Scientists Argue the US Ban on Human Gene Editing Will Leave It Behind (vice.com) 183
Alex Pearlman, reporting for Motherboard: As the biotech revolution accelerates globally, the U.S. could be getting left behind on key technological advances: namely, human genetic modification. A Congressional ban on human germline modification has "drawn new lines in the sand" on gene editing legislation, argues a paper published today in Science by Harvard law and bioethics professor I. Glenn Cohen and leading biologist Eli Adashi of Brown University. They say that without a course correction, "the United States is ceding its leadership in this arena to other nations." Germline gene modification is the act of making heritable changes to early stage human embryos or sex cells that can be passed down to the next generation, and it will be banned in the US. This is different from somatic gene editing, which is editing cells of humans that have already been born. The ban, added by the House of Representatives as a rider to the fiscal year 2016 budget, could have far-reaching implications if it continues to be annually renewed, according to the authors. It "undermines ongoing conversations on the possibility of human germline modification" and also affects "ongoing efforts by the FDA [Food and Drug Administration] to review the prevention of mitochondrial DNA diseases," including some kinds of hearing and vision impairments, among other serious illnesses that tend to develop in young children.
or in front (Score:2)
MAD (Score:1)
Which scientist? Dr. Moreau, Dr. Jeckyll, or Dr. Frankenstein?
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Dr. Evil. He's looking to expand beyond Sea Bass.
Yes, it will prevent research within the US (Score:1)
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Depends how hard it turns out to be. But it is a definite possibility and they are going to try pretty hard to make it work.
Re:Yes, it will prevent research within the US (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yes, it will prevent research within the US (Score:4, Funny)
I've always wanted to learn German. I didn't know I could learn it through gene modification technology.
Well, when they cross Homo Sapiens and the Suidae family of even-toed ungulates they will speak Pig Latin.
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you swine!
alternate point of view (Score:2, Interesting)
Putting in place these limitations allows us to find alternative solutions, its great to fix unborn babies, but currently 100% of the human population has been born, so fixing problems in aged individuals maybe better to encourage.
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It's rather obvious that they have the greatest conflict of interest. Not only do germline genetic repairs compete with their intellectual property for patients to cure, they threaten to reduce common genetic maladies as a profit center, like a communicable disease treatable with a lucrative antibiotic being eliminated would deprofit the antibi
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It's no worse than the bar for treatments generally. A promising new drug for my condition was recently withdrawn from trials because it was killing people. You either do things with rigor or you might as well be peddling Rhino horns.
This is not unlike the inclination to act with a total lack of discipline in IT.
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Genetically ensuring healthy babies/children could save a lot of health care resources that can then be devoted to helping older people.
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I disagree with your assertion. The OP didn't come across as an asshole in the slightest. Your post was literally jarring. You made a good point and then finished it so crudely for no reason. What's wrong with you?
Re: alternate point of view (Score:4, Funny)
He/she may be suffering from a Mitochondrial disease...
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People generally have no awareness of this until AFTERWARDS.
Even then, dealing with a (relatively) well understood low level cellular mechanism is by no means a sure thing.
Do I have this right? (Score:2, Insightful)
GMOs are the worst thing to ever be unleashed on the world because it is gene-splicing done by mainly US firms but it is horrible that the US is not engaging in "unnatural" (not sperm and egg) gene-splicing of human DNA?
Or restated as "direct manipulation of non-human DNA is worse than admiring Hitler but direct manipulation of human DNA is the best thing ever."
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At least among the people I know, GMOs aren't bad because of the gene manipulation itself. Instead, they are considered bad because that manipulation results in significantly higher concentrations of pesticides being used on GMO crops (as the crops are now "roundup ready" or whatever). It is these higher concentrations of pesticides that are considered dangerous, not the genetic manipulation.
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Re:Do I have this right? (Score:4, Informative)
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Much as I dislike Monsanto, that story is bullshit.
No farmers have been sued for inadvertently using GMO seed. They did it quite deliberately, without paying.
Its a hypothetical. Even if farmers repeatedly used saved seed, and over time the GMO strains blown in came to dominate, the patents are already expiring.
