Itchmo Forums for Cats & Dogs Brought to you by Itchmo: Essential news, humor and info for cats, dogs and pet owners.
September 06, 2008, 09:47:25 AM *
Welcome, Guest. Please login or register.

Login with username, password and session length
News:
 
   Home   Help Search Login Register  

Go To Itchmo.com: Read the latest cat, dog and pet news, pet food recall info, product reviews and more — updated daily.


Pages: 1 [2] 3 4 ... 53
  Print  
Author Topic: Patenting Pandora's Box - dangerous stuff  (Read 28381 times)
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
JJ
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 2684


View Profile
« Reply #15 on: June 25, 2007, 08:43:52 PM »

I have been suspecting this.  I have researched that there are no laws against this in my state and have suspected this after reading about the aminopterin...

http://www.mflegal.com/petfoodlawsuit.html
page 24 of the complaint.

"Amazingly, animals
from research laboratories are also rendered into pet food."


So, according to the lawsuit,  the sickly mutant tumorous transgenic mice, etc., could all be in your pet food, along with whatever experimental drugs they are full of.  Absolutely legal from what I see in my state's laws for it to be there...it is up to the pet food company to disclose it.
And, as I posted elsewhere, for chemo drugs the dilution factor works backwards according to the specialist that treated my dog for cancer.  A clinical dose of many of the chemo drugs will kill cancer, very low doses they believe cause cancer.  He took a lot of time to explain it and caution me about handling the drugs.
I never would have thought I'd have to worry about those drugs being in pet food, and now research lab animals...that is dangerous stuff!

By the way, if you want to buy one of these mice and home cook it for your pet (free of experimental drugs that way), they have a $10 off sale through Aug 31 on this strain:
Product Information
Strain Details

Type JAX® GEMM® Strain - Congenic
Type JAX® GEMM® Strain - Mutant Strain
TJL Mating System Homozygote x Homozygote         (Female x Male)
 
Species laboratory mouse
Background Strain NOD/LtSz 
Donor Strain C.BKa-Ighb/IcrSz (C.B-17) 
H2 Haplotype g7
Generation N10F59 (14-DEC-06) 

Appearance
albino
Related Genotype: A/A Tyrc/Tyrc

Strain Description
Mice homozygous for the severe combined immune deficiency spontaneous mutation (Prkdcscid, commonly referred to as scid) are characterized by an absence of functional T cells and B cells, lymphopenia, hypogammaglobulinemia, and a normal hematopoietic microenvironment. Normal antigen-presenting cell, myeloid, and NK cell functions are strain dependent. scid mice carry a DNA repair defect and a defect in the rearrangement of genes that code for antigen-specific receptors on lymphocytes. Most homozygotes have no detectable IgM, IgG1, IgG2a, IgG2b, IgG3, or IgA. Thymus, lymph nodes, and splenic follicles are virtually devoid of lymphocytes. scid mice accept allogeneic and xenogeneic grafts making them an ideal model for cell transfer experiments. Some scid mice will spontaneously develop partial immune reactivity. scid mice that have serum Ig levels greater than 1 ug/ml are considered "leaky." scid leakiness is highly strain dependent, increases with age, and is higher in mice housed under non-SPF conditions. In general, scid leakiness is high on the C57BL/6J and BALB/cBy genetic backgrounds, low on the C3H/HeJ background, and even lower on the NOD/LtSz background. NOD/LtSz-Prkdcscid mice are both insulitis- and diabetes-free throughout life and serve as a diabetes-free control for comparison to NOD/ShiLtJ mice (Stock No. 001976). However, there is a high incidence of thymic lymphomas in this congenic stock limiting the mean lifespan to only 8.5 months under specific pathogen-free conditions. In addition to being an excellent host for xenografts, NOD.CB17-Prkdcscid/J mice may be useful for delineation of the role of T cell subsets in autoimmune diabetes and also as a source for insulitis-free islets.

