The 2000's had a CLONE OBSESSION (...it got weird)
The 2000's had a CLONE OBSESSION (...it got weird) - YouTube
Transcripts:
Did you know back in the 2000s there was a huge debate about human cloning? >> We're talking about scientists creating human embryos for the purpose of exploiting them and destroying them. And there is no scientific evidence today that this is justifiable. >> Did you know there's no federal ban on human cloning in the United States? >> Strictly speaking, it would be legal to clone me, for example, tomorrow.
They're also making fake embryos for spare parts. >> But a brave new world where children are bred for spare parts >> and human animal hybrids for research. >> Dr. Zavos also reveals he's produced animal human hybrid. >> In this series, we're going to get into the most incredible cloning, conspiracy theories, and scientific advancements.
Now, y'all can watch these all in order. You can watch them out of order, but at the end of the series, we are going to put out the entire cloning series as one mega video, the mega series video. So, in this series, I'm going to cover the recent past, the present, current status of things, and how it might even get more interesting in the future.
>> Very, very high probability that the baby's going to be seriously abnormal. is just completely morally unjustifiable. >> Please do not send any hate or honestly comments of any kind to anyone mentioned in this video on behalf of me or yourself. Purpose of this video is to give my commentary and opinion on matters of public concern. Thank you.
We got to talk about how the 2000s was obsessed with cloning. So, in the previous video in this series, we talked a little bit about how the celebrities are out here cloning their dogs out in the open. Okay? And then we talked a little bit about how they are also now cloning primates. But before we get into the whole what are they doing next and what are they doing now, I need to rewind it, rewind a little bit and just remind y'all and ask y'all if you remember how obsessed.
Like for example, the Disney Channel and like the kids channels and things were with cloning cuz I did not remember. I figured since we're going into the past anyway, we might as well go all the way back to 1818. And again, my god, all roads leads to I'm going to finally one day drop my Lord Cornberry video.
Put Lord Cornberry somewhere if y'all want me to finally drop that soon. I'm I'm nervous. this. I'm going to put all the work my It's going to be my wife's work. This Lord Cornberry. But anyway, yes, Dr. Jackekal and Mr. Hyde does go right back to the Hyde family. Yep. The cornberries. And we're going to talk about Frankenstein.
Okay. So, this book originally was written. Is this Mary Shelly? So, she um originally wrote this book. It came out. It was published in 1818. And they've been obsessed with Frankenstein ever since. And like what is Frankenstein? It is a hybrid chopped, hacked, whacked together humanoid humongulus that is made from the most supposedly beautiful attributes of humans.
But then when you put the thing all together, it was the monster and also very importantly a mean degenerate monster. It wasn't a creature of high moral standards, ethics, or even intelligence. It was something wrong with it. All right, that's the book canonically. Okay. And then recently in this like this month or last month, they just came out with a Netflix series about Frankenstein or a movie.
Was it? It might be a movie. Stop it. It's Guermo. >> Yeah, >> y'all remember him? Remember him? What was it? Oh, this. Y'all remember him? That guy who made that movie made this Frankenstein thing on Netflix. And why does it say only monsters play God? We have to put in like a zoinks. Zoinks. Only monsters play God.
See, they telling you. They tell they always have to tell you what they're doing. >> Okay. Anyway, so yeah. Oh my god, what is that grotesque picture? So, we're going to fast forward like a hundred something years. We have the Brave New World situation. And I don't know if y'all ever had to read this Brave New World.
I definitely had to read it in college. I don't remember nothing about it. I completely have amnesia. They must have fractled me. I definitely had that book with that type with that swirl on it, but I don't Maybe I didn't read it. That doesn't seem like me. I was reading my reading assignments for the most part. Maybe I didn't read it.
Maybe one of my friends had it or something, but I've seen this. Anyway, so in The Brave New World, cloning is used to massroduce people through the Bokanavski process where one egg is split into 96 identical embryos. It does sound like a cool like sci-fi basis of a show or a movie or a book, but girl, I didn't know that Aldis Huxley wrote this.
Like I had forgotten. Was he a cornberry? A habsburg? A Rothschild? A Roth? Huxley? He was a Huxley. These cloned embryos grow into 96 identical people who are trained for a specific role, helping the world state maintain a steady supply of workers. I got to go. I'm telling y'all, I'm haunting everybody if y'all don'tcremate me instantly, like within a few days. Anyway, okay.
