Irish Daily Mail

He’s a cloneIrish arranger!

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QUESTION Did Argentine president Javier Milei try to have his dog cloned?

NOT only did he try, he succeeded. Javier Milei, a self-identified libertaria­n and ‘anarcho-capitalist’, adopted an English mastiff named Conan, after Conan the Barbarian, in 2004.

The dog died in 2017 and the following year Milei received Conan’s clones – one of the same name plus Murray, Milton, Robert and Lucas, named after his favourite economists, Murray Rothbard, Milton Friedman and Robert Lucas.

At his political rallies, Milei held aloft pictures of his dogs, which he distribute­d to the crowd before picking up a chainsaw, his unsubtle metaphor for the spending cuts he promised to deliver.

Milei, unmarried, described the 200lb Conan as ‘his closest friend and confidante’. According to The Madman, an unauthoris­ed biography of the president by Juan Luis Gonzalez, following Conan’s death a devastated Milei visited a medium to communicat­e with his late pet in the afterlife, and said Conan relayed God’s mission for him to be president of Argentina.

Milei paid PerPETuate, a US firm, $50,000 (€46,000) to perform the cloning.

Usually reluctant to talk about his ‘grandchild­ren’, he has said: ‘What is it they say, my dogs determine my strategies, yes? That they’re like a strategic committee? They are the best strategic committee in the world.’

Cloning dogs involves somatic cell nuclear transfer.

The nucleus of a somatic cell (a cell other than a sperm or egg cell) from the donor dog is inserted into an egg cell that has had its nucleus removed. The reconstruc­ted egg is then stimulated to start dividing, then implanted into a surrogate mother dog.

The first cloned dog, Afghan hound Snuppy, was created in 2005 by scientists in South Korea.

Rachel French, St Andrews, Fife.

QUESTION What are the most patronisin­g pop songs ever? Phil Collins’s Another Day In Paradise springs to mind.

I LIKE Phil Collins but he probably deserved some of the grief he got for Another Day In Paradise, a song about the guilt felt when ignoring the homeless in which he ordered us to ‘just think about it’.

Phil later left Britain for the tax haven that is Switzerlan­d.

Some of the responses to the song were even more patronisin­g. Billy Bragg piously told us: ‘Phil Collins might write a song about the homeless, but if he doesn’t have the action to go with it he’s just exploiting that for a subject.’

Bragg recently updated his already toe-curling song Sexuality to support the trans movement with the jarring lyric: ‘Just because you’re They, I won’t turn you away /If you stick around, I’m sure that we can find the right pronoun.’

Another excruciati­ng song about homelessne­ss was Mel C’s If That Were Me, which contains the line: ‘I couldn’t live without my phone / But you don’t even have a home.’

Paul McCartney is king of the beautiful melody, but without John Lennon to add a bit of grit, his lyrics can be cloying. No more so than with Ebony And Ivory, which goes: ‘Ebony and ivory live together in perfect harmony/Side by side on my piano keyboard, oh Lord, why don’t we?’

That said, it was John Lennon’s Plastic Ono Band that gave us the tiresome hippy anthem Give Peace A Chance, while he sat in bed doing nothing.

Then on The Luck Of The Irish, Yoko Ono offended an entire nation with her comment on

Northern Ireland’s Troubles, that went: ‘Let’s walk over rainbows like leprechaun­s / The world would be one big Blarney stone.’

However, the king of them all must be Bob Geldof and Midge Ure’s Do They Know It’s Christmas? Not just because Ethiopia has a longer Christian tradition than the British Isles, but it even refers to Africa as a place ‘where nothing ever grows, no rain nor rivers flow’ – an astonishin­gly misleading portrayal of Ethiopia.

Gus Evans, Carlisle, Cumbria.

QUESTION How is the liver able to regenerate? Are other parts of the body able to do this?

THE liver is the only solid organ that can use a regenerati­ve mechanism to return to full capacity after it’s been damaged.

Remarkably, the body can cope with the removal of up to two thirds of the liver and will return to normal size within three months of a substantia­l hepatectom­y. Other solid organs, such as the lungs, kidneys and pancreas, adjust to tissue loss but can’t return to full function.

The liver plays three key roles in the body: as a protein factory to maintain the thickness and consistenc­y of blood; as a filtration system that cleans the huge volume of blood that flows from the gastrointe­stinal tract back to the heart; and to support metabolic processing by creating bile that aids food digestion and helps the body absorb medication.

The liver’s main functional cells are called hepatocyte­s. During liver regenerati­on, these proliferat­e and rapidly divide to restore liver mass and function.

Non-solid organs can also have significan­t regenerati­ve powers. Blood vessels can undergo angiogenes­is, where new vessels form to replace damaged ones.

The skin is constantly renewing itself through cell division at the base of the epidermis. It can regenerate to heal wounds and replace damaged tissue.

However, deeper layers of skin do not go through this and so do not replace themselves. Kavita Shah, Isleworth, Middlesex.

Is there a question to which you have always wanted to know the answer? Or do you know the answer to a question raised here? Send your questions and answers to: Charles Legge, Answers To Correspond­ents, Irish Daily Mail, DMG Media, Two Haddington Buildings, 20-38 Haddington Road, Dublin 4, D04 HE94. You can also fax them to 0044 1952 510906 or you can email them to charles. legge@dailymail.ie. A selection will be published but we are not able to enter into individual correspond­ence.

 ?? ?? Pet project: Argentine president Javier Milei with one of the dogs he had cloned by a US firm
Pet project: Argentine president Javier Milei with one of the dogs he had cloned by a US firm

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