Did you read anything or know if this might be true that Greenspan was arrested? Chek out article in the reading room on rumormillnews.com & let me know what you think.
Logged

'Life isn't about how to survive the storm,
But how to dance in the rain.'
JJ
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 2684


View Profile
« Reply #16 on: June 25, 2007, 08:46:26 PM »

So Donna think you just gave more substance from your follow-up on the synthetic life form to my feeling that they are not only creating franken food but now, lo and behold, FRANKENSTEIN'(S) themselves. Donna ya know the old saying "Money talks and bullchit walks?" I'm really believing it this time.
Logged

'Life isn't about how to survive the storm,
But how to dance in the rain.'
shibadiva
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 1297



View Profile WWW
« Reply #17 on: June 27, 2007, 08:04:41 AM »

Klondike They are so decadent. I am reminded of "Cabaret". Must telephone Paris and tell her not to let Alan see that.

Poor little mice.
Logged

A small body of determined spirits fired by an unquenchable faith in their mission can alter the course of history.
~~ Gandhi
JJ
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 2684


View Profile
« Reply #18 on: June 27, 2007, 04:54:21 PM »

Klondike they really have made big strides in the FREAK dept. And look who is heading up this frankenstein experiments? Another person from melaland. I suppose they would like us to trust them to just try this on mice and rats. What will they do with these freaks of nature when they kill them to cut them open to see what the insides look like? Gonna add them to the melamine for addition to the pet food over here? GAWD, how horrid this all is.
Logged

'Life isn't about how to survive the storm,
But how to dance in the rain.'
dingbat
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 2194


No matter where you go there you are


View Profile
« Reply #19 on: June 27, 2007, 07:15:22 PM »

Quote
These poor little monsters

Klondike

The scariest part of this to me is the crossing of the species barrier, new diseases that have no antibodies, vaccines, nothing. Plague that could run rampant. Yes I know they say never happen, same thing they said about killer bees not ever escaping, fire ants never escaping. If one of these critters would ever escape and mate with a mouse the potential for disaster is unreal.

Again this looks like a science fiction movie that I have seen, scientists screw around with genes, all hell breaks loose, zombies roam the earth. Wasn't something like this the basis for the movie "13 monkeys" or one of those plague movies?

db Undecided
Logged

disclaimer: All comments above are my opinion, any reference to persons living or dead are purely coincidental, no claims are made to the verifiability of any statements that could be misconstrued as being verifiable.
JJ
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 2684


View Profile
« Reply #20 on: June 27, 2007, 08:10:04 PM »

db yes crossing the barrier and messing with mother nature's natural selection that has worked so well for so long. All these people need to get a life, find the solution to our energy needs, put all the brain matter to work on something needed all over, not on who will be the first to create Frankenstein from a petri dish.
Logged

'Life isn't about how to survive the storm,
But how to dance in the rain.'
shibadiva
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 1297



View Profile WWW
« Reply #21 on: June 28, 2007, 04:52:36 AM »

Klondike What if the mouse's consciousness is already equivalent to human consciousness? We always assume we're top of the heap based on our own point of view. Remember the days when vivisection was OK because "animals don't feel pain"?
Logged

A small body of determined spirits fired by an unquenchable faith in their mission can alter the course of history.
~~ Gandhi
Donna
Sr. Member
****
Posts: 257


It's PEACE, not war & greed, earthlings!


View Profile
« Reply #22 on: June 28, 2007, 05:39:12 AM »

So Donna think you just gave more substance from your follow-up on the synthetic life form to my feeling that they are not only creating franken food but now, lo and behold, FRANKENSTEIN'(S) themselves. Donna ya know the old saying "Money talks and bullchit walks?" I'm really believing it this time.

Hey, JJ!

Are you trying to bait me with your money talks, bullchit walks statement?!?  You will surely get me on a tangent if I even dare to venture where I may want to!  And, then, that “Van with the X-ray vision” will surely be pulling up!