So, this one we all probably have heard about. You may be familiar with Dolly the Sheep. I was about 5 years old when this happened. I was six years old. So like, and I'm 35 now. Okay, so that's 20 years ago. 30 years ago. Anyway, okay. So there's this sheep right here. Allegedly, apparently this was a clone, a clone sheep.
But the birth of Dolly the sheep was kept under wraps until the Roslin Institute published its research paper. >> The few at Roslin who knew what made Dolly so special were sworn to secrecy. >> We knew it was going to be a big story. We were going to get a lot of media scrutiny and the top journals will not publish papers about things which have already been publicized.
>> They managed to keep Dolly under wraps from July until February. Then just days before the news was set to be released. >> Somewhere or other there was a leak and because it was published in the Sunday paper you know the thing blew. >> Her birth was announced February 22nd 022297. A brave new world has arrived with the debut of Dolly, a seven-month-old lamb.
>> And the world's press descended on Roslin to meet the now famous sheep. Her sudden appearance sparked a media frenzy and debate around the ethics of CL cuz they're like, "Okay, Shoot. Beep." It worked. If this is real and true, it worked. And if they could do, I mean, everybody was thinking it.
What's to stop them from doing it to Marilyn Manson or me or you? What sensationalized it was that people began to say, "Well, could we do this with humans?" And people tended to assume that this would happen. Cloning a human being is closer than almost anyone had even imagined. >> Now, it seems that one day scientists could take a single cell from a more sophisticated creature, say like me, pull out my DNA, stick it in a new cell, plant the cell in a womb, and 9 months later, out would come a genetic copy of me, a clone. People like, "Hold on. You
That's a clone. She" And a lot of people like denied it. They were like, "That there's no way. That's just a hoax. They just want more funding." I don't know. I wasn't there. Okay. Um I definitely remember seeing it. Like I remember being in the grocery store and seeing like Dolly the sheep like on the front of like, you know, the the National Inquirer or the whatever you know those crazy those like really actually crazy tabloids were.
But it was like okay, but they really did clone the sheep apparently. Dolly. And so after the whole Dolly the sheep news broke. That was 1996, 1997 when that was going on. Pop culture exploded. They were obsessed with clones instantaneously. Cloning became a huge topic in Hollywood in movies and especially movies for kids. For example, the first Pokemon movie.
>> Pokemon the first. >> Why does roads end up leading back to Pokemon movie now ever since we talked about it? Is this the third or fourth time the Pokemon movie the first Pokemon movie? We talked about Dream Street. We talked about a Lou Pearlman Pokemon movie album with Britney freaking Spears.
Maybe a coincidence. What about in 2000? A couple years later. Disney Channel original movie, The Other Me. Now, I had completely forgotten this existed. I did not remember this movie in the slightest, but now that I'm looking at it, I'm like, "Oh, yeah. I definitely watched that." This is a Disney Channel original movie about a teenager, one of them Lawrence brothers who maybe them's cloned, who accidentally clones himself as a genius and ends up using the clone to pass school.
Okay. Um, anyway, then there was this other movie that same year, The Sixth Day. Is this Arnold Schwarzenegger? Yeah, the film is set in the near future when cloning is accepted for animals but illegal for humans. So, by the time they finally make it illegal for humans, cuz it ain't yet, but we'll talk about more of that later.
>> Supreme Court upheld the laws against human cloning. >> So, for example, each mall contains a store named Repet Repet that will clone your dead pet right down to its ability to notice you. Well, they haven't gotten there yet. It must be in the future. If you missed the last video, you need to check it out.
>> You save your soul, man. God doesn't want you to go in there. >> Don't go in there, man. >> And the god shouldn't have killed my dog. >> Atheist, >> stop the cloning. Say no to repet. >> We can clone your four-legged loved one in just a few short hours. How can we do it? It all begins with the growing of blanks.
Animal drones stripped of all characteristic DNA in embriionic tanks at the Repet factory. In the finalstage, using Repet's patented cerebral concording process, all of your pets thoughts, memories, and instincts are painlessly transplanted via the optic nerve. I suppose the clones have no soul, but they're dangerous. >> Clone pets are every bit as safe as real pets. Plus, they're insured.
