Three Geeks Chatting

Cloning, Genetic Mysteries, and Ethical Dilemmas: A Journey into the Unknown!

June 22, 2024 Nicholas, Stacey, Hanna Season 1 Episode 5
Cloning, Genetic Mysteries, and Ethical Dilemmas: A Journey into the Unknown!
Three Geeks Chatting
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Three Geeks Chatting
Cloning, Genetic Mysteries, and Ethical Dilemmas: A Journey into the Unknown!
Jun 22, 2024 Season 1 Episode 5
Nicholas, Stacey, Hanna

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Could cloning be the key to unlocking immortality, or does it tread too closely to playing god? Join us on this captivating journey as we unravel the mysteries of cloning, starting with an exploration of the genetic intricacies between identical twins and clones. From the groundbreaking techniques like embryo twinning and somatic cell nuclear transfer to the legendary tale of Dolly the sheep, we highlight the scientific milestones that have paved the way for modern cloning. This episode isn't just about the science; it's a deep dive into the ethical quandaries and future possibilities that cloning technology presents, making it a must-listen for curious minds and science buffs alike.

Ever heard of Clonade's bold claim of creating the first human clone named Eve? We navigate the murky waters of human cloning, including the controversial stories surrounding Clonade and enigmatic rapper Kid Boo's assertion of being a clone. Drawing parallels to dystopian narratives like "What Happened to Monday," we ponder the ethical and fantastical implications of cloning, from mythical creatures to real-world genetic experiments gone awry. Amidst the thought-provoking discussions, we keep things light-hearted with a playful debate on whether our co-host Nicholas might actually be a clone. Don't miss out on this engaging episode that effortlessly blends science, ethics, and a touch of humor!

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Send us a Text Message.

Could cloning be the key to unlocking immortality, or does it tread too closely to playing god? Join us on this captivating journey as we unravel the mysteries of cloning, starting with an exploration of the genetic intricacies between identical twins and clones. From the groundbreaking techniques like embryo twinning and somatic cell nuclear transfer to the legendary tale of Dolly the sheep, we highlight the scientific milestones that have paved the way for modern cloning. This episode isn't just about the science; it's a deep dive into the ethical quandaries and future possibilities that cloning technology presents, making it a must-listen for curious minds and science buffs alike.

Ever heard of Clonade's bold claim of creating the first human clone named Eve? We navigate the murky waters of human cloning, including the controversial stories surrounding Clonade and enigmatic rapper Kid Boo's assertion of being a clone. Drawing parallels to dystopian narratives like "What Happened to Monday," we ponder the ethical and fantastical implications of cloning, from mythical creatures to real-world genetic experiments gone awry. Amidst the thought-provoking discussions, we keep things light-hearted with a playful debate on whether our co-host Nicholas might actually be a clone. Don't miss out on this engaging episode that effortlessly blends science, ethics, and a touch of humor!

Speaker 1:

technically, I don't even have to do that anymore now I'm just doing it for fun. What's up everybody? Three geeks chatting here. I'm nicholas I'm stacy. I'm hannah and we have a very interesting episode for you today cloning. Got a question for you guys how close are twins to being clones?

Speaker 2:

I'm assuming you know the answer, so why don't you just tell us, Nick?

Speaker 1:

Because I want to hear what your guess is.

Speaker 3:

I would say probably pretty close.

Speaker 2:

I mean they're almost identical. Their genetics are identical, it's just they might have different things, like there's mirror twins which are one's left-handed and one's right-handed, which I do know a set of those.

Speaker 1:

I didn't even know those existed, to be honest.

Speaker 2:

Yeah they're called mirror twins. That's kind of cool. Then you have fraternal twins, which is, you know, one can be male and female, I know a set of those.

Speaker 1:

I know some of those.

Speaker 2:

I know some of those they have identical twins which obviously is identical and I don't know. They can have a little bit of a difference, because I knew a set of twins and the way you told them apart was one had a beauty mark. So I'm not entirely sure. I think that was technically identical but I'm not entirely sure. Just to be honest with you.

