posted on Feb, 28 2009 @ 10:51 AM
Modern genetics currently is frantically working on accelerated growth and programming techniques for clones that will soon be produced. Finding a
source material is not difficult - just get a couple of best navy SEALs, a couple of Olympic athletes, take their DNA (they will think it was a
regular medical check-up) and put it together. C'mon, it's not that difficult. The real difficulty is protection from hostile routine-tampering and
communication jamming. They must be implanted with some self-destruct mechanisms. In case of any signs of capture, questioning, tampering or hacking
into their subroutine grid the SD chip goes off. Here is another challenge - they must be intelligent to perform flawlessly, but not smart enough to
turn on their own creators. That's a very fine line. So, the SD chip must also go off should there be an attempt of overriding the
"do-not-touch-the-friendlies" subroutine. Any sign of disloyalty - and the head is blown away. They can also be used as a trojan horse - remember
command 66 in the "War of the clones"?.. Send them to infiltrate some other state as "sleeper agents" and trigger a specific command - they will
wreak havoc on the "friendly-turned-to enemy".
I don't see any difficulties with producing such creatures. They initial R&D and incubation facilities must require some investments, but they will
pay off tenfold once operations become a dazzling success.
Also, I don't see any point in preserving their human shape. In fact, it would be very counter-productive, cuz it instils in their human creators a
useless sense of guilt over clones sent to death. It's much better to spend some extra bux and mix them for example with: bears (heavy-gunners),
leopards (fast assault teams), eagles and owls (sniper units), apes and reptiles (jungle and underwater recon), etc. Of course, this may sound far
fetched, but please do not underestimate the science that already exists and which we are not supposed to know.