...and i officially started buying rice/soy milk today:http://www.abcnews.go.com/WN/story?id=4139003&page=1
1/17/2008 10:52:15 PM
Are you completely opposed to cloning, or do you simply want to play it safe for a while?Either way, I strongly support a move away from dairy.
1/17/2008 11:05:26 PM
playing it safe ... if i really had a conscience about cruel treatment of animals, i probably would've given up meat by now. it just tastes so good.what's wrong w/ dairy?
1/17/2008 11:10:21 PM
definitely should be labelled as such
1/17/2008 11:10:50 PM
1/17/2008 11:26:35 PM
1/18/2008 4:44:24 AM
If treatment of animals is the problem, then treat the animals better. I need my vitamin D goddam it.
1/18/2008 8:26:34 AM
as long as the resulting clone milk/beef has to pass the same standards as normal milk/beef i dont have a problem with this.[Edited on January 18, 2008 at 9:11 AM. Reason : beeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeef]
1/18/2008 9:09:56 AM
Cloned animals cost too much to eat, so most likely they will just be used for breeding purposes.
1/18/2008 9:32:58 AM
Yeah, and according to Sanjay Gupta, http://www.cnn.com/HEALTH/blogs/paging.dr.gupta/2008/01/cloned-food-and-milk.htmlactual clone meat/milk probably won't be on store shelves for 3-5 years. But clone offspring is still weird enough for me to avoid it.And apparently,
1/18/2008 9:43:53 AM
1/18/2008 10:06:10 AM
1/18/2008 10:08:28 AM
From my feeble science understanding, cloned animals are not genetically modified, they are simply copied biologically. Not that I completely trust the FDA, but we are already eating many plant products, such as corn, that have been genetically modified to be bigger, tastier etc. Cloning isn't as drastic a procedure as GMO. The problem with gov't enforced labelling is that of all the numerous components that go into the production of something...a group of politicians is going to decide which thing is important enough to pull out and splash across the label. The gov't basically is choosing sides over political debates..."Non-Union produced", "Fairly traded" "Hand-made" are all poltical choices that gov't could force producers to advertise on their products using the public welfare as an excuse.
1/18/2008 11:31:11 AM
How would you like your steak? Rare? Medium rare? Well cloned?
1/18/2008 11:53:41 AM
Is there anything inherent in the cloning process that would make a cloned cow's meat any different from any other cow's meat? It's my understanding that a cloned animal still grows from cells to whole cows just like any other cow. So what exactly would make a cloned cow's meat any more dangerous than any other cow?
1/18/2008 12:29:20 PM
1/18/2008 12:36:31 PM
1/18/2008 1:48:53 PM
But seriously. The normality required for an animal to survive is much higher than it is to eat. And after you cook it, meat looks nothing like meat.
1/18/2008 2:01:00 PM
No doubt. Cooked beef from cows/cow offspring with cloning-induced genetic developmental deficiencies could be completely harmless.But still, it's
1/18/2008 2:56:36 PM
so, you guys who will "definitely avoid this", do you make it a point to avoid genetically modified crops?
1/18/2008 3:04:02 PM
Once I'm able to afford to buy organic, I'll do it. I'm reasonable--I know that, practically, not all genetically modified foods/preservatives/additives can be avoided. But with beef and milk already loaded with hormones and, on top of that now, cloned cow products being approved for consumption, I'm a little wary (of cumulative effects, maybe?). Moreover, it's just plain weird for my taste.Besides, with my diet, cutting out beef and milk will be a relatively small adjustment.
1/18/2008 3:49:23 PM
i like hormones and preservatives and stuff like that
1/18/2008 3:58:37 PM
1/18/2008 10:08:38 PM
^^ Dang, and I just thought about how much I'm going to miss butter, pizza (cheese), and milkshakes.hmm, i might have to rethink this "complete avoidance" policy.
1/19/2008 12:08:14 AM
1/19/2008 12:15:02 AM
I haven't got a problem with anything in the food production industry or the cloning industry, but I'd still like to be notified about when I am purchasing cloned meat... it is especially important to put such a note on products because others may have a moral or religious opposition to eating meat that is not naturally produced. Similar to the whole situation of kosher meats, only more new-age.Besides that,
1/19/2008 1:01:57 AM
1/19/2008 12:57:39 PM
The problem then becomes when large factory farms push the FDA to disallow or discourage companies from labeling uncloned products as being such as has lately been done with rBST, a product which is illegal in virtually every country but the United States due to its ill effects.