Speaker 3:

I'm not a twin.

Speaker 1:

I'm not a twin. I'm not entirely sure, just to be honest with you.

Speaker 2:

I'm not a twin. I'm not a twin.

Speaker 1:

I'm not a twin either. No, those are twins. Um, identical twins are almost the same thing as clones, as they share the same genes. So what is cloning? Do you guys know much about clones?

Speaker 2:

Just what I learned from Attack of the Clones.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

They are genetically modified. Well, those were to grow faster.

Speaker 1:

Genetically modified to grow faster.

Speaker 2:

That's what those were. On the Star Wars thing Normal twins don't do that.

Speaker 1:

I'm not talking about twins I'm what those were on the Star Wars thing Normal twins don't do that I'm not talking about twins.

Speaker 2:

I'm talking about clones. Clones, yeah, I don't know. Do they? Do they actually do that for things? I know there's people that have their pets cloned, but I don't know if they'd have the same exact personality.

Speaker 3:

They probably wouldn't.

Speaker 1:

I think that would go under the nurture versus nature, because those play a huge factor. So even then clones would be different. So clones are made from DNA of living creatures and they're inserted into carriers like bacteria or yeast. So this is essentially how clones are created. Um, but we're going to continue with. Cloning is done two ways embryo twinning, where the egg is split and reinserted into the mother, or somatic cell. Nuclear transfer, which is a big word that I'm really glad I typed up and didn't remember because I completely forgot that that was a word. It's taking the DNA of an animal and sticking it into an egg, making an embryo and then putting it back into the female. So these are the two ways cloning is done.

Speaker 1:

From my research, these come from. National Geographic is where I found all my information from. To cite my sources here now I will tell you this a lot of my source is National Geographic. But to make this even more fun is I found some sketchy sources about stories that I had heard in high school that actually made me want to do this episode, because I went and found articles that discussed these scientists that a lot of people have tried to debunk. But there's not a lot of information, and we're going to get to that later in the episode because I'm really excited for that one.

Speaker 2:

We're not getting into that puppy episode from that anime, are we?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so anyways. The first one's about putting dogs and humans together. No, we're not, that's splicing.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that's splicing.

Speaker 1:

And that's a completely different episode that we will get into later on when I pick another topic. That's like three topics away, though, because I already have my next topic and it's not splicing. Here's another question for you guys Do you guys know what the first animal cloned was? I want a sheep, a sheep and no. So this was back in 1996, which feels weird because this cloning is older than I am, which means I could be a clone theoretically.

Speaker 2:

You're not.

Speaker 1:

I know I'm not, although I look identical to my grandfather.

Speaker 2:

My dad looks identical to his grandfather. That's called genetics honey.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I know, but that is what cloning is.

Speaker 3:

It's playing with genetics 1996 was when this happened.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so we're going back to 1996. Hannah, you weren't born yet. I was a year away from being born.

Speaker 2:

I was nine.

Speaker 1:

And you were nine. The first animal to be cloned was 1996. And it was a sheep named Dolly. That's the sheep, Dolly the sheep, Dolly. That's the sheep Dolly the sheep. Since then they have cloned cows, cats, deer horses and rabbits. However, due to ethical reasons, they have not cloned humans. So people believe, Plus the amount of failures it takes for them to properly clone Dolly Dolly went through a whole bunch of failures.

Speaker 2:

It takes for them to properly clone dolly dolly went through a whole bunch of failures the reprogramming process that cells seem to go through during cloning is not perfect, and the embryos produced by nuclear transfer often show abnormal development. Making clone mammals was highly inefficient. In 1996, dolllly was the only lamb that survived to adulthood from 277 attempts.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so Dolly the sheep was the first out of 277 failed clones. What do you guys think cloning could branch off into?

Speaker 2:

order 66 for cloning?

