1/22/2008 12:58:49 AM
IF these things are heartier than malaria-carrying mosquitos, wouldn't that mean in places where they're deployed, you get overrun with mosquitos? What other effects does this cause? Increased bats? More bat feces, more bat infestations.The food web is called a web for a reason. You can touch one part of it without having some effect on all parts of it.This type of tampering seems that it could easily run out of control.I seem to remember reading a report a while back where some GM plant got out of control. Also, isn't the reason Kudzu is everywhere because someone thought introducing a new species was a good way to control erosion?
1/22/2008 1:16:14 AM
^i agree with that 95 percentthe other 5 percent is the passenger pigeon going extinct...pretty sure that bird was so stupid it didnt really affect any other animal populations
1/22/2008 1:24:51 AM
^^agree 100%human death is underratedwe do not need to be fucking with the web of lifehumans have a long losing record when it comes to using new technologymalaria is a natural "check and balance" with humanswe fucked with nature, creating breeding grounds and lots of mosquitoesnow they kill usthat is fairthat is fairfucking with the web of life not only can, BUT WILL get out of our controlit is unnecessary, lame, cheap, wrong, dangerous, egocentric, and a big fucking cheatthere is no honor in the research or application of this deadly scienceplusaccording to libertarian principleactions that pollute the organic gene pool in natureharm others liberty, who have a right to live in the organic world that has existed for millions of yearsjust like you can't pave over a national park -- that harms future generations "right to the same"you may not care about the "organic" distinction, but others do, greatly.who are you, though the use of force, without the consent of those affected, to destroy or harm that which is organic?PERHAPS FOREVERthe butterfly effect is real and permanentwe must prevent these things from happeningdon't start no shit, won't be no shit!
1/22/2008 2:41:02 AM
^what is your opinion on the production of recombinant insulin?
1/22/2008 3:25:02 AM
^if you're just making something, like humulin, where the result is so simple (molecule, not animal)and it's completely contained within a labthat's okgmo's should really only be used like that, in very controlled laboratory environmentsit's when modifications with uncertain "unintended" consequences get out into the wild, uncontrollablethat's a problem
1/22/2008 3:55:18 AM
1/22/2008 5:44:29 AM
...because it's also very effective at killing mosquitoes, which are a pretty big problem as a malaria vector?
1/22/2008 7:14:06 AM
how about cloned food.illl eat
1/22/2008 9:08:10 AM
tough choice Malaria or more Bat Feces
1/22/2008 9:51:18 AM
1/22/2008 9:57:09 AM
'Not Prone to mutation' is an interesting way of describing a species who reproduces in the billions every year. The problem with genetic engineering is that small changes can remain dormant for some time and then with the introduction of a new variable become a catalyst for catastrophic change.Not saying this will happen, but rapidly multiplying species are the quickest adapters to change.Poisonous mosquitos world wide? Not a stellar idea.
1/22/2008 11:00:46 AM
They could just remodify the mosquitos to not suck blood... actually, that's what they should have started with. Find the gene that turns off their blood desiring nature.
1/22/2008 11:08:04 AM
Bring back DDT. Problem solved.
1/22/2008 2:07:06 PM
I agree, we should gas the fuckers. Bald eagles be damned.
1/22/2008 2:13:50 PM
This is all cool until the new mosquitoes mutate to become poisonous. I've seen that movie. I didn't like how it ended.
1/22/2008 3:09:06 PM
1/22/2008 3:20:15 PM
and fwiw:
1/22/2008 3:22:06 PM
I hate responding to uninformed people, but 392's uneducated rant is rediculous.There are thousands upon thousands of genetically modified organisms in use to mass produce medication and other supporting molecules such as individual acids and proteins. No honor? I've worked with products (Embrel in particular) that give people their lives back, or products that are directly injected into people in IVs.There is a responsiblity that people have in making this organisms unable to survive in a natural environment (in fact there are government regulations covering this) and we were able to learn from mistakes in the past. To call in unhonorable demostrates your lack of education about the subject. Nothing you said carries any weight, its just objective diatribe with no purpose.
1/22/2008 3:50:56 PM
yeah well the modified measels virus that cured cancer in I Am Legend turned out much differently.
