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Paradox of genetic engineering
Canada Free Press ^ | 06/24/18 | A. Dru Kristenev

Posted on 06/24/2018 8:30:08 AM PDT by Sean_Anthony

Reinventing of God’s creations, whether it’s laboratory beef or a freakish feathered dinosaur, these strange concepts are symptoms of unchecked pride – that man can build a better mousetrap or, in this case extinct “terrible lizard,” than God.

After all the years of telling us that genetic engineering is unhealthy for people and upsets the natural order of the environment, advocates of all things organic are finding themselves in something of a bind.

Overzealous health nuts keep pushing everything vegan but have never let go of deriding genetically modified foods, consistently going after Monsanto and other corporations that monkey with grain and vegetable DNA to make them pest and drought resistant.


TOPICS: Politics; Science; Society
KEYWORDS: chickens; dinosaurs; geneticengineering; vegans

1 posted on 06/24/2018 8:30:08 AM PDT by Sean_Anthony
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To: Sean_Anthony

Website is so full of obscuring popups and grey outside I gave OP trying to read the article.

OBNOXIOUS


2 posted on 06/24/2018 8:33:57 AM PDT by American in Israel (A wise man's heart directs him to the right, but the foolish mans heart directs him toward the left.)
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To: Sean_Anthony

The logical vegan answer?


A few thoughts.

1) When you take philosophy (the search for truth)out of science and society, you also lose the concept of logic.

2) Something looked at in isolation looks much different than something looked at within systems. At least in my elementary schools we studied systems. This is the problem with global warming it is a few measuring points ignoring the effect of countless measuring points and countless systems...……….

BUT, when you factor in systems, the answer gets much different...……………………………..


3 posted on 06/24/2018 8:46:34 AM PDT by PeterPrinciple (Thinking Caps are no longer being issued but there must be a warehouse full of them somewhere.)
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To: Sean_Anthony

Well we condition our kids to sit at desks a lot nowadays. I think fewer and fewer know how to mow the lawn.


4 posted on 06/24/2018 9:04:34 AM PDT by Morpheus2009
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To: Sean_Anthony

I have some comments for this and it concerns the notion of religion and man made things.

G-d made the system that is the universe in which we live and made the genetics and the science which we understand (although not anywhere near completely) because we have our ability to study and archive and learn. The study of genetics and cosmology are part of our task in this life.

Another part of our task is to live to the best that we can and achieve what we can and learn what we can. This includes making plant based meat substitutes that taste good and provide nutrition. It can also include deciding not to ingest things that have been made or contain processes that are not as natural as something not touched by the hand of man.

We have the ability to make modifications that allow foodstuff to grow and flourish in unusable soil. We can defeat spoilage and disease and reach for new levels of medicine. There are many people alive today because their natural death was delayed by man made invention.

And still one can try to deny all that has been accomplished, and that too is allowed. For me and mine, the development of man made meat products is a step in the right direction and is allowed by the system in which we were born.


5 posted on 06/24/2018 9:05:36 AM PDT by KC_for_Freedom
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To: Sean_Anthony

This past day I read an article in the WSJ (no link - paywall) from a journalist environmentalist (UK), Mark Lynas, who had been rabidly anti-GMO from his adolescence until about 5 years ago when he totally switched camps to being pro-GMO (albeit on the basis of climate change).

A big point that he makes is that GMO modifications for pest and drought resistance is reducing the use of pesticides / toxins, sometimes down to a third or less usage. Yet the activists persist which is a lesson in the near religious aspect of the far edge fanaticism in any movement.


6 posted on 06/24/2018 9:06:28 AM PDT by SES1066 (Happiness is a depressed Washington, DC housing market!)
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To: Sean_Anthony

Genetically modified food is rejected by the left. But they are obsessed with doing everything else they can to interfere with Nature. They would love it if they could change someone’s XX or XY chromosome, to turn them into the opposite sex.
Don’t look for consistency with the left. They are capable of holding two contradictory thoughts in their minds at the same time without seeing the conflict.


7 posted on 06/24/2018 9:12:11 AM PDT by I want the USA back (Liberalism is the denial of human nature.)
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To: Sean_Anthony

Genetic engineering has been going on for centuries. The only difference is that we have better tools to do it now.


8 posted on 06/24/2018 9:15:43 AM PDT by Brilliant
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To: Brilliant

Genetic engineering going on for centuries. And now we have better tools. For a fact. And genetics are now being modified for humans to correct faulty genes to cure all sorts of medical problems: sickle cell anemia, muscular distrophy, aids, lots of gene splicing cures coming. And of course the sci-fi stories of super soldiers,,,and ultra well built women. Americans may have ethics. The Chinese?! Who knows?!