Speaker 1:

I don't know what. Do you guys think cloning could actually branch off into the concept of taking these genes and reproducing them into the same uh, in this case the same sheep? Do you guys think that if cloning was successful I mean, we're looking at a 28-year-old project Do you guys think they still clone? Do you guys think they've cloned humans? I mean, I really want to know your guys' thoughts on this. I don't think they would clone humans?

Speaker 2:

You do not think they still clone? Do you guys think they've cloned humans?

Speaker 1:

I mean, I really want to know your guys' thoughts on this. I don't think they would clone humans.

Speaker 2:

You do not think they would clone humans, not until, like you said, they wouldn't get perfect because of ethical reasons.

Speaker 1:

I don't think scientists care about ethical reasons.

Speaker 2:

I mean, there's probably evil scientists out there.

Speaker 1:

I don't know what are your thoughts, anna, and I want to hear your thoughts we watch geek movies.

Speaker 3:

There's evil scientists, you know I would think, maybe over time and who's to say that someone's not tried and just haven't failed to clone somebody? Could there be someone cloned right now? I don know, but I could see someone maybe trying over time.

Speaker 1:

I am so glad you brought that up, hannah, because let me tell you Straight as notes no. Let me tell you about Clonade, clonade, clonade From the Bahamas. Gosh, I thought that guy from the Kool-Aid commercials Claw-nade From the Bahamas.

Speaker 2:

Gosh, I thought that guy from the Kool-Aid commercials was going to come out, so December 27th 2002, claw-nade moved to the Bahamas where he cloned the first baby.

Speaker 1:

The Bahamas where he cloned the first baby. Now, this is where my notes are not from the most credible sources. I'm gonna tell you this right now. However, I have seen multiple articles about this guy since high school and he has claimed to have started cloning to clone the first baby, and he named this baby Eve Kid. You not?

Speaker 3:

It's a girl.

Speaker 1:

By 2004, he claimed to have cloned 14 humans. This man has a website still that is severely outdated, but I googled his website.

Speaker 3:

Is it from the movie what Happened on Monday? Have you heard of that movie?

Speaker 1:

I've not heard of that movie.

Speaker 3:

It's like people are named Monday, tuesday, wednesday, thursday, friday, saturday and, I think, sunday and that person can only go out that day. Oh, and then something happens the Monday and she goes missing. But the people are identical.

Speaker 2:

I've seen that. Yeah, they're all twins.

Speaker 3:

It's called what Happened to Monday.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, because they're only allowed to have so many children. I think it's a Chinese film or something.

Speaker 3:

I don't know, I've not watched it. I've not watched it. I've almost watched it. I was just right into it.

Speaker 1:

Oh no, I've got to go look that up after the podcast.

Speaker 3:

I mean, it's a fictional movie, but you know.

Speaker 1:

All the people are identical and only Monday can go out on Monday and Tuesday can go out on Tuesday. But nobody knows that. I've seen someone describe that movie. I've never heard of the movie. Now he's claimed to have cloned 14 humans. However, these are disbelieved due to the fact that he keeps the babies and their families private and so no one knows who these kids are. And I did some math here In 2002, he cloned one human named Eve. 2004 he cloned 14 kids, so he claims by 2024 at that rate, he would have 154 cloned humans on average now. And the question is where are all these kids?

Speaker 3:

Well, on a private island.

Speaker 1:

Someone In the.

Speaker 2:

Bahamas. They won the lottery.

Speaker 1:

Someone came out and claimed to be one of the cloned children, and it is a famous rapper who, here, I guess I've never heard of him, but he is a more famous rapper named Kid Boo, who came out and said he was cloned, but most tossed it out as a public stunt. With that said, his website is still active. You can find it. Uh, he does more than just cloning children, but that is something you can find on the website. Um, it is believed that he's not the only one to have cloned humans there. There are other scientists who have come out and, uh, claim to have cloned children.

Speaker 1:

Um, one of my favorite stories that I heard was a couple um in one of the european nations who came out and cloned a child and got so much hate from it that, um, the kids picked up, or the scientists picked up, the kid and they left, and no one knows what happened to them. With that said, though, there are actual accounts of cloning and humans who have apparently been cloned so far, we have been told. Well, what do you guys think about this? I mean, what do you guys think about this? I mean, what do you guys think about that?

