Also, critics of cloning state that scientifically "manufacturing" a child will be like playing the role of god and that cloning undermines the basic elements of a loving and nurturing family and also as accepting each child as an unique individual. In addition, another proposed problem with cloning is that it could be manipulated and used to create an army of people for causing destruction or for slavery. E.V. Kontorovich, a professor of molecular biology from New York, writes, "Cloning would take the humanity out of human reproduction, and in doing so rob our spirits of something that cannot be replaced artificially" (99). He contends cloning is inhumane and there are no good reasons why it should be performed on humans. The proposed medical cloning uses for cloning are in fact unethical as they include the harvesting of organs from clones human fetuses. Although he believes cloning as a means of overcoming infertility is little better, he writes, "The relationship between the parent and his or her cloned child would be very ambiguous, and the clone might be viewed as a commodity that was made rather than a person who was born"
Also, critics of cloning state that scientifically "manufacturing" a child will be like playing the role of god and that cloning undermines the basic elements of a loving and nurturing family and also as accepting each child as an unique individual. In addition, another proposed problem with cloning is that it could be manipulated and used to create an army of people for causing destruction or for slavery. E.V. Kontorovich, a professor of molecular biology from New York, writes, "Cloning would take the humanity out of human reproduction, and in doing so rob our spirits of something that cannot be replaced artificially" (99). He contends cloning is inhumane and there are no good reasons why it should be performed on humans. The proposed medical cloning uses for cloning are in fact unethical as they include the harvesting of organs from clones human fetuses. Although he believes cloning as a means of overcoming infertility is little better, he writes, "The relationship between the parent and his or her cloned child would be very ambiguous, and the clone might be viewed as a commodity that was made rather than a person who was born"