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#11 | ||||
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We do not have any problems that increased production efficiency would solve. By comparison to the very, very, very serious risk posed by allowing crudely manipulated gene strains into the wild, there is no visible benefit IMO. Quote:
As I say, I'm all for the project under suitably controlled conditions: like, in a floating habitat in space. Cool; if it all goes wrong, expose to vaccum and/or incinerate and start again. Exposure to the open selection of the wilderness before we are as close to 100% sure of what we are doing as it is possible to be? No no no. |
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#12 | |||
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Edited to add: The article does mention the production of beta-casein. While I can't speak to the beta form specifically, casein is a protein some people are allergic to. Quote:
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#13 | |
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#14 | ||
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#15 | ||||
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Patrick |
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#16 | |
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For what its worth, here's what the article says about safety and containment considerations. Apparently the risk is low to begin with, and several types of countermeasures can make it even lower.
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#17 | ||||
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Animals migrate, but that is not how rabbits got to Australia. Quote:
As I said, no productive increase will improve access: we already have MORE THAN ENOUGH productive capacity, that is not the problem. Quote:
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[qote] And why do you characterize such crops as "crudely manipulated," when the truth is that they are very specifically and selectively manipulated to produce a specific protein?[/QUOTE] Becuase, by comparison with the effects of natural selection, its a very crude cut-n-paste intervention. We don't and cannot know the ramifications of what will happen to that protein, for example, when it is ingested by the plants natural predators. We don't know what happens when that parasite is ingested by one of its predators in turn. And as you pointed out, its not even as if we have reason to expect the gene sequence to stay in place, so we also cannot predict where it will turn up. If this research were being done suitably slowly, with suitable safeguards, I would not have a problem with it. But at the moment, I consider it highly suspect, reckless and stupid. And whats worse, warnings have been sounded, the rape crop i alluded to above which contaminated neighbouring feilds being a prime example of a failure correctly predicted by Frinds of the Earth. And yet, the drive to go GM continues - and the drive AGAINST labelling GM products just in case consumers exercised choice. The agenda driving GM crops has nothing to do with helping the world, and does not appear to be scientifically rigorous. |
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#18 | |
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I have no doubt that the drugs, used as drugs will be extensively tested. What I have a concern about is if these crops are planted near enough to food crops for pollenation to occur. The fact that the crops are being tested for effects on herbivores and insects tell me that there is at least the possibility of them being in an "open" environment. If the genes are transerred (and expressed) in a food crop, there are huge dangers. I tend to use corn for examples for 2 reasons: it gives huge yields, so is a tempting crop for pharms, and the pollenation distance is potentially huge. Right now, corn is completely safe for those with casein allergies. Corn that produces casein can be deadly for them. If the pharm corn can cross-pollenate at all with food corn, the entire corn supply becomes suspect due to the commodity nature of grain in the US. Perhaps the gene would be selected against over the course of generations in normal field environments. First that assume that there is some factor in the gene that makes it more unfit than normal corn. Second, it assumes that in the generations that it takes for the gene to be removed nothing bad happens. Something bad like people dying from allergens that have not previously been in corn. Again I will state that extensive testing is done of GM crops to ensure no allergens are carried along with gene transfer. When dealing with pharm crops, allergens are potentially part of the intended transfer. How is this kept completely isolated from the food crops? Simian |
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#19 | ||||||
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#20 |
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Hysteria vs. Science. No matter how many times we see it manifested in history, we just can't stop ourselves from engaging in it.
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