Speaker 3:

I think it's kind of got a death stranding thing going down here or something.

Speaker 1:

A death stranding thing going down.

Speaker 3:

The babies.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we're going to use the clone to children for energy.

Speaker 3:

The baby bottle thing. Yeah, baby bottle pops, baby bottle pops, baby bottle pops, and we're canceled, lined up on the wall like on the video game, and they're tubes that you put them on to re-energize them.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean, I mean, uh, the the thing is like people still clone animals, like animals get cloned all the time. I mean mean there's really I think it's kind of weird.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean it is strange, but I feel like I've seen someone, and they had their cat cloned.

Speaker 3:

I don't really want a clone of me running around.

Speaker 2:

I don't need no more than me. I don't even like myself now.

Speaker 1:

I don't want a clone of myself.

Speaker 2:

I mean I can see people doing it to get a pet back, but I mean just just go adopt a new one, uh well, I'll adopt one. There's honestly animals that need there's.

Speaker 1:

There's no regulation for eating cloned animals either. You can, you, you can eat cloned animals, not like cloned pets. I'm not saying like, yeah, we're going to cook up some cats, but what I'm saying is and we're definitely canceled what I'm saying is that if they clone chickens and cows and all that, they can theoretically slaughter them and sell the meat. I mean it is.

Speaker 2:

But would that drive up the price of meat or would that lower it? Because I mean all the all the trials they have to do. That would drive up the price. Then you got the people who want the organic stuff with another chemicals and stuff in there.

Speaker 1:

Then you're going to have to not only look for organic, for natural chickens well, here, here's the thing, though, um, by regulation, uh, they don't have to say it's a cloned animal. Yeah, I remember reading a whole thing, america has a lot more stuff than you know.

Speaker 2:

Europe bans a lot more ingredients than america, so I'm just saying they probably won't tell us, but they'd have to tell them.

Speaker 1:

I mean technically not. If you think about it, it's just another animal that's been made. I mean because they're recreating it and putting it back, so it goes through the same birthing process and all that. It's just identical to whatever. It's just identical to whatever it's created from.

Speaker 2:

I think it would still drive up the prices.

Speaker 1:

I honestly don't know.

Speaker 2:

Because you've got to do an extra step rather than just, you know, having animals.

Speaker 1:

It is believed that we are currently eating cloned animals.

Speaker 3:

You're talking about that in a few minutes. Is that, when we get food poisoning?

Speaker 1:

that's probably why we don't get food poisoning. We probably get food poisoning from actual animals. Just be honest here. But it is believed that we eat cloned animals right now, that we eat cloned animals, and these are all conspiracy theories, don't get me wrong. I'm not telling you if I believe it or not. I'm just saying these are all conspiracy theories. Don't get me wrong. I'm not telling you if I believe it or not.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying these are fascinating concepts or the topic in my opinion, because, but even if we got into cloning humans which, in my opinion, in less regulated uh countries where they are able to experiment on wider range of things legally, I truly believe they probably have cloned multiple humans. I mean, yeah, I mean america is very regulated when it comes to our experiments, but other countries aren't. Other countries aren't. Those other countries, you can do these crazy testing and not get in trouble. I mean, I think 27 years since we cloned the first, or 28 years since we cloned the first sheep, I highly doubt that no one's cloned an actual human, even if I mean I just there's. It would baffle me more to tell me that we have not tested human cloning I think there's probably been more cloning than we know of I think there's been a lot more cloning than we know of especially, especially of animals.

Speaker 3:

I can't vouch for humans, yeah.

Speaker 1:

I will say recently, harvard lost scientists because they were paid to go to a different country and I'm not going to name the country. It's nothing like that country and nothing like that. They were paid to defect from America and go to this country so they could finish experimenting on things that America would not regulate, that they could do human trials in this other country versus human trials in America. And so Harvard actually had an incident where a lot of their students defected, or a lot of their scientists that they gave grants to defected and went over to another country to do these human trials. I mean it's we have another country who's doing these human trials. Keep that in mind.