The notion of non-conceived and then birthed entities is a program I have been watching for a while and I will state, I am adamantly opposed to it.  However, not being in a seat in which anything can be done to put a halt to such production, as human beings we are put into a position of trepidation because we KNOW deep down inside, it is morally the wrong reason in which replication of "human beings" can, will or might be utilized. 

A couple notions of the scientific strides (if you can call them that) resounded within me as alerts.  They loudly reverberated the statement, "Danger, Will Robinson", and that is where my sense of foreboding comes into play. They are as follows:

1. The fact that those who would or may be slated for production are “living machines” – fully working organisms programmed for particular tasks."

and

2. Craig Venter's claiming monopoly ownership upon “free-living organism that can grow and replicate” "whose genome (full genetic information) has been built entirely through mechanical means"

In my opinion, when any organization has an interest in the identification, configuration, and/or splicing of DNA for the production of human genes for means of their own, we can rightfully conclude (at least I do) they may not be doing it in the best interest of science, as presented by the "invention" in a Patent, or as the inventors and interested parties may adamantly state.  Oh, sure, we can be hoodwinked into thinking this will produce germ/disease free, intelligent, though not conceived from conventionally accepted methods, entities, but then, I sit and wonder, whose entities will they be, or rightfully “belong to” without having been born from natural parents? 

For instance, Kyhal is born as a "free-living organism that can grow and replicate", but whose names are listed on Kyhal's birth certificate?  Or, for that matter, does Kyhal indeed exist and have a birth certificate?  If he does exist, how long will he remain alive if he does not produce the task he is/was "programmed for", if not for a disease-free population purpose?  But, then the question becomes, what is Kyhal "programmed" for?  Is it the everyday life lessons and necessities?  Will Kyhal feel or learn, and thereby replicate basic feelings and emotions?  Or, will Kyhal be so "programmed" he does not learn anything from his entry into the world, and thereby turn against what he sees in his environment, including any other person he may feel is one of the "programmed" threats, or the persons or family Kyhal can or may be sent to live with?

Now flip the scenario. 

Safely presume Kyhal was not “replicated” to produce a disease-free population, but for some other purpose known only to Kyhal’s “makers”.  What questions will be asked now?  We ARE intelligent, FREE-thinking beings and, having lived in the century of “secrets” and “closed doors”, we know what lurks in the machinations of some minds.  “Controlling” Kyhal would be tantamount to denying his autonomy and that of any subsequent “replications”, a characteristic we are endowed with at BIRTH.  If Kyhal is NOT a FREE-thinking entity, then what is he?  He becomes non-autonomous, and therefore does not think or control himself, as “someone” or “something” has done it for him, and that is where the “programming” becomes sketchy, in my opinion. 

This is where one does not want to wander the avenues of their own minds, as that only produces the notion that this idea of “living machines - fully working organisms programmed for particular tasks” and “free-living organism that can grow and replicate” could, can, may or will be used for “strategic” purposes (in my opinion).  The notion of “replicating” arsenals of Kyhal’s is by far a more precarious ideology, as the “programming” could, can, may or will consist of “kill and destroy” encoding and thereby produce a battalion of “automatons” (in my opinion).   Now, I sit and wonder, what happens if this group “replicates” solely on their own while their DNA evolves?  Who “controls” the entities now?  Surely, not those who “created” the entity for their purpose, rather it would be the MIND of the entity, which would hold control, a mind that has EVOLVED.  Now, take that one step further and ask, does the evolving mind of the replicated entity evolve within the violent realm as perhaps, “programmed”, or does that entity realize that the majority of humankind is basically peace loving and evolve into a benevolent "replicated" unit?  I will let you ponder that question, but I believe that any way I look at this, it presents a highly volatile set of circumstances.

