zinfamous
No Lifer
- Jul 12, 2006
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Humans have been genetically manipulating food plants and animals for thousands of years. Why stop now when we are getting really good at it?
This is my general take on the issue, but the fact remains that transgenic manipulation is not the same beast as manipulation through (Mendelian) genetic crossing--horticulture.
With the proteins created through horticulture, any type of unwanted response is typically weeded out through crossing--the original information is typically still there, but you generally don't have to worry about novel, human-induced information, and how it affects the downstream coding of the handful of genes in involved. We know a lot--but we don't yet know enough, I think, to allow wide spread use of this at the moment.
I am all for GMO practices, and would hate to see crippling regulation that staunches research (I was actually thinking about this the other day--as I have to send organisms--sometimes whole tissue, sometimes just DNA--and sending transgenics is an entirely different issue. The current Fed regulations are actually quite useless: they simply slow down shipping/research and permitting can cost more. It does nothing to "insure the efficacy of this research"), but also feel there needs to be something in place that prevents wide-spread use before we have a better understanding of epigenetic effects, and all that.