Speaker 3:

That's how you tell us what goes on that we don't know about. Yeah, didn't the?

Speaker 2:

government. Just tell us that we have aliens. They're real.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and no one cared, because they were more worried about their rent than they were about the actual aliens.

Speaker 2:

Like aliens from space is what they told us.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

So really is anyone going to bat an eye if clones start?

Speaker 3:

popping up, or is it just actual clones and they put it off as aliens?

Speaker 1:

Okay, so I'm not going to touch base on this episode of what I'm what I'm gonna say, but I will say I have. There are theories and conspiracies, uh, that are going to be a really fun episode. That is like four episodes. That's like my when I do my fourth episode moment. When I get to my fourth topic, we we're going to be discussing multi-human outer or Kegels.

Speaker 1:

Do what when I get to my fourth topic? So, like three topics away from this one, we'll be discussing humans outside of the plane, of where we know of, outside of the planet we know of, because I got, I have some wild episodes planned and one of them involves humans that are not, that we have never met before, that live outside of our realm of reality, I guess is what I'm going to say. So we'll be coming back to that episode. And then we have, I know, and then I do have episodes planned for aliens later on, but nothing in the near future.

Speaker 2:

Well, I'm just saying we didn't bat an eyelash at aliens. Really, are we going to bat that much of an eyelash at clones, unless some weird stuff just happens? You drank your little spicy thing there, didn't you? All the spice went down to the bottom. Yeah, that thing was nasty. I didn't you? All the spice went down to the bottom. Yeah, that thing was nasty.

Speaker 1:

I didn't like it. What is this?

Speaker 2:

That's tea, that's my tea Strawberry tea.

Speaker 1:

Oh, it tastes really good Wow.

Speaker 2:

It has a little stevia in it.

Speaker 1:

We did not bat an eye when it came to aliens, but I think everyone kind of already knew. No one walked around. Even the biggest skeptics were like there's probably something out there. I mean I don't, it didn't surprise me, but I believe everything. I mean everything. We had a cat outside our house and I'm pretty sure it was a skinwalker.

Speaker 2:

And that's how we disappear.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying, and that's not the only time. I pulled into my driveway and I've heard screams nearby out in the middle of areas that there's just no one around. There's no one there and I've just heard screams and then I've seen figures off in the distance. Either I'm crazy which is a highly possibility, not going to mark that one out or recently we've been populated with skinwalkers.

Speaker 2:

You're not supposed to talk about them.

Speaker 1:

You're not supposed to say their name because it draws them. And ever since I started saying skinwalkers, weird things have been happening and we just heard a creak in this house.

Speaker 2:

The house creaks all the time. Yeah, our house is haunted, that might have been my back too.

Speaker 3:

I just stretched what is a skinwalker.

Speaker 1:

A skinwalker. So skinwalkers are creatures.

Speaker 2:

What if they clone a skinwalker?

Speaker 1:

What if they make? What if skinwalkers were created by malfunction science? Well, they've been around for so long. Huh, not really good. So skinwalkers, what a skinwalker is hannah? It is believed to have been, at one point, a shaman otherwise known. They're not witches, but in terms of what we're talking about, they're sort of an off-branch of a witch. So shamans are very natural, they're very. They do a lot of like how do I put it? Herbs and medicine, and Like a D&D druid.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like a D&D druid. They're very wilderness and it's believed a skinwalker was once human, once a human shaman, who transforms into these creatures now, and the only way to really kill one is you have to know its actual name. So if they don't tell you their name, then you can't really stop one.

Speaker 2:

So you need a phone book and you just start.

Speaker 1:

But if they're a shaman? If they're, Shamans are very old belief too.