1/22/2008 4:00:12 PM
Check mate.
1/22/2008 4:01:37 PM
gotcha bastard
1/22/2008 4:15:08 PM
1/22/2008 5:01:39 PM
1/22/2008 5:10:07 PM
^^ You can't make the statement "DDT was a bad idea" so unequivocally. It's still used in parts of the world.You just have to weigh the benefits with the risks, and for Americans, we have the money to pursue better alternatives, so we did.
1/23/2008 12:01:18 AM
i dont think there is any one "good" solution. When i said it was a bad idea i ment that it was a bad idea using it as and overall solution to the problem (from the bring back DDT comments). DDT is cheap and good for killing the mosquitos carring the disease that kills people. I understand peoples concern for introducing GMO's into the environment, they dont want it to endup like kudzo. But insertion of single genes into other species has proved to be relatively safe and donesn't seem to affect the organism otherwise, for example GFP in fish and rabbits or BT corn. Either way its a bad idea for other venues not to be explored. And i find it ironic that the people that can afford to create alternatives are the ones that spend the most time debating the ethics. The people dying from malaria would proably much rather have more mosquitos that dont give them malaria then use a spray that poisens their food supply and affects their food sources.
1/23/2008 12:41:15 AM
^ Wading into the deep end of the discussion pool, Jen? Good for you. Be advised: There are rabid moonbats here--and they bite! FYI.
1/23/2008 12:55:50 AM
^^ I think this is a reasonable concern, and if we're debating alternative strategies for fighting malaria, certainly we'd want to go with the one with the highest effectiveness and the lowest other disruption of the environment. So, I understand the concern about using DDT - if we were to do nothing else.But, I think genetically modified mosquitoes are one approach. One concern I can see coming up is whether the selective advantage of malaria-resistance would not lead to a net increase in mosquitoes - I'd leave that question to the experts. And, there's other methods we've employed successfully, too - like sterilizing male mosquitoes and releasing them back into the wild, thus causing a "blanks" competition for mates, and lowering the overall mosquito population.Either way, I think we should go into a problem like this will all the options on the table.
1/23/2008 1:22:31 AM
But what if they have a Silent Spring?[/sarcasm]
1/23/2008 5:50:42 AM
1/23/2008 10:10:20 AM
But you forgot to mention how DDT was proven beyond a shadow of a doubt (unless you are a moron) to be hazardous thus why it was banned.
1/23/2008 10:48:45 AM
i actually messed up that sentance. It was supposed to read "that poisens their food supply and causes birth defects in their children"And as far as poisons the food supply i challenge you prove sir that it does not, as i assure you it does. Mabey "poison" is a bad phrase but the substance remains in the organsim that ingested the DDT and the concentration of DDT increases as it moves thru the food chain producing the greatest impact on those at the top of the food chain, aka People. The same people that DDT was being used to help in the first place. Eliminating malaria with DDT causes causing cancer. Are you saying cancer is preferable to malaria?
1/23/2008 1:29:03 PM
what about other mosquito-borne illnesses that this new robust mosquito population will become more likely to carry?the law of unintended consequences can work exponentially in biological situations.i'd rather treat the problem with increased access to anti-malarials and researching less dangerous alternatives to DDT.
1/23/2008 2:00:48 PM
DDT may have some effect on human health, but there's no way it's worse than malaria. Malaria is almost as bad as you can imagine. I can see the problems to both solution, but we're talking the lives of millions of people here.http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=6083944
1/23/2008 2:01:53 PM
1/23/2008 3:04:54 PM
because the people proving DDT was dangerous were not the same people who were suffering of the dangerous of malaria.
1/23/2008 3:47:16 PM
Mass use of DDT would have wrecked quite a few ecosystems.
1/23/2008 3:51:59 PM
1/23/2008 3:55:47 PM
We should learn a lesson from the last time a modified insect was brought into the wild, thus the beginning of killer bee's reign of terror. To make it all the way to Montana by 2010.
1/23/2008 4:08:12 PM
that shit wont make it any place that has hard freezes during the winter
1/23/2008 4:27:45 PM
1/23/2008 10:12:02 PM