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Yes... such a "false narrative" of nature actually doing what it's designed to do. You smug morons whine about "science" than then ignore it when it suits you.
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GMOs aren't bad because of the gene manipulation itself. Instead, they are considered bad because that manipulation results in significantly higher concentrations of pesticides being used on GMO crops
No, genetic engineering is totally the reason; the goalpost has just been moved some given how indefensible and ridiculous of a reason it is. In the case you mentioned, people should ask themselves if farmers are spending extra of GE seed just so that they can spend extra of additionally unnecessary pesticides because they have no idea how to farm and need some city dweller to explain it to them, or that there is more to the story. It is the latter.
Yes, there are crops genetically engineered to be resista
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> what do you think farmers did before these crops?
They grew something besides high fructose corn syrup for ConAgra.
The thing about most GMOs is that they are done for very uninteresting plants that go into foods that you really shouldn't be eating anyways. GMO crops for the most part are part of a dubious monoculture both in terms of actual biology and in terms of the consumer food supply.
If you generally avoid "food like substances" in shiny plastic wrappers, you're probably already avoiding the vast m
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The price premium on Roundup Ready corn, for example, isn't "low" now because Monsanto is being nice and lulling us all into believing they're good people. They're charging wh
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Yeah, the term "Frankenfood" was coined because of Roundup and not to invoke irrational fears about the genetic makeup of the tomato somebody might bite into. Riiiiiight!!!
BTW, Roundup is an herbicide. The difference between herbicide and pesticide is similar to the difference between a lion and a vegan.
There are many aspects of GMO crops. Some is to make them Roundup resistant by splicing in genes from other plants that are naturally roundup resistant. Some are to splice in genes from plants that excrete c
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The difference between herbicide and pesticide
Technically speaking here, as per legal definitions, a pesticide is anything that kills an unwanted organism. An insecticide kills insects, a miticide kills mites, a rodentacide kills rodents, a fungicide kills fungi, an herbicide kills weeds, and all are technically pesticides, although in the common vernacular, pesticide and insecticide are frequently used interchangeably.
I agree with what you're saying, and the parent poster most likely was using the word pesticide to mean insecticide (because there is
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No, it's just a lame excuse to have yet another technology banned. And this ban on human germline GM has been a hobby horse of Jeremy Rifkin for years. NobOdy is going to spray Roundup on humans for any reason, but Rifkin and his friends in the Hollywood Party will find some excuse to have human genetic engineering banned.
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"The problem with GMO's is patents on F'n FOOD!"
This is a defect of our legal system, not our technology.
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Which has been going on for decades, long before genetic engineering. Surprisingly, plant breeders want to get paid too. If you don't like it, that's fine, there are countless varieties of crop that are not patented or off patent (for example, the patents on Honeycrisp apples and Monsanto's first generation of glyphosate tolerant soybeans have expired and both are now free to use). It is an option, not an entitlement, to use newer varieties.
You want to talk to be about short vs long term benefit, what ha
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> I'm not sure how you can say patents are bad then demand to use the work patents have provided for.
I rather view it as being able to use my own personal property without interference. That's the problem with this stuff. Corporate toadies are more than happy to strip rights from individuals and give them to corporations.
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1) This isn't a real thing. It was an idea that never got into marketed products. It would actually probably be a go
Alternative pleading: Either terminator or patent (Score:2)
How do you square [patent infringement lawsuits] with your belief that GM seeds aren't replantable?
I mentally resolved this cognitive dissonance into alternative pleading [wikipedia.org] to the following effect: "Some GMO plants introduce a terminator gene, whose intentionally failing pollination could cause defects in neighboring farmers' crops. And even those that don't have a terminator gene are a patent hazard for neighboring farmers."
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This is an old, old problem, though, and a reason to use heritage seed and produce more.
Re:Do I have this right? (Score:5, Informative)
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So what is wrong with labeling them? We label vitamins. We label prescriptions. We label water bottles. Why is labeling GMOs so terrible?