9 posted on 06/24/2018 9:36:10 AM PDT by Trumpet 1 (US Constitution is my guide.)
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To: Sean_Anthony
It’s the law of unintended consequences that I tend to worry about and our fully mapping the human genome was a real breath-taker, that’s for sure.

Humans mess with stuff, for good and bad reasons. That’s just the way we are, but generally the intent is to make something better by making it even more the in way God made it.

I’m okay with that. I spent the 70s and early 80s in farm country, where hybrid corn and beans and pure-bred hogs and cattle were the basic staples of life and business.

I remember detassling hybrid seed corn as being a hard summer job for bus loads of high school kids, but it sure paid well!

In those days, humans used more or less the same methods that God does to create our something betters. It was slow trial and error, but effective.

Nowadays, we use our own tools to quickly isolate, cut and splice away God’s genetic work to replace it with our own.

This seems like a more direct and better way to do the same things and maybe it is.

However, as an observer, I can’t help but notice how our taking Him out of anything we do generally goes bad sooner or later.

More often than not, that happens about the time we go too far too fast, and then do something stupid because our ego or checkbook or who knows what thinks that would be a good idea.

Which then brings us back to the law of unintended consequences.

10 posted on 06/24/2018 10:17:34 AM PDT by GBA (Here in the matrix, merrily, merrily, life is but a dream.)
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To: Sean_Anthony
DNA is God's creative tool that He designed and employed.

The only thing scientists can do is learn to understand it and try to change it.

They cannot create DNA.

11 posted on 06/24/2018 10:44:48 AM PDT by Slyfox (Not my circus, not my monkeys)
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To: Sean_Anthony

that man can build a better mousetrap or, in this case extinct “terrible lizard,” than God.


Why not? God’s craftsmanship is woeful. My dog can make his own vitamin C, but I can’t. What’s the deal with that?


12 posted on 06/24/2018 11:44:59 AM PDT by sparklite2 (See more at Sparklite Times)
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To: sparklite2

Dogs don’t like, won’t eat citrus. We do.

Woeful? More like wonderful.


13 posted on 06/24/2018 12:33:53 PM PDT by RoadGumby (This is not where I belong, Take this world and give me Jesus.)
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To: Sean_Anthony

Label GMO foods.


14 posted on 06/24/2018 1:08:49 PM PDT by Joe Bfstplk (A Texas Deplorable.)
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To: RoadGumby

Dogs don’t like, won’t eat citrus. We do.

Woeful? More like wonderful.


Dogs don’t eat citrus because they don’t have to.
We eat citrus because, it seems likely, when we as primates lived in trees, fruit was everywhere and plentiful. We originally had the ability to synthesize our own citric acid, but lost it through non-use as tree dwellers.

I believe that. But if we were created that way, it is a faulty design. That’s not the only thing. Breathing through the same throat we eat with seems unnecessary and promotes choking to death. Also, on a planet covered primarily in water, why didn’t we get some gills?

If there was a creator God, he/she didn’t to a very good job.


15 posted on 06/24/2018 1:09:21 PM PDT by sparklite2 (See more at Sparklite Times)
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To: Sean_Anthony
I remember when there were objection to producing plutonium, as it was a unnatural element, not made by God. I believe God gave us brains to use, and except for a very few "Thou shalt nots," we're pretty much free to use them as we please, including making plutonium as well as higher-mass transuranics, and recreating dinosaurs.
16 posted on 06/24/2018 3:45:21 PM PDT by JoeFromSidney
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To: Joe Bfstplk

Yes. Regardless of opinion, informed purchase is entirely reasonable.


17 posted on 06/24/2018 5:13:10 PM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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To: Sean_Anthony

What of Monsanto seeking to ruin private farmers who do not want Monsanto seeds but who are helplessly exposed to their patented seeds via open trucks on public thoroughfares, and are then accused of violating patent?

What of Monsanto bribing legislators through lobbyists to attempt to outlaw all heirloom (i.e., natural and non-patentable) seeds to force all farmers to buy Monsanto GMO seeds that do not reproduce and must thus be repurchased each year?

What of Monsanto buying Beealogics, a non-profit company researching Beehive Colony Collapse Disorder, then burying the data that correlates their Roundup witn Beehive Colony Collapse Disorder?


18 posted on 06/24/2018 5:23:24 PM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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To: YogicCowboy

witn = with.


19 posted on 06/24/2018 5:24:16 PM PDT by YogicCowboy ("I am not entirely on anyone's side, because no one is entirely on mine." - J. R. R. Tolkien)
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To: Sean_Anthony

NOT recreating, only MINOR modifications.

NOTHING original has ever been done without reusing/manipulating the complex mechanisms already there.


20 posted on 06/24/2018 5:36:22 PM PDT by elbook
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