Yes, I sit here shaking my head in awe at the audacity of this idea and I believe that is what the concerned scientists fear, as well.  If humankind uses this for THEIR benefit, then let it benefit for the good, such as medical purposes.  Let it not be to fabricate mice for experimental and/or warm-blooded food production, or to produce sheep, pigs, chickens or cows for food or pet consumption because some diseases within are antibiotic resistance.  Don't use this to "build" anything that would be contrary, rather, use this “knowledge” to sufficiently rid this planet of the diseases that plague so many, some of which have been “birthed” through food consumption and “in the name of science”.  However, in retrospect, this is not something I see happening (my opinion, only), especially in light of the volatility situation today, and certain interests present upon the Patent (see “Description”).

THE J. CRAIG VENTER INSTITUTE, 9704 MEDICAL CENTER DRIVE, Rockville, MD 20850
WO/2007/047148) MINIMAL BACTERIAL GENOME

http://www.wipo.int/pctdb/en/fetch.jsp?DISP=25&IDB=0&SORT=1214293-KEY&LANG=ENG&LANGUAGE=ENG&SERVER_TYPE=19&FORM=SEP-0%2FHITNUM%2CB-ENG%2CDP%2CMC%2CPA%2CABSUM-ENG&IA=US2006039047&TOTAL=1&C=10&SEARCH_IA=US2006039047&START=1&QUERY=%28WO2007047148%29+&DBSELECT=PCT&TYPE_FIELD=256&RESULT=1&IDOC=1312194&DISPLAY=STATUS

The “Documents” section of the Patent filed with the World Intellectual Property Organization is worth viewing, if you are interested in the particulars of this “invention”.  Yes, a lot of it is scientific in nature, but there are very obvious read between the line implications, in my opinion.  Use the “page button” to view individual pages of these documents, as there is no scroll capacity and only Page 1 will be present for viewing.   

http://www.wipo.int/pctdb/en/fetch.jsp?DISP=25&IDB=0&SORT=1214293-KEY&LANG=ENG&LANGUAGE=ENG&SERVER_TYPE=19&FORM=SEP-0%2FHITNUM%2CB-ENG%2CDP%2CMC%2CPA%2CABSUM-ENG&IA=US2006039047&TOTAL=1&C=10&SEARCH_IA=US2006039047&START=1&QUERY=%28WO2007047148%29+&DBSELECT=PCT&TYPE_FIELD=256&RESULT=1&IDOC=1312194&DISPLAY=DOCS

United States Patent Application, No. 0070122826, dated May 31, 2007

http://appft1.uspto.gov/netacgi/nph-Parser?Sect1=PTO1&Sect2=HITOFF&d=PG01&p=1&u=%2Fnetahtml%2FPTO%2Fsrchnum.html&r=1&f=G&l=50&s1=%2220070122826%22.PGNR.&OS=DN/20070122826&RS=DN/20070122826

So, in essence, what you suspected, JJ, regarding “FRANKENSTEIN(S)”, is truthful in its form as it appears on paper and in thought.  My statement, “X-Files, here we come”, appears not to be that far off base and only adds to my confirmation and trepidation of this whole affair: The horror NOW has the propensity to begin.

Sincerely,
Donna


~ The dead cannot cry out for justice; it is a duty of the living to do so for them. ~
    Lois McMaster Bujold, 2002 Diplomatic Immunity, US Science Fiction Author
« Last Edit: June 28, 2007, 07:18:49 AM by Donna » Logged

Disclaimer:  Opinions, thoughts & premises are my own, except links & quotes.

"Your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all the barriers within yourself that you have built against it."  Rumi
dingbat
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 2194


No matter where you go there you are


View Profile
« Reply #23 on: June 28, 2007, 11:03:31 AM »

Quote
The horror NOW has the propensity to begin.

Donna

Great observations and theories. I believe that the 'horror' has been around for a while but only recently made public. Your post reminds me of a TV series/movie, the clones revolted, eugenics war.