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So what is wrong with labeling them? We label vitamins. We label prescriptions. We label water bottles. Why is labeling GMOs so terrible?
We label for ingredients, not for processes. How big would a food label have to be if we had to say "Harvested with combines" and "Shipped in refrigerated trucks" on each of them?
I speak as a person to whom nutrition labels are very important, because my wife is on a complex renal diet. We have to squint at the fine print for substances nobody else cares about, like phosphorus and protein. The more clutter you add to our labels, the bigger a magnifier we have to use.
Watch anti-GMOers define DNA as an ingredient (Score:2)
We label for ingredients, not for processes.
For one thing, DNA is a material present in uncooked food, making it arguably part of an ingredient. (I admit to not having read your definition of "ingredient". If you wish, I can discuss this issue in the context of on a cited definition.) For another, the nutritional value of each ingredient depends on the plant's phenotype, which is affected by changes to its genotype.
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We label added vitamins and nutrition facts as those are actual components of food. Genetic engineering is not a food component, and it makes no more sense to label it that it does to label something has being produced through doubled haploid hybridization, grafting, or any of the other many things that go unlabeled (most of which the average person has no idea is occurring). The other difference is that there haven't been years of fearmongering targeting vitamins; is it really informative when you tell p
Re:Do I have this right? (Score:5, Insightful)
Scientists: This stuff is safe.
Organic industry: If it's safe, why not label it?
[labels go in]
Organic industry: If it's safe, why are there MANDATORY LABELS? BOOGA BOOGA! Buy organic!
The problem of people wanting to find GMO free food is easily solved by voluntary labels put on by companies that want to cater to people with food hang-ups. It works for Kosher, and there's already a "Non-GMO Project Verified" label that's perfectly happy to scam you out of your cash by putting its stamp on salt and bottled water.
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It "has to be mandatory" if your goal is to push people away from GMO products, not if your goal is provide a supply of verifiable non-GMO food for people who want them. Your point about there being a "well defined market" for Kosher foods gives the game away. Your goal is not to find non-GMO foods to buy. You can already get that by buying Organic o
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There is a finite amount of room on any food container for labels, and there are things that matter more.
I have friends with serious food problems. One will react really badly to sulfites, one to gluten, another to cornstarch. I have to read ingredient labels in detail and hope I'm interpreting them correctly if I don't want to poison my friends. I'd really like, for example, a sulfite label, since that can cause an actual problem, so I'm not real keen on a mandatory label for something that really do
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Of course "actual scientists" don't give a damn about the broader implications of what they are doing. They have this scientific hubris that everyone should just accept their work based a sort of blind trust. Their attitude and those of their followers are no different than any other religion.
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Get to know some scientists. They're fanatical about being able to check each other's work, because science doesn't actually work if it relies on blind trust. Most of the scientists I've known will explain their work and why they're doing it and what the science is if asked, or sometimes if the listener just stands there and looks halfway interested.
If you want to check on anything scientific, a university library should be able to provide everything you want to check on starting with the results of ex
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Medicine: 41
Chemistry: 34
Physics: 25
Economics: 8
Literature: 1
Peace: 1
I don't know how many holders of the price in Medicine are alive right now, but I would have to guess that 41 of them is a pretty substantial percentage. It seems like mostly relevant people. Not sure why the literature and peace price winners jumped in there. At a glance I don't see much that's relevant in their background. But yeah, I'd say that this list doesn't compare very closely to Jenny McCarthy's idio
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I'm going to guess that you don't think anybody is qualified to make such a statement. I suppose technically, that's true. It's not possible to prove that something is "safe" so demands to prove GMOs "safe" are really just setting up goalposts with wheels. All you can do is test for specific dangers, and those tests have come out negative. So I suppose the best thing to say is that we've tested for the dangers we can reaso
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Food gene manipulations can help cure widespread malnutrition but who cares about that?
Oh the irony. "Mental detective" indeed. Perhaps you are also in need of a bit of that gene trimming as well?
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> Food gene manipulations can help cure widespread malnutrition but who cares about that?