Speaker 3:

So people think these exist.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean some people there are. So there are beliefs. They're not really common this way where we live, not. So you know, you got like the chupacabra right.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you ever hear of a wendigo. That's what I think this whole time I'm trying to think of that name.

Speaker 1:

So you ever hear.

Speaker 3:

You've heard of a wendigo right it sounds familiar, but I don't know if I can tell you exactly it's in a video game um, they're.

Speaker 1:

It got popular in a video game. Uh, until Dawn was where they're from.

Speaker 2:

That was the one video game.

Speaker 1:

They live in woods and the wilderness and a lot of times they're depicted as deer. They have antlers and stuff like that. But they're big humanoid creatures and until Dawn I don't know how accurate this is to the actual legend of Wendigos. Until Dawn showed them as cannibals. They were humans who got trapped in a mine and they were eating other humans to survive and they transformed into these creatures. I don't know how accurate this is to the actual lore behind real life Wendigos.

Speaker 1:

Quotations on real life Skinwalkers are a lot of times confused for Wendigos, skinwalkers and Wendigos are very popular out in the Appalachian Mountains. Skinwalkers and Wendigos are very popular out in the Appalachian Mountains, skinwalkers specifically. I don't know the full detail of where Wendigos are really known in the United States. Some people do believe in them, a lot of people. Surprisingly, if you ever look up on TikTok Appalachian Mountains, you see a lot of weird stuff. The Appalachian Mountains is a very weird place, regardless of if you believe in these creatures or not. The Appalachian Mountain. There's a lot of people out there who do these end of night rituals where they block off their windows, they make sure everything's closed, they dim their lights so they don't draw any unwanted attention Because to them skinwalkers, stuff like that, are a real thing, it is in the. I mean it's to them it's very real. You got Skinwalker Ranch, which is they've had so many documentaries about this place. I mean it's insane and I mean we've gone off topic from cloning.

Speaker 2:

But so we're getting too podcast out of this one.

Speaker 1:

Do what?

Speaker 2:

Sounds a little creepy.

Speaker 1:

It is, but and here's where it's getting, here's to turn it back around with cloning. Is cloning's no different than a lot of, a lot of this weird, uh, weird concepts? I mean, we, we have unexplained um, creatures like skinwalkers and wendigos, um, but then you got concepts like cloning. I mean clonings. You could create these creatures with genetic modification and all you're doing with cloning is you're moving genes. I mean, scientists have already started gene editing. You can edit genes. That's part of splicing. Splicing is literally taking DNA from one creature, combining it with DNA from another creature, taking DNA from one creature combining it with DNA from another creature. There was a whole documentary on TV when I was a kid about them splicing eggs from chickens and recreating dinosaurs.

Speaker 2:

We have several movies about why that is a very bad idea.

Speaker 1:

Exactly. But I mean in all honesty, you do have these weird phenomenons like that. I mean so I don't know if I. I will say I don't know if I believe in skinwalkers and Wendigos. I don't know if cloning humans have actually happened to me. I like to imagine they have To me. I like to imagine they have. Personally, I like to live on that side of the fantasy line versus life is kind of boring and normal. Maybe that's just my opinion. That's how I personally view it. It's more fun to believe for me.

Speaker 2:

Where's my dragon?

Speaker 1:

Don't even get me started on dragons. Where are my dragons For cloning stuff? Where's my dragon? Don't even get me started on dragons.

Speaker 2:

Where are my dragons For cloning stuff? Where's my dragons? I have cats. I need some dragons.

Speaker 1:

Anna looks like she wants to say something and if I get on the dragon topic, we're going to skier bad.

Speaker 2:

We have already skier, bad we're coming back to that we skier bad every time.

Speaker 3:

I was just going to say that I'm sure cloning of humans has definitely been tried.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

Now whether they were successful or not who knows.

Speaker 1:

So what are you guys' opinions on cloning, though?

Speaker 2:

I am not an expert, it's weird.

Speaker 1:

It's weird.

Speaker 3:

I would not do it.

Speaker 1:

You wouldn't do it.