>> But if it is so safe, then why is it against the law to clone human beings? Because the human brain is much too complicated to sing for. Now, you remember that experiment they did, right? Yes. Well, that's why that didn't work. Then there's also in the movie a black market in human cloning whereby illicit cloners can do a simple eye scan of a dead person and sing cord their entire personality.
What in the minority report Tom Cruz Scientology hell is this movie? I don't think I ever heard of the sixth day either. And that's another kind of religious like godish reference cuz like on the sixth day he created the blah blah blah blah blah blah. On the seventh day he rested. Anyway, the next year, of course, who could forget? How could we make a video without mentioning Spy Kids, the movie? Okay, Spy Kids.
There's all the remember there's like a clone army of kids, two siblings whose parents are in, for all intents and purposes, the CIA, um, OSS, which is the original name of the CIA. Like, the OSS got shut down the next year the CIA open. So, it is the CIA and their parents are spies for it. They're supposedly secret agents and the kids have to go rescue the parents who are spies from a madman that is creating clones of children to take over the world.
And they're like super they're like super soldier clones. They're like really strong and they can fly and they can do crazy stuff and they have they're robotic and they have like you know um stamina for a long time and things like that. And the guy he's not only making clones exact replicas of children. He's making these weird hybrids with these creatures and humans.
So he'll take like a a person from DC, like a political pundit, and they he will get them kidnapped and bring them to this island and then hybrid them with some weird thing and twist them. You you know the foolies, you remember. So the kids eventually then get initiated into the society of spies themselves and they do end up battling the army of degenerated clones and saving their family.
And I do think that they did hide they did hide the truth in these movies because guess what? Can't no clone compare. Sorry to tell you. Anyway, um, so the next year we had Star Wars Attack of the Clones, right? I mean, like this is just clone clone clone clone clone. Dolly the sheep comes out and it's clone clone city.
Okay, we got Attack of the Clones. We got the Clone Wars eventually comes out, which is a Star Wars animated series. And then, of course, the island. I just found out about the island, but it's apparently a 2005 movie. I got to watch this thing. It's Michael Bay who did Transformers.
A Michael Bay film about a governmentf funded facility that grows clone humans for wealthy sponsors. Why do all the clone movies have to do with like government stuff, dude? So why why in this movie were they cloning things or why did they have clones or what? Like why why did they need a government funded wealthy sponsor clone facility? Well, it was for many reasons.
One of them was to be surrogates to be surrogate mothers incubators. It's kind of like those dogs we talked about in real life in the last video. Um, also organ harvesting. It's like we need an extra spleen. We need extra liver. Somebody drank too much. We got to get a liver. Let's just grow one in a clone. So, they grow whole entire clone.
Just cut the cut the spleen out. This is a fiction movie, y'all. Okay. So, there's a movie, but it was in 2005. Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the next generation of sites. An organic frame engineered directly into adulthood to match the client's age. You're looking at stage one of its development. Within 12 months, it will be harvest ready, providing a carrier for your baby.
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It's a product, ladies and gentlemen, in every way that matters. I definitely think that the pop culture obsession, you know, especially starting in about 1998 all the way through 1997 all the way through really kind of today. I mean, even like in some ways like I robot is sort of like that. And we'll talk a little bit more about like AI clones and robot clones and things like that and how you know that'll be in a later video.
But as far as this episode in the series, I just want to point out that I think that the life imitates art imitates life imitates art thing definitely ends up proving to be true because whenever you shove things out, especially to kids who Imean we didn't have all this Netflix and all this this that. There was three channels most of us were watching or allowed to watch that was like Nickelodeon, Disney, and like maybe Cartoon Network and maybe a few other one Saturday morning PBS, whatever.
So it's like you know little kids grow up to be scientists and they learn how to do things with skin cells. All right. So I I'm just going to say I think that the pop culture obsession with clones in the 2000s has led us to where we are today, which we will talk about in a later video. So, these first two videos of the series have really probably led I know they definitely learning this stuff led me to ask this question and maybe it led you to ask this question as well.
Okay, all that's fine and good. They were obsessed with clones. They were obsessed with human clonings. And maybe they can clone a dog and maybe they can clone a monkey. But let's not get all ahead of ourselves. Can they even clone a human? Has it ever even been done? Is it allowed? These are questions we're going to get into in the next episode of this series.
That's all I really had for this one. In the meantime, facts ain't defamation. Neither are opinions. me. Goodbye.
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