This is just a fantasy that you lot trot out once you can no longer run from reality.
There is no need for franken-foods to solve this problem of yours. There are plenty of "legacy" foods that will fit the bill. You're just trying to find a problem to fit your solution. You're trying to apply the most complicated approach possible when something remarkably simpler will do.
The truth is that we grow far more food than w
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Let's look at the market realities. Farmers nowadays tend to be pretty conscious of why they're paying money and what they're getting for it, and they still buy lots and lots of GMO seeds. Clearly, they get considerable savings out of the seeds, or they wouldn't pay money for them.
That's sort of the point (Score:4, Insightful)
A: Human gene editing could lead us to a dark place, let's not do that.
B: This will cause us to be left behind in the science of human gene editing!
A: Yes, well, that was rather the point, wasn't it?
Obviously this was the intent. I'd personally be willing to take a few risks to get the cure for cancer, but if Europe takes the risks we still get the cure for cancer - just not the profits from it.
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[...] if Europe takes the risks we still get the cure for cancer - just not the profits from it.
Yeah...
We would be benefiting from the very thing that we banned for ethical reasons.... The ban on gene editing should be tied to a ban on science, treatments and medicine derived from banned work as well. Otherwise, what's the point?
I am, by the way, completely for unrestricted research into all aspects of science so long as no humans or animals are harmed.
Re: That's sort of the point (Score:2)
Perhaps those instituting the ban simply realize the levels of depravity in US big pharma. If that morally bankrupt cadre is allowed to work with gene splicing, pretty soon we'll have dick pills with side effects of body horror.
"Seek medical treatment for an erection lasting longer than 4 hours, or if you begin to grow mantis-like forearm spikes or spider mandibles,"
No ... such technology should be left to less evil groups (basically anyone except 1940s era Germany). If those groups develop something ama
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They haven't outlawed the mantis-forearm-erectile-disfunction experimentation. They've only outlawed making the mantis forearm inheritable by children.
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They will be, by the categorical collapse between the two, alone.
You can't differentiate yourself from an animal now, but are gracefully protected by theistic concepts such as "rights". What happens when the lack of scientific basis for that becomes widely obvious?
"rights" are not "theistic" concepts at all. Rather, they are concessions obtained by the weaker group from the ruling group through violence, or the threat of it. Animals will get rights just the same when they claim them... which won't happen anytime soon. Which means that "animal rights" aren't rights, despite the name. They are duties imposes on humans by other humans. That alone should tell you that nothing of note will happen to our concept of rights no matter what genetics says.
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You may not have a problem with germline gene modification but maybe the rest of humanity might or those 5, 10, or even 50 generations from now. We know very little about genetics and how each gene interacts with others. While some things such as the gene for eye colour appear to be straight forward the genes that give rise to disease usually are due to a "fault" in one of many.
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A number of mitochondrial diseases are due to mutations in a very small set of genes, due to their immediate lethality. They sound like prime candidates for a fix.
However, there is a much simpler solution, which is prenatal testing and early abortion. As the foetus isn't going to survive for a long time anyway, this will not change much in final outcomes right now, and will provide a solution for everyone, instead of the extremely expensive and uncertain germline modification that will only be available to
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Sure, just full on eugenics - just kill the unacceptable fetus (or, presumably, infant if that's where it's detected). Not sure why that would bother anyone. Of course, some problems won't manifest until puberty, but I think you'll get a lot less objection to offing unwanted teenagers.
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We're talking about new, unknown problems here. Nothing to do with known issues - though on that topic, of coure you talk about those issues, and ignore sex-selection abortion, which is the number 1 thing people screen for today.
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What happens if we make a human that is toxic to other humans?
I'm pretty sure George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and Hillary Clinton already exist.
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No, he's nitpicking the difference between curing a type of cancer and curing cancer.
You can become immune to one strain of flu, but not every possible type that has or may eventually occur.
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Cancer is not something that can be cured. You can't cure "virus".
