e used whenever it becomes necessary. But what would happen  if humans started to use animals as body for growing human organs? Where is the line  drawn between human and non human? If a primate was cloned so that it grew human  lungs, liver, kidneys, and heart., what would it then be? What if we were to learn how  to clone functioning brains and have them grow inside of chimps? Would non-human  primates, such as a chimpanzee, who carried one or more human genes via transgenic  technology, be defined as still a chimp, a human, a subhuman, or something else? If  defined as human, would we have to give it rights of citizenship? And if humans were to  carry non-human transgenic genes, would that alter our definitions and treatment of  them(Deductive Logic: Kluger 1997)? Also, if the technology were to be so that  scientists could transfer human genes into animals and vice-versa, that would heighten  the danger of developing zoonoses, diseases that are transmitted from animals to  humans. It could create a world wide catastrophe that no one would be able to stop  (Potential Risks). In conclusion, the ethical and moral implications of cloning are such  that it would be wrong for the human race to support or advocate it. The sheer loss of  life in both humans and non-humans is enough to prove that cloning would be a foolish  endeavor, whatever the cause....