Speaker 2:

No, I'd clone. You just said at the beginning that you don't even like yourself. You don't want another one.

Speaker 1:

No, I don't want one of me.

Speaker 2:

So who would you clone? Who would you clone? What would you clone? Probably my brother Clone. I don't think he'd want that either.

Speaker 1:

I mean he's older. So like by the time he reached, by the time the clone became, my brother's age, my brother would be.

Speaker 2:

Have you talked to your brother about this?

Speaker 1:

Cloning my brother. Yes, I'm going to just surprise him.

Speaker 2:

I'm pretty sure you got a consent. There's the thing called consent Christmas present.

Speaker 1:

Christmas present what are?

Speaker 2:

you going to do? Walk up to him and just go, hey bro Merry, you know, Happy Hanukkah.

Speaker 1:

Here's you as an infant.

Speaker 2:

I'm sure he would absolutely love that to add to his other two children.

Speaker 1:

I think his wife would be more upset than anyone.

Speaker 2:

Like what I said. What are you going to do? Walk up to him and just yank his hair out.

Speaker 1:

You know what I might? I'll just draw some blood while he sleeps.

Speaker 2:

Honey, you need to have consent for that.

Speaker 1:

I mean, I think it'd be a pretty cool.

Speaker 2:

Consent is very important. These days, you need to have consent. It's very important. Consent is important.

Speaker 3:

Make sure you throw every piece of my hair particles in your house away, Stacey I ain't cloning you, Anna.

Speaker 2:

You ain't got to worry about it. It's all my hair and the cat's hair, my hair's everywhere.

Speaker 1:

We're going to end up with a full metal. You're going to think you're cloning your brother.

Speaker 2:

You're going to have it pop out and it's going to be me. You got the hair mixed up.

Speaker 1:

What's going to Stacy, and it's going to come out looking like the Fullmetal Alchemist Brotherhood dog girl.

Speaker 2:

I was thinking more, hermione.

Speaker 1:

No, I'm picturing this thing to be a cat with long red hair.

Speaker 2:

That's why cloning humans is unethical.

Speaker 1:

On that note, that has been an episode of Three Geeks Chatting. I've been Nicholas. You've Chatting, I've been Nicholas.

Speaker 2:

You've been Nicholas.

Speaker 1:

I've been Nicholas. What are you now?

Speaker 3:

I'm a clone, his clone brother came in and was talking to us.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you do look like your brother, that's why he knows so much.

Speaker 1:

I'm a lot fatter than my brother. I'm a brother if you put on like another 200 pounds.

Speaker 2:

Your brother's shorter than you.

Speaker 1:

By like a couple inches, yeah.

Speaker 2:

You guys act alike. You guys could be clones.

Speaker 1:

We sound alike too. I've been editing these podcasts on my YouTube channel and we don't sound quite a bit alike. Maybe I'm just a clone of my brother. You're probably a clone of your brother. I was just clones for my brother.

Speaker 2:

Because there's times you both do something and I'm like yeah what His wife has said the same thing. Yeah, we've talked, about it.

Speaker 1:

I'm sure you guys have Yep. Anyways, guys, thank you so much for listening. As always, check us out on 3GeeksChatting, on TikTok, and you guys want to plug your stuff.

Speaker 3:

I stream on Twitch and I'm ThePurpleNerd21, and it's the same as TikTok I have no content yet, and I'm thePurpleNerd21, and it's the same as TikTok.

Speaker 2:

I have no content yet. I'm currently streaming on. I'm not streaming. I am on TikTok and I'm theAwkwardCoop1.

Speaker 1:

I am 2geeksgaming on all social medias and I stream on Twitch and I make TikTok videos and YouTube videos. All the other social medias I'm not really active on, but I have them, so you know. Do with that information as you will. Anyways, guys, thank you for listening. I hope you guys have a great morning, evening, afternoon, night, day, whatever time it is you're listening to this and we'll see you guys in the next one. Bye.

Exploring the Concept of Cloning
Cloning
Cloning and Genetic Modification Discussion