I was watching the news today. It seems that the US government has decided that after years of research the meat (as well as eggs, milk ect) from cloned animals is every bit as safe as that from non-cloned animals.
The science behind the report (from what I was able to read) seems pretty sound. It also can definitely make things easier/more efficient for food producers.
Example: Farmer Brown has a very high producing cow. This cow can produce a lot of high quality milk, is very healthy and has no apparent predispositions to infection. The farmer wants more cows like this one, but breeding is imperfect. He has to find a good bull to mate her with and keep the breed stock good. He doesn't want to overbreed the line and cause problems, but he also wants to maintain the desired qualities.
Now it's simpler. Get the equation right once and make copies.
I see no problem with this, for the health of the consumer. It may open the ideas of whether it is ethical to put animals through such things, given the chances of birth defects or bad embryos. It's also possible that DNA problems could reduce life span. But if you really hate being cruel to animals, then there are much bigger issues.
Hence: I'd rather keep this thread to the "I eat meat, but I would/would not eat this" as opposed to the "This is one example of why meat is evil"
Needless to say, cloning won't make anyone eat meat who wouldn't otherwise
Story:
http://www.playfuls.com/news_003584_Cloned_Meat_OK_To_Eat_FDA_Scientists_Say.html
The science behind the report (from what I was able to read) seems pretty sound. It also can definitely make things easier/more efficient for food producers.
Example: Farmer Brown has a very high producing cow. This cow can produce a lot of high quality milk, is very healthy and has no apparent predispositions to infection. The farmer wants more cows like this one, but breeding is imperfect. He has to find a good bull to mate her with and keep the breed stock good. He doesn't want to overbreed the line and cause problems, but he also wants to maintain the desired qualities.
Now it's simpler. Get the equation right once and make copies.
I see no problem with this, for the health of the consumer. It may open the ideas of whether it is ethical to put animals through such things, given the chances of birth defects or bad embryos. It's also possible that DNA problems could reduce life span. But if you really hate being cruel to animals, then there are much bigger issues.
Hence: I'd rather keep this thread to the "I eat meat, but I would/would not eat this" as opposed to the "This is one example of why meat is evil"
Needless to say, cloning won't make anyone eat meat who wouldn't otherwise
Story:
http://www.playfuls.com/news_003584_Cloned_Meat_OK_To_Eat_FDA_Scientists_Say.html