This was also the basis of the star wars movie attack of the clones, genetically engineered humans made specifically for combat.

All this scares the hell out of me. WAY too many things can go wrong, we (the human race) are not intelligent enough to be screwing with mother nature. Billions of years of evolution can not be messed with.

To induce human cells into a mouse's brain, what is it then? Still a mouse? mouse/human? does it understand its fate? what are we doing, have we nothing better to do with our science?

In all of history there has NEVER been a case of what to do with all the 'good things' that come out of discovery, rather it has ALWAYS been a case of how do we deal with all the 'unforeseen, unknowns' that come from discovery/invention.

db Undecided
Logged

disclaimer: All comments above are my opinion, any reference to persons living or dead are purely coincidental, no claims are made to the verifiability of any statements that could be misconstrued as being verifiable.
JJ
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 2684


View Profile
« Reply #24 on: June 28, 2007, 09:04:52 PM »

Donna the 'replicants' that you mention made me stop dead and the memories of The Terminator movie and Aliens with Queenie large & in charge of her soldiers. Also we have Monsanto's terminator seeds too. Think there is any connection? Were the movies a glimpse as to what may come about? Not something I like to think about but just did. With all the messing around with the DNA of food I do not feel for one moment there would be any good created out of this. Good does not make money, does it? Nah rather evil, hurtful, dangerous, keep you sick things make money. Too many rich people out there who will throw their money at this in order to be a part of it, to control it along with the scientists-smacks of Nazi Germany where they told the scientists what kind of cruel experiments to do to those people. This is all just so shameful and un-humane in any way, shape or form. I'm sorry we are opening Pandora's Box wider and wider and we will have (all movies) Hellraiser, Aliens, Pumpkinhead, The Terminator replicants running around loose as mother nature is ass-backwards.
Logged

'Life isn't about how to survive the storm,
But how to dance in the rain.'
Donna
Sr. Member
****
Posts: 257


It's PEACE, not war & greed, earthlings!


View Profile
« Reply #25 on: June 29, 2007, 04:56:19 AM »

Here is the latest email received from ETC Group, an update of this week's meeting in Zurich.  Rather than highlight the important aspects, I believe reading the entire piece is the better alternative.

[begin quote]
ETC Group
News Release
28 June 2007
www.etcgroup.org
Synthia’s last hurdle?

Synthia – the “Original Syn” artificial microbe – may have jumped a hurdle that Dolly – the cloned sheep – never could

Synthia, the (theoretical) human-made synthetic microbe – still barely a twinkle in J. Craig Venter’s eye – may be in search of a surrogate micro-mom sometime very soon. According to a research report released today in Science magazine, Synthia (the subject of a patent application discovered by ETC Group a few weeks ago -see “Goodbye Dolly -- Hello Synthia!”) may have overcome her last hurdle. The report, authored by Craig Venter and his colleagues at Synthetic Genomics Inc., claims to have inserted a foreign bacterial genome into the cell of another bacterial species. Nobel laureate Hamilton Smith who is one of Venter’s co-authors in the research article told a meeting of synthetic biologists in Zürich on Monday that this represents a significant step en route to building a whole new life form. As the article itself concludes, “…we have discovered a form of bacterial DNA transfer that permits … recipient cells to be platforms for the production of new species using modified natural genomes or manmade genomes…” “In the case of Dolly the cloned sheep,” says Jim Thomas of ETC Group, “the job was to insert a single parent’s DNA into an embryonic cell for replication. Venter’s group replaces the host cell’s natural DNA with an entirely foreign species.” “The peas in this pod would not look alike at all,” adds ETC’s Executive Director, Pat Mooney, “it's like pod-outcasting.”

The team of synthetic Genomics scientists inserted the whole genome of Mycoplasma capricolum – a bacterium that often infects goats – into another bacterium showing that it is possible to “boot up” a new species through the cells of another species. “Synthia – the artificial goat bug – may, if it works, surpass Dolly – the lamb clone – with the scientific breakthrough,” says Pat Mooney.