So say "No", but that is precisely what is meant by "overly rigid definition"
Again, no. It's clear from the original quote that they don't think that broad categories can be cured ('cancer', 'virus'), rather than (for example) thinking cancer can be 'treated' but not really 'cured'. Changing the definition of 'cure' wouldn't affect their critique, but saying "cure every kind of cancer" instead might.
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You really are a useless twit.
Absolutely correct, good on you for spotting the obvious. But then again, I'm not a cowardly useless twit, like some people.
Behind what? (Score:1)
Behind countries doing gene splicing to create Frankenfoods?
Yeah, not a big deal. We just outsource the wet lab part of the study to Canada or the EU anyway. Then we do the grunt work here.
Want to know what's leaving us behind?
Money spent on higher education and grants.
That's where the missing part is.
Re:Behind what? (Score:4, Insightful)
People who get upset over GMO Foods (Score:4, Insightful)
Seem surprisingly willing to push Frankenpeople.
Oh well the U.S. also pioneered eugenics but was left in the dust by European nations and that worked out well.
Well if bob next door gets one... (Score:3)
Science may now be capable redefining the human condition and if we aren't at the forefront of this crime against nature
well then that's just un-American.
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I thought the US was just going to buy their super soldiers from China like they buy everything else from there.
guinea pigs (Score:4, Insightful)
If the adjustments are "simple" fixes like curing a disease by correcting a mutation or two, I see no problem with it.
But if it's about making a "super race" by fiddling with body type or the brain, then I say let other countries be the guinea pigs and learn the hard road lessons of fiddling.
We can gradually adopt practices that prove themselves over time.
However, I can image a scenario where a given set of tweaks makes say 95% of the subjects faster, smarter, and/or more disciplined, etc., but 5% have nasty side-effects. Such countries may conclude the trade-off is worth it and have an overall better GDP even if some suffer because of it.
That creates a conundrum: how do you compete with a country ready to throw a percentage of their population under the bus to get aggregate gains, especially if they become a military risk to us.
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If the adjustments are "simple" fixes like curing a disease by correcting a mutation or two, I see no problem with it.
But if it's about making a "super race" by fiddling with body type or the brain, then I say let other countries be the guinea pigs and learn the hard road lessons of fiddling.
You are implying some arbitrary normal human as a baseline reference. And the only difference between those two scenarios is whether you are moving someone up to that baseline or past that baseline. But why should we set the goalpost at average human instead of setting the goalpost of optimum human potential? Most of us who aren't Olympic-level athletes and super-geniuses all has some genetic conditions that hold us back from reaching the greatest heights of human achievement. If those conditions can be fi
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But why should we set the goalpost at average human instead of setting the goalpost of optimum human potential?
Well, for one thing, because the history of eugenics proves that "optimum human potential" is generally more of a culturally contingent set of metrics rather than an objective measure of human potential.
Are we better than the Nazis or various other eugenics projects in recognizing how "unscientific" our values sometimes are? Hopefully we're better than that... But I'll bet in a hundred years or so, scientists will look back and shake their heads at how ignorant we were in thinking X signified a good me
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Besides, technology and society over time shapes us by removing natural pressures that select for positive traits. Since breeding kennels for humans would be considered immoral and impractical, using direct genetic manipulation is the only acceptable method for impro
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The risk is not just external.
There are a lot of deep ethical problems here. Do we want to "cure" conditions that cause people to be troublesome and not follow orders?
I'd like to see careful discussion about what is and isn't OK. That isn't unusual - I'm not allowed to just build a nuclear reactor in my back yard either - dangerous projects require reasonable review .
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Or, for that matter, what do we want to do about autism? We definitely would like to make sure nobody's on the far end of the spectrum, but for those of us on the near end it's part of who we are, and isn't just a detriment.
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Well, it seems as though the best petri dish for growing these humans and replacement parts turns out to be a real womb after all. At least that is what I learned from the back story novels.
Maybe I'm missing something... (Score:2)
(Sec. 749) Prohibits the FDA from acknowledging applications for an exemption for investigational use of a drug or biological product in research in which a human embryo is intentionally created or modified to include a heritable genetic modification. Provides that any submission is deemed not to have been received, and the exemption may not go into effect.
