I weep. (but that fake label is hilarious)
GMOs are a topic I find interesting but know painfully little about.
You'd get similar results about labeling for dihydrogen oxide.
You'd get similar results about labeling for dihydrogen oxide.
DHMO was the cause of all school violence? Wow.
Spot on. And if people complain about the thousands of mutant/non-viable organisms created in the name of genetic engineering, remind them of the hundreds of millions of such creatures created over the past hundred millenia by breeders of domesticated species.One of the really sad elements of any "conversation" concerning "genetically modified" organisms is that in one sense or another, "genetic modification" precedes history: humans have been practicing selective breeding of plants and animals for millennia. In its current version, "genetic modification" is taking place at a different level, but how different is it really in a "broad picture" sense to insert a gene into DNA compared to selecting specific strands of DNA to intermingle?
The first corn had something like four kernels. Dogs and horses originally were one "breed" each.
The "outrage" it seems to me has nothing whatsoever to do with "genetic modification" and is more a complaint of "progress is advancing too fast compared to my ability to comprehend it."
Spot on. And if people complain about the thousands of mutant/non-viable organisms created in the name of genetic engineering, remind them of the hundreds of millions of such creatures created over the past hundred millenia by breeders of domesticated species.
You mean Fido is a MUTANT!?!?!?!Spot on. And if people complain about the thousands of mutant/non-viable organisms created in the name of genetic engineering, remind them of the hundreds of millions of such creatures created over the past hundred millenia by breeders of domesticated species.
Yup - and I should know. I'm one, too!!!You mean Fido is a MUTANT!?!?!?!![]()
Mongrels of the world, UNITE!!Yup - and I should know. I'm one, too!!!
The first section of Daniel Kahneman's book Thinking Fast and Slow (the "fast thinking" part) is also superb on those subjects, once you get past his use of the word "heuristics" as a term for "convenient mental shortcuts based on life experience."
Parts of the book even discuss readings they take on things like pupil dilation, which indicate our subconscious is responding to cues from the environment even when we are unaware of it.
"Looking to the future, we’re planning a mission to explore Jupiter’s fascinating moon Europa."
But the Monolith has warned us that "All these worlds are ours, except Europa. Attempt no landings there."
I know, but the English looked wrong if I used yours.
Oh, this is rich: according to the Environmental Working Group, exposure to Tupperware is causing early puberty.
Then again, according to the EWG, if I eat a conventionally grown apple, I'm going to die.
I've read of concerns in both regards. How big a concern it is, that's hard to say.Huh. I thought it was the hormones they give the cows that get into the milk.