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About cloning by Jay Adwaita Maharaja

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Can they clone a human being?

They can. They will. They may already have.

Does a clone have a soul?

Yes. A clone has consciousness, and consciousness means soul.

How does the soul enter the cloned body?

No problem. It already happens in nature, with identical twins. One cell

splits into two bodies, and by Krsna's arrangement a soul enters both.

Is there any history of cloning in the Vedic scriptures?

Yes, in Srimad-Bhagavatam. When the goddess Diti was pregnant, Lord Indra by

mystic power entered her womb to kill the expected child. He cut the child

to pieces -- but each piece, to his surprise, became a child. These children

became known as the forty-nine Maruts. (An early lesson to cloners: Once you

start slicing, you may not always end up with what you set out for.)

Will cloning be good for humanity?

Sometimes good, sometimes bad, always a waste of time. Cloning is but

another attempt to coax nature into giving us a better life on earth, a life

more like what we want.

But nature, by design, acts in such a way that we always get precisely what

we deserve: a mixture of happiness and distress brought about, measure for

measure, by our own karma. No matter what you do, you can't squeeze a better

life out of it.

Real advancement of civilization lies not in tinkering with nature, vainly

trying to make a better world, but in moving forward in self-realization and

getting out of the material world altogether. If we're not doing that, we're

simply wasting our time.

But as long as we're here, can't cloning bring about some good?

Some good, perhaps. But here's a secret of nature: Whenever we try to

exploit her, get more, make things better, she always retaliates. Result:

More comfort at the start, more trouble later down the line. It's "the

rubber-band effect": It always snaps back on you.

As stated in Srimad-Bhagavatam (7.9.17), duhkhausadham tad api duhkham

atad-dhiyaham: As long as we're in material consciousness, whatever we do to

remedy our troubles just makes our troubles worse.

With the comfort of the car comes the poison of exhaust; with the efficiency

of nuclear power plants, disasters like in Chernobyl.

In the long run, will cloning make for a better world? No. As usual, worse.

What kind of karma must you have to become a clone?

Bad. Good or bad, karma's all bad, because karma means repeated birth and

death.

Apart from that, precisely what kind of karma must you have? The ins and

outs of karma are subtle, too subtle to consistently predict. The cell

biologists at the Roslin Institute who cloned Dolly the sheep might come

back in their next lives as sheep, perhaps cloned ones, bleating a truly

excellent "baa baa" and wearing superior coats of wool.

What will cloning mean for bioethics?

It'll mean a mess. The pattern is becoming familiar: Science charges ahead,

and human life becomes more vexatious, more dangerous, and further off from

spiritual realization.

What does the Hare Krsna movement advise?

Live simply, chant Hare Krsna, get out of this material world, and go back

home, back to Godhead.

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