The patent application disclosed at the end of April showed that – at the time of application – no one had created artificial life. But, at the same time, the patent claims that the method it disclosed could make artificial life possible. Today’s article, by some of the same inventors, seems to suggest that the patent may need updating. Presumably, Synthetic Genomics Inc. is submitting a new application for this new approach. “For at least two years now, Craig Venter has been promising the world artificial life in a matter of months,” Thomas notes, “The promises keep coming and the months keep rolling by. Now the research team may have just overcome one of the last hurdles to synthetic life.” Pat Mooney adds, “However, the real hurdle that Synthia and Craig Venter have to overcome is society. Synthetic biology is a form of extreme genetic engineering that has enormous implications for everyone who lives on this planet.”

Despite the delays and the changes, no one attending the Synthetic Biology 3.0 gathering in Zürich this week really doubts the ability of the technology to build unique life forms. “Perhaps the most shocking thing about all this,” concludes Jim Thomas, “is that scientists now treat the construction of artificial life as a ‘given’. Everyone seems to feel it is just a matter of time.” During the Zürich conference earlier this week, Jim Thomas of ETC Group called for scientists to join with civil society and governments in a broad societal discussion over the socio-economic, environmental, health, and ethical implications of the new technology. (For further information about the Zürich meeting, see http://www.etcblog.org/.)

ETC Group will be discussing the implications of Synthetic Biology and the potential development of artificial life forms when the UN Convention on Biological Diversity’s scientific subcommittee meets next week in Paris (July 2 – 6). Climate change is on the UN body’s agenda and Craig Venter is claiming that Synthia could be used to improve agricultural crops as agri-fuels. As the intergovernmental agency responsible for the Cartagena Protocol (the treaty on the transboundary movement of genetically-modified organisms), ETC Group believes that the Convention should study whether entirely artificial life forms (unnatural biodiversity) come under the remit of the protocol and (whether they do or not) what the impact might be on natural biodiversity.
 
For further information:
Jim Thomas: jim@etcgroup.org, tel: +1-514-516-5759
Kathy Jo Wetter: kjo@etcgroup.org, tel: +1-919-960-5223
Pat Mooney: etc@etcgroup.org, tel: +1-613-241-2267
Silvia Ribeiro: silvia@etcgroup.org, tel: +52-5555-6326-64
[end quote]

It is revealing in content and continues to solidify the ability to produce "artificial life forms", but there are individuals who find this technology out of the norm and that is a footstep in the right direction.  Sadly, despite the outcome of the upcoming UN Convention, a foreboding feeling wells within me that further strides in biodiversity will progress, and it will only be a matter of time before subsequent companies such as J. Craig Venter's spring forth with expoundments of the original Patent regarding "artificial life forms", which could, can, may or will be for marketable purposes.

db, I have to admit, I was never the Sci-Fi kind of gal and saw "The Terminator" and the first "Star Wars" movie.  I believe the last Sci-Fi was the remake of "Planet of the Apes", which once starred Charlton Heston.  The commercials to the current tv series, "Kyle XY", which I have never watched, prompted the same train of thought as yours, JJ, and I smile here because we seem to be on the same "wave length"!  Klondike, I believe you hit the nail on the head with "temptation" as it relates to the lack of governing regulations with this technology.  I, too, would be pushing forth for the bigger and better knowing I could now virtually create anything as a bioscientist with no repercussions attached.

This will definitely be one scenario I will not take my eyes off and hopefully, once society as a whole is made more fully aware of technological strides in "artificial life forms", neither will they.

Sincerely,
Donna


~ The dead cannot cry out for justice; it is a duty of the living to do so for them. ~
    Lois McMaster Bujold, 2002 Diplomatic Immunity, US Science Fiction Author


Logged

Disclaimer:  Opinions, thoughts & premises are my own, except links & quotes.