While this prevents any FDA approval, I don't see how it would stop scientists from performing experiments, and it doesn't seem to have any criminal or civil penalties attached to it. Are there other bills that provide for this?
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The problem is more from restrictions on federal research funds, and the rules against related research in labs receiving any federal funds.
So basically it's not a ban in the sense that it's verboten, just that they won't be able to get any research dollars from the government?
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Only limiting it in so far as no company sees any profit motive for risking its own money but plenty of profit motive for risking my money. I think that is what you meant to say.
I often wonder how anybody gets along without the government sending somebody by to shove the food down their mouths and wipe their ass when it comes out the other end when I read such tomfoolery as that.
Panic! (Score:2)
Genetically-enhanced communist super-humans are going to seduce our undersexed Millennials! Sexually-transmitted retroviruses will modify their genome to make them more communist! Code Red! Code Red! *starts breathing into paper bag*
"Scientists" can argue all they want (Score:2)
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Meanwhile, the NIH is lifting it's ban on chimera research.
Must have been after intense pressure from the furry lobby. Seems ironic that the Chinese will be the ones with human super soldiers [wikia.com] but we'll have tiger-man warriors.
Huh? (Score:2)
All it does is prevent the procedure from being performed in the US. It also keeps the U.S.A. out of the initial lawsuits. Quite frankly if your doing germ line editing then everyone involved needs their "rights" voided. It's dangerous enough and the U.S. can't afford the lawsuits.
But of course U.S. companies are going to be involved in the "research" and profits. The procedures just won't be performed here.
It's been said before (Score:2)
Eichmann: If we don't drown Jews in the freezing tanks of water, we will FALL BEHIND in the study of human thermodynamics and hypothermia!
Just because we CAN doesn't mean we SHOULD.
There are some things that it's perhaps better to "fall behind" on?
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There are some things that it's perhaps better to "fall behind" on?
Sure. Curing diseases is not one of those things.
They said the same thing about fetal stem cells. (Score:2)
But then iot turned out that the best treatments are from stem cells harvested from your own body. Stem cells from other bodies turned out to become cancerous.
Not the biggest problem (Score:2)
I'd be less concerned about the effects of the ban and way more concerned about the ignorance and hostility to science that's behind it.
Conversation overheard in Syria in 2028... (Score:2, Informative)
Conversation overheard in Syria in 2028...
"Who wants to go to the U.S.?"
"Not me. I hear that hyper religious shithole still has people who have Type 1 diabetes and Huntington's disease... can't you freaking imagine?"
2000 year-old book governs research policy (Score:2)
Is that not the real problem? The interpretation of a 2000 year-old book, by just a few really and then a larger number of people have to accept their word, determines what is acceptable research and what is not. Then given enough elected legislators among that larger number and it affects laws around the research.
The interpretation is sometimes confusing though. I've never read it but I'm led to believe there is an assertion within it, "Thou shalt not kill", but the interpreters of the book don't object to
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I've never read it but I'm led to believe there is an assertion within it, "Thou shalt not kill", but the interpreters of the book don't object to extremely well funded military research.
You refer to a passage in Exodus 20. A more accurate translation, given the context of other uses of the Hebrew word translated "kill" in the King James Version, is "You must not commit murder." That makes more sense alongside the capital punishment for the most serious sins set forth in Leviticus.
What I want to know is (Score:2)
How am I supposed to get my augmentations without becoming addicted to Neuropozyne [wikia.com] if Sarif's gene therapy is outtlawed? Darrow or Taggart must be behind this!
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It's happened. Strains of cells from real people have been patented without them knowing that the strains are even interesting.
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we'd repeal the DMCA
A complete repeal of the DMCA would include a repeal of 17 USC 512, the Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act. This would take away the defense that allows sites that display user-uploaded-works, such as YouTube and Slashdot, to continue to operate without requiring editorial review of each post. Instead of forcing one comment off Slashdot, Scientology would have been able to close Slashdot entirely.
A complete repeal of the DMCA would also include a repeal of 17 USC 117(c). This would resto