30MIN
Cloning has always been a popular topic in science fiction, but let's consider if it was a real thing. Would the universe fall into disorder, or would human society progress even further? Well, it brings me great sadness to say this to all the sci-fi geeks out there, but cloning should stay in fiction and there's logical proof to back it up. There's just too much to risk, and while not everyone's going to try and take over the universe there are always people with bad intentions, or possible unintentional mishaps may come from it. Even the writers who come up with and use cloning in their stories see it as a detrimental thing!
Of course, there are many useful ways we can utilise cloning, and some think that progresses in science and technology will be made with cloning. That's true, but, as I have stated, bringing cloning into the world would end in more evil than good. There will always be someone who will want to clone something harmful, or clone themselves to cause trouble.
Along with being too risky, there would also be the people not with harmful intentions-but who unintentionally cause trouble. Think about it-society would be thrown into disorder! There would always be debates on how to use cloning, anti-cloning organisations, people frightened of cloning and making irrational decisions and somehow or other(as previously mentioned) someone with bad intentions would come into the picture-and worse, others might support them or be forced to. Cloning would be out of the ordinary and go against the rules of the universe, meaning we would all be questioning ourselves, each other and ruining the peace and safety of a normal world.
And what is our proof, you may ask? While either side can't have their point proved by scientific information, the true origins of cloning side with the point that it is for the worse. Yes, the sci-fi writers even deem their invention evil. It doesn't take more than a peruse through their work to see that cloning is a tool almost always used by villains. If fictional villains would find it useful, then so would real-life ones. Clones are likely to cause trouble, and there are always technological mishaps and hiccups with cloning machines that always spiral out of control-much like they would in real life. If even skilled writers who can accurately portray how the modern universe would react to cloning deem it destructive, how could we use it?
Cloning, as you have seen, would ruin the harmony that our world functions in and would likely end in peril. Pure logic and looking at how things turn out in sci-fi proves this-but you would see the reason in it too, if you take a second to ponder. Would such an unpredictable, menacing tool be somehow helpful to our society? Tell me what you think.
*advice for next time=provide more examples, not repeat an idea, keep asking why?, expand on the 'causing trouble' idea e.g. people who cause trouble might build an army with clones/commit several crimes at once/
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