"Your task is not to seek for love, but merely to seek and find all the barriers within yourself that you have built against it."  Rumi
dingbat
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 2194


No matter where you go there you are


View Profile
« Reply #26 on: June 29, 2007, 08:39:38 AM »

Quote
Synthetic biology is a form of extreme genetic engineering that has enormous implications for everyone who lives on this planet.”

Donna

That statement says it all for me, 'enormous implications', the word enormous indicates massive, worldwide, all encompassing, whatever the up side it would be great (for those that could afford it), whatever the down side it would be absolute disaster for all of us.

IMO, the risk FAR outweighs the reward in this one.

I still believe that we as human beings, by definition, can not know more than the creator, evolution whichever you believe. We can not screw around with artificial life, synthetic beings, Way too many ethical questions here.

Does the artificial life form have a soul? is it aware of its existence? Will it be used in place of animals for drug/food testing. How do we as humans justify this? Would they be used as soldiers? LAB rats? What is this higher purpose that could justify this creation?

I don't understand how anyone, scientist or GOD fearing person could accept this.

If one believes in GOD, then this isn't right, GOD is the creator not us.

If one believes in evolution, scientists, then they must believe that it took billions of years to perfect the genome that they are now screwing around with.

I still can see no long term upside to these projects, maybe short term cures for diseases, but what about the long term effects? new diseases, synthetic life forms escaping and mating creating another form of life.

db Huh Huh
Logged

disclaimer: All comments above are my opinion, any reference to persons living or dead are purely coincidental, no claims are made to the verifiability of any statements that could be misconstrued as being verifiable.
shibadiva
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 1297



View Profile WWW
« Reply #27 on: June 29, 2007, 07:37:06 PM »

There's a gap between owning the benefits and rewards of GMO's and owning the hazards.

When property rights to life forms are claimed, it is on the basis of their being new, noval, not occurring in nature. But when it comes time for the "owners" to take responsibility for the consequences of releasing GMO's, suddenly the life forms are not new. They are natural, and hence safe.
Logged

A small body of determined spirits fired by an unquenchable faith in their mission can alter the course of history.
~~ Gandhi
dingbat
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 2194


No matter where you go there you are


View Profile
« Reply #28 on: June 29, 2007, 08:07:16 PM »

Quote
When property rights to life forms are claimed, it is on the basis of their being new, noval, not occurring in nature. But when it comes time for the "owners" to take responsibility for the consequences of releasing GMO's, suddenly the life forms are not new. They are natural, and hence safe.

shibadiva

Sort of like burning the candle on both ends. Discovery and the resulting profit without the liability of that discovery and profit. That sounds like a ponzi scheme?

How do we hold them accountable for the inevitable consequences that will occur?

If history has taught us anything it is that any new invention comes with a caveat. That NOTHING IS 100% SAFE, there must always be a trial period to work out bugs, sometimes the inventions don't work at all, (thalidomide, vioxx, ford edsal, ford pinto, etc) after a short trial time frame.

db Undecided
Logged

disclaimer: All comments above are my opinion, any reference to persons living or dead are purely coincidental, no claims are made to the verifiability of any statements that could be misconstrued as being verifiable.
shibadiva
Hero Member
*****
Posts: 1297



View Profile WWW
« Reply #29 on: June 29, 2007, 08:39:35 PM »

Have you tried eBay?
Logged

A small body of determined spirits fired by an unquenchable faith in their mission can alter the course of history.
~~ Gandhi
Pages: 1 [2] 3 4 ... 53
  Print  
 
Jump to:  

Copyright 2007 Itchmo.com: Read the latest cat, dog and pet news, pet food recall info, product reviews and more — updated daily.
Powered by SMF 1.1.3 | SMF © 2006-2007, Simple Machines LLC
Seo4Smf v0.2 © Webmaster's Talks
| Sitemap