's worse, FDA indicates that it will not require labeling on cloned food, so consumers will have no way to avoid these experimental foods. ... | | By: Full Time Income From Home | | |
|
|
| |
 |
|
| |
| |
|
 |