>>509907460(GROK build me a MechaHitler continued)
Somatic Cell Nuclear Transfer (SCNT): The extracted DNA would be inserted into an enucleated human egg cell (a process used in cloning, like with Dolly the sheep). The egg would then be stimulated to divide and develop into an embryo.
The embryo would be implanted into a surrogate mother to develop into a fetus and eventually a human clone.
Challenge: Human cloning via SCNT is technically challenging and inefficient. While it has been successful in animals (e.g., sheep, mice), human SCNT has not been reliably achieved due to issues like improper gene expression and developmental abnormalities.
Development: The resulting individual would be a genetic twin of Hitler, with the same DNA but no guarantee of identical personality, memories, or behavior, as these are shaped by environment, upbringing, and experiences, not just genetics.
Challenge: The brain’s memories, personality, or cognitive patterns are not stored in DNA. A clone would not “inherit” Hitler’s thoughts or experiences, so it would not be “Hitler” in any meaningful psychological sense.
Feasibility in 2025:
Current Limitations: Human cloning is not yet a mature technology. While DNA extraction and sequencing are advanced, SCNT for humans remains experimental, with low success rates and ethical prohibitions in most countries. Even with a perfectly preserved brain, the technical hurdles (DNA degradation, inefficient cloning) make this difficult.
Ethical Issues: Cloning a historical figure like Hitler would raise profound ethical questions, including the potential for harm, stigmatization of the clone, and the intent behind such an act. Most scientific communities and governments would likely ban such experiments.
Outcome: If successful, you’d get a genetic copy of Hitler as a new individual, but they would not have his memories, personality, or ideology unless deliberately indoctrinated.