Oct 30th, 2009 | survey

Should scientists be allowed to create parentless children?





72 votes, 178 views , 4 comments
 
 

 
Add your comment
Update your status line


Comments (4)
Drowlord
(Reply)
Texas, United States

posted Nov 10th, 2009 at 11:14 CST

Seems like there are plenty of people in the world already, without resorting to this type of activity.

Animedude202
(Reply)
Australia

posted Nov 2nd, 2009 at 15:54 CST

thats just wrong in equality

Xenosilvano
(Reply)
Portugal

posted Oct 31st, 2009 at 09:16 CDT

what the hell? Children who don't have parents end up all weird when they grow up.

An8bitkid
(Reply)
Indiana, United States

posted Oct 30th, 2009 at 04:36 CDT

"As you know, every man contains a homonculus baby within his seed of life that he is to implant into his wife for incubation during times of marital relations. This process has occurred since the dawn of man 6,000 years ago and every single proper animal mammal on Earth, and now scientists have thrown it all away."      okay, lol'd and stopped reading right there. Luckily I heard this on the news and I must say... this question is so loaded. The question raises false flags, the intro tells you what to think, and the answer options are way too biased. =\   Regardless of all that, everything modern man does is unnatural. If you have a pet, it was selectively bred. The computer you're using is completely unnatural. The medicine you take likely doesn't occur naturally. But this is what seperates us from other animals... the fact that we understand nature and can manipulate it. And we're just a product of nature too, so all these things could be considered a natural course of events. Raising kids without parents is immoral, but nobody is suggesting that. Manipulating genes? That doesn't hurt anybody... it can only help.

 
Log in using your:

* Username
* Email address
* Password
 
Buddy icon
* Gender
     
* Birth date
Country
City
 (your vote will still count)
Embed Flash Widget
Embed Java Script Widget
Copy & paste the embed code to your site.