1/19/2008 1:12:45 PM
^
1/19/2008 2:32:29 PM
Why would they waste so much money to clone an animal when they can just get the animals to have sex for free?
1/19/2008 3:12:48 PM
theoretically, they can clone prize cows (the ones that produce the most gallons of milk/day) and then breed them to create a stock of super-producing--hence more profitable--cattle.genetically speaking, though, that's pretty risky, considering that species survival often depends on a frequent and thorough "reshuffling" of the gene pool.
1/19/2008 4:20:41 PM
yeah, you don't want cows to go the way of the banana.
1/19/2008 6:06:44 PM
1/19/2008 10:13:02 PM
1/20/2008 8:20:01 PM
1/21/2008 10:01:13 AM
If cloning and genetic modification is playing god then we have been doing it for ten thousand years. Not a one of our animals or crops existed back then, they were all created through thousands of years of selective breeding. What we do today is no different, just a little less haphazard.
1/21/2008 10:32:02 AM
^oh please :::RRROOOLLLLLLL::!!!!!!1do you actually think anyone here is talking about that?why would you go and make yourself look stupid by saying that?yes yes yes, human selection combined with natural reproduction is technically a form of "genetic engineering"but the only people who use the term "genetic engineering" in a context that includes human selectionare generally proponents of "genetic engineering" or opponents of those against "genetic engineering"EVERYONE ELSE, (read: average regular people)use the term "genetic engineering" to refer SPECIFICALLY to "artificial genetic engineering"AND DON'T PRETEND LIKE YOU DIDN'T KNOW THAT!a fish and a strawberry can't fuckso putting fish genes into a strawberry (by force, by damaging a living thing, invasive "surgery") IS ARTIFICIALthat's what people are talking about, ok?so, next time, before chiming in with that bullshit, you should ask, "are you talking about natural or artificial?"then you can avoid looking like some dumbass corporate lawyer with your "WELL ACTUALLY..."this "point" you made here is no better than those who say shit like,"what do you mean this apple isn't organic? of course it is -- it contains carbon, right?"
1/21/2008 10:48:01 AM
You are begging the question. Is naturally selecting genes via natural selection (as has been done for a millenia of years) sufficiently different from artificially selecting genes via selective breeding (as has been done for 10,000 years)? Why are they so different from artificially selecting genes via radiation induced mutation (as has been done for 70 years)? Finally, why are they so different from artificially selecting genes via direct cellular manipulation (as has been done for 20 years)? In my opinion, all of these forms of genetic manipulation are equally suspect and I want the same testing and research into all of them. The genes in the deer running around Raleigh are slowely being manipulated by natural selection, why should we be any less suspicious of eating deer than we are of eating laboratory modified cows?
1/21/2008 2:21:47 PM
cloned meat is always okay, if they are cloning healthy animals.GM food is less certain, depending on what modifications they are making, but most of the GM food out there aren't the strawberry-in-to-rats type of GM.
1/21/2008 2:52:55 PM
1/21/2008 4:07:31 PM
I think I'm just gonna stop buying food.Like I won't be one of those "OMG, I MUST HAVE ORGANIC!" people.Instead, I'm gonna be a free food bitch.If it's free and it don't smell like shit, I'll eat it.Fuck all this other noise.
1/21/2008 7:28:31 PM
^ The Campus Greens (I don't know if they still exist, but they did ~2 or 3 years ago) used to go through trash bins on Hillsborough Street and hold a food giveaway thing ... I think once a month. You should join them.
1/21/2008 8:59:56 PM
I was once leaving Fraziers with a ton of take out and saw some kid digging through a trashcan out on Hillsborough. I thought to myself, I am going to hook this guy up with some great food. Just as I was about to gain his attention, he stands up out of the trash and places a bottle in his basket which was a recycling bin. I laughed on the inside and was glad that he got up before I offered him the food and possibly offend him.Pretty cool those Campus Greens are so dedicated.anyway...
1/21/2008 9:07:46 PM
1/22/2008 2:53:23 AM
1/22/2008 7:12:21 AM
For all bacon and sausage lovers (and goat milk lovers for that matter):I missed this, but apparently the FDA slipped in a "consumer update" a few days after clone beef/milk issue hit headlines.http://www.fda.gov/consumer/updates/cloning011508.html
1/25/2008 6:05:37 PM
sup jackson
1/30/2008 10:12:54 PM
^ marko!just chillin...moving to texas soon where i can get all the clone beef i can eat.
2/4/2008 1:25:04 AM