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Persuasive Essay On Cloning Animals

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Cloning Your dog dies, and your mom offers to get you a new one, but you don't want a new dog, you don't want a new dog like your old dog, you want your old dog. Cloning isn't the right answer, it's expensive, the clones are different from the original, and cloning doesn't always go the way scientists want it to. Cloning is extremely expensive. It costs "$15,000 for dog cloning services" to "as little as $30,000," but "50,000 and up seems to be more common"(Davis). For some it can cost "$20,000" for cloned animals (Michel). Rider Charmayne James had her horse Scamper cloned. It cost "$15,000" to clone scamper (Church). "Forking over the staggering $155,000 it can cost to clone an animal" may not be in your budget (Lewis 23). …show more content…

Robert Lanza said "each cloned animal has its own unique personality" (Davis). The horse Scamper is the clone of the deceased Clayton, "Clayton has a splash of white on his face that Scamper lacks" (Church). Likewise, "McKinney's Booger was a rescue dog; she wouldn't have been able to replicate those early months that turned him into the dog he was" (Davis). Sandra and Ralph Fisher "owned a bull named Chance, an unusually gentle animal who posed for photos with kids. When Chance died, the Fishers were devastated. So they had him cloned, the second Chance was born. Second Chance did not have the same mild disposition. In fact, he had a vicious streak. Second Chance attacked Ralph twice – almost killing him" (Lewis …show more content…

That's because an animal's temperament is determined not only by genes, but also by its life experiences" (Lewis 23). "Even though dozens of pet owners have ordered clones, polls show that most Americans think pet cloning is wrong" (Lewis 23). If you are really devastated about losing a pet "pet taxidermy is surprisingly popular. It's far cheaper and less controversial than cloning" (Lewis 23). There is also the option of adopting a pet from a shelter. There are "thousands of shelters overflowing with dog and cats in need of homes" (Lewis 23). "Sometimes dogs used in scientific research are sold for dog meat instead of being euthanized" (Davis). After having her dog cloned "McKinney toured the facilities at SNU, she told Woestendiek that she was horrified by what she saw, including dogs, both sick, and unhealthy, in tiny cages. She said one of her puppies surrogates was skin and bones and the other one didn't produce enough milk, so they "sent her back""

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