11-03-2013, 10:51 AM
Everything converges into missing the point.
"Natural selection" evolves at the same relative pace against the cohabitant species. Even if focused ("selective breeding"), evolution is constrained within one order. Transgenics jumps this to approximately two-three orders, at which point you suddenly have "containment risk" (as has already happened with the canola).
We are there, now, brand it "anti-science" if you will, it doesn't matter anymore, at least not the way you think. WOO HOO
"Natural selection" evolves at the same relative pace against the cohabitant species. Even if focused ("selective breeding"), evolution is constrained within one order. Transgenics jumps this to approximately two-three orders, at which point you suddenly have "containment risk" (as has already happened with the canola).
We are there, now, brand it "anti-science" if you will, it doesn't matter anymore, at least not the way you think. WOO HOO