.

Monday, March 18, 2019

Current State Laws on Human Cloning :: Argumentative Persuasive Topics

Current State Laws on tenderity Cloning   California Cal. Health & Safety Code, 24185 to 24189. Bans efforts to create a gaye being by utilizing bodied cell nuclear manoeuvre for the purpose of, or to implant, the forceing product to initiate a pregnancy that could result in the birth of a human being. Ban is to expire January 1, 2003 unless all-encompassing by legislature.     Louisiana La. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 40 1299.36 to 1299.36.6. Forbids any person to clone or look for to clone a human being, and forbids a health eagerness or agency to allow any individual to clone or attempt to clone a human being in a facility owned or operated by the health facility or agency. Clone is defined as in California law, to involve an invention to initiate a pregnancy. However, a separate state law prohibits intentionally destroying a viable fertilized ovum, and requires that no in vitro fertilized human ovum will be farmed or cultured solely for research purposes or any new(prenominal) purposes. La. Rev. Stat. Ann. tit. 9, 129, 122. Whether this prohibits use of cloned embryos for research depends on how courts will interpret the phrase fertilized human ovum.     Michigan Mich. Comp. Laws 333.16274, 333.16275, 750.430a. Forbids any individual to engage in or attempt to engage in human re-create, applying civil penalties (up to a $10 gazillion fine) and criminal penalties ($10 million fine and up to ten days in prison). Human cloning means the use of human corporate cell nuclear transfer technology to produce a human embryo. 333.16274(5). This law clearly forbids creating a cloned human embryo for any purpose, including research. A separate state law also forbids using a rest human embryo for nontherapeutic research if... the research substantially jeopardizes the life or health of the embryo... Performing such research is a felony. 333.2685 (1), 333.2691.     Rhode Island R.I. Gen. Laws 23-16.4-2 to 23-16.4-4. Bans use o f somatic cell nuclear transfer for the purpose of initiating or attempting to initiate a human pregnancy, as well as the creation of genetically superposable human beings by dividing a blastocyst, zygote, or embryo. The law seems to ban cloning by nuclear transfer only if done to initiate a pregnancy. However, a separate law prohibits the use of any live human fetus, whether before or after expulsion from its m others womb, for scientific, laboratory research, or other kind of experimentation.

No comments:

Post a Comment