2/28/2006 1:21:28 PM
Personally, I think it is the governments role to regulate genetic mutation and any other type of genetic altering. Same thing with stem cell, if people knew that a higher authority is actually supervising this work then maybe the evironmental/pro-life zealots wont go bombing and sabotaging important research that may give rise to new theories and technology.By the way, if someone had the intent to personally screw with people through food/chemicals/germs/whatever then whats stopping them? Shouldn't we be more worried about the mad lone scientist instead of the licensed laboratory scientist?[Edited on February 28, 2006 at 1:27 PM. Reason : .]
2/28/2006 1:25:04 PM
2/28/2006 1:42:47 PM
I propose a solution which provides for uniform standards for lazy/cheap producers and still provides for state rights. Federal regulations are a minimum for food standards and can be sold in any state. However, any food which meets the federal standards but not the state's standards must be labled "This product meets federal standards for food safety but does not meet the standards set forth by this state"Problem solved.
2/28/2006 1:42:50 PM
^ deal.
2/28/2006 1:47:14 PM
2/28/2006 1:51:47 PM
2/28/2006 3:39:10 PM
2/28/2006 3:43:34 PM
2/28/2006 4:05:48 PM
2/28/2006 4:33:00 PM
^ You just restated yourself. [Edited on February 28, 2006 at 4:42 PM. Reason : [blanked]]
2/28/2006 4:38:50 PM
2/28/2006 4:39:46 PM
As I have said, "A Company" does not exist, it is an imaginary figure, an abstraction for something very real: People cooperating to pool their property and create even more wealth.So, when you say "A company should not be treated as human, nor given the rights of a human" you are really saying "People working together as a group should not be treated as human, nor given the rights of a human." Why do you feel this should be the case?
2/28/2006 4:43:05 PM
2/28/2006 4:44:20 PM
Uh, the things they create are called "property". you know, factories, trucks, inventory. Of course this stuff should not be called a person, it is property, and belongs to the shareholders, and they and their agents should be able to dispose of it as they see fit. [Edited on February 28, 2006 at 5:11 PM. Reason : fix]
2/28/2006 5:10:53 PM
so as a shareholder of apple computers and yellow roadway, which chair, computer, truck belong to me?
2/28/2006 7:41:44 PM
you own part of the leg of each chair yo.get in there and take your shit back.of course apple could just badge the 3 legged chairs with their logo and sell it for 100x what they paid for it.
2/28/2006 7:50:37 PM
Shaggy, when people buy Apple products, they aren't paying for the logo. Shit's quality yo.
2/28/2006 7:54:01 PM
ololololololololololololololololololololololololololothats a good one i'll remember it.
2/28/2006 7:55:16 PM
(good zings)As for nutsmackr: is it your contention that whenever property rights are not clear and easy, none exist? After a 30 year marriage during which both worked, which of the two owns the house? I started a legal partnership with my cousin, we each invested about half the money and started a pizza hut. Which of us owns the cash-register? (for some reason the police came when I took the ovens home with me). The answer to your question is that you own x% of everything those companies own. If you want to get your stuff out of those companies, I'm sure a fellow shareholder will relieve you of your shares, just as a partner in a firm can only get out by being bought out. The 1/3 partner in a law firm just can't start taking home funiture, he must find someone to buy his stake. [Edited on February 28, 2006 at 9:29 PM. Reason : stake!][Edited on February 28, 2006 at 9:30 PM. Reason : ovens!]
2/28/2006 9:23:50 PM
still no one has responded to me as to why these gm crops and whatnot are necessary, since there is enough food in the world to feed everyone more than they need RIGHT NOW. That being the case, why do we need gm crops in order to try and get more output? The problem of chronic hunger is one of DISTRIBUTION, not scarcity.It's not going to be given to the hungry any more than the food we already have. Food aid is typically given to governments, and often those governments just put it on the market to be sold, thereby passing over the hungry, who still can't buy it.[Edited on March 1, 2006 at 9:13 AM. Reason : .]
3/1/2006 9:12:42 AM
http://www.plantphysiol.org/cgi/content/full/124/1/3an interesting read on the topic in a peer-reviewed journal.
3/1/2006 10:02:34 AM
3/1/2006 10:35:55 AM
DG, you still have not explained how me growing GM crops is a sufficient hinderance upon your freedoms to justify governmental interference. Where are the farms being wrecked by GM contamination? Such things start lawsuits, they should be public. We have been growing GM crops for a decade now and eating them, the problems should have arisen already.
3/1/2006 11:09:51 AM
3/1/2006 11:38:54 AM
3/1/2006 12:00:09 PM
well, your logic is completely flawed here. I don't think anyone's ever imbibed a specific combination of 1/3 whiskey, 1/3 clorox, and 1/3 hydrochloric acid while taking an enima full of motor oil, but I can pretty well assume that it will kill him. I don't need to do research.and before you get even more silly on me, you know that I'm not saying that growing gm crops is equally dangerous as that. What I'm saying is that if we don't KNOW, but there's a good chance that it COULD cause problems, much more extensive testing should be done before it's in our cornflakes.I would say that the burden of proof is on those introducing the new product, not on those trying to prove they're dangerous.Oh, btw, alot of my problems would be allayed if they started labeling GM foods, because I'm quite sure sales would plummet and they'd lose in the marketplace. Then smith's free hand could bitch-smack them.[Edited on March 1, 2006 at 12:13 PM. Reason : .]
3/1/2006 12:12:51 PM
3/1/2006 12:49:10 PM
3/1/2006 12:57:18 PM
Oh Fuck. You did it to me again. Please note, there were two separate topics covered in my post. Only one mentioned Penn and Teller, and only because the question was a truely subjective "do people trust the FDA?" Again, you have not demonstrated substantial harm from the vast quantity of GM foods produced and consumed every year. Hence, you have no moral ground to stand upon while calling for its banishment.[Edited on March 1, 2006 at 1:01 PM. Reason : substantial is more accurate]
3/1/2006 1:01:01 PM
3/1/2006 1:06:45 PM
3/1/2006 3:40:03 PM
3/1/2006 4:49:05 PM
http://sustainablog.blogspot.com/2006/03/house-delays-vote-on-hr-4167.htmlhttp://www.net.org/health/hr4167.vtmlThe House is set to debate HR 4167 today but the vote on final passage has been postponed until next week. Opponents of the bill think this is because of the number of amendments that have been offered as a result of stepped-up public and press attentionhttp://www.net.org/health/AG%20Letter-FoodSafety-3-1-06.pdf37 state attorneys general oppose the bill.The Congressional Budget Office estimates that HR 4167 will cost taxpayers more than $100 million, but notes that bill is so vaguely written that its costs and effects are difficult to predict:
3/3/2006 10:15:09 AM
Now that thinking is dangerous. We already have too many laws on the books. While I do not support this legislation (food safety regulation is a state issue), simply saying that "this bill eliminates 200 of the 1.4 billion laws on the books!" is not sufficient justification to be against it. Hell, it is sufficient justification to be in favor of it, at least until more information is made available. In this instance, it is replacing state law with federal law, and I just can't support that. Naughty congress!That said, this insult to federalism is paltry compared to the insults posed by federal labor regulations such as the minimum wage and union rights.
3/4/2006 12:48:19 AM