Dolly The Sheep Research Paper

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Pages: 3

Dolly, the first cloned farm animal, born in 1996, lived for a mere 6 years with serious health problems. She was the only successful cloned birth out of 277 attempts involving 13 surrogate mothers, living their whole life in a biomedical research laboratory. Does that sound ethical to you? Though there are some good aspects to the idea of cloning, most are substandard. Overall, the idea of cloning has a negative effect on our society, and is completely inhumane and not remotely ethical.

Biomedical research facilities test animals in unbelievable, immoral ways, that some may consider abusive. Currently, over 25 million animals such as mice, birds, chimpanzees, rats, and rabbits are used for experimentation in various departments of biomedical research facilities. (New England Anti-Vivisection Society, NEAVS ) These animals that are forced into experiments can suffer from being injected with diseases, poison, immobilization for long periods of time, continuous anesthetization, having to give birth several times, lack of food and water, and many more cruel acts. Most animals in these kinds of
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Though it took 277 attempts as well as 13 surrogate mothers, the procedure was successful. Dolly spent her whole life in a laboratory, forced to breed six times and died six years later in 2003 from severe arthritis and lung disease, living half the average lifespan of a sheep. What is ethical about an obvious, purposeful, high waste of animal embryos, knowing there would be a low chance of success, and then forcing Dolly to give birth repeatedly, and unwillingly? Dolly was treated as a experiment than an actual living being. Not only that, but being a clone, Dolly was highly subject to disease, which is why she lived such a short life, being held for experimentation in captivity. Dolly’s life is an accurate representation of how unethical the treatment of clones can