edit: I just noticed that DJS a.k.a. technosophy (aka nonzero, aka donspanton aka....), is not in authority anymore. What happened?
It's just a glitch in the system. Sorry for getting your hopes up.
Posted 18 March 2009 - 05:08 PM
edit: I just noticed that DJS a.k.a. technosophy (aka nonzero, aka donspanton aka....), is not in authority anymore. What happened?
Posted 18 March 2009 - 05:11 PM
For anyone who is pro-science, lifting restrictions and allowing scientists maximum flexibility in pursuing their research agendas is a no-brainer.
Posted 18 March 2009 - 06:13 PM
For anyone who is pro-science, lifting restrictions and allowing scientists maximum flexibility in pursuing their research agendas is a no-brainer.
Posted 18 March 2009 - 07:05 PM
edit: I just noticed that DJS a.k.a. technosophy, is not in authority anymore. What happened?
Posted 18 March 2009 - 09:46 PM
edit: I just noticed that DJS a.k.a. technosophy, is not in authority anymore. What happened?
You blinded him with the science and his head exploded.
Posted 18 March 2009 - 10:24 PM
Posted 18 March 2009 - 10:39 PM
Luv you can't help it. All of your arguments are religious ones.
Don't be a wiseguy. Point them out. Blatant lies will get you nowhere in life "eternaltraveler LOL:)"...
Talking to you and DJS, two supposed people of authority here at Imminst (how ironic), is like talking to two computer programs with many flaws in their programming. You both are extremely out-of-touch with reality, sadly.
"all arguments are religious ones" --> point them out. It doesn't get any more blatant than that. What a comment.
I think you both need to seriously think about stepping down from leadership here at Imminst. When you both display what you have here in these last fews threads, it seems extremely viable. Think about it.
edit: I just noticed that DJS a.k.a. technosophy, is not in authority anymore. What happened?
Posted 18 March 2009 - 11:33 PM
Posted 19 March 2009 - 01:51 PM
It's funny, on my local newspaper forum, there is a bigoted, barely literate redneck who is spouting almost verbatim, word for word, your arguments Luv...
Now, I suppose I could assume that somehow this brain dead moron has suddenly become a genius, but that seems highly unlikely. Which leaves the other conclusion, that both he and you are repeating the same BS given to you by someone else, be it republican, evangelical, or whatever.
Screaming doesn't give your arguments weight, Luv. Especially not LARGE PRINT SCREAMING All it really does is make you look like a hysterical fool, much like the redneck I referred to above. Neither does making personal attacks against those who disagree with you make you look like anything but someone who knows they are in the wrong and refusing to admit it.
Now, DJS has asked you to create a new thread if you wish to continue debating whether ESCR or ASCR should be pursued, and I am suggesting that when you do so, make sure you use better references for you arguments than obviously biased and politicized blogs, preferably scientific journals, magazines, or articles which can be verified and their research looked into. I for one understand that ASCR is stalled because of the chemical doping that has to be done to force cells to revert to embryonic mode once they have been differentiated, though I admit I may have this confused somewhat with my reading on therapeutic cloning. If you have valid evidence to support your claims, I would definitely like to read it. However, more links to things like iReport are going to be rather detrimental to your arguments rather than helpful.
If however, your arguments are based entirely on emotions and political or religious beliefs, they are unlikely to win any converts. At present you have offered nothing which could be validated, simply opinions.
Edited by luv2increase, 19 March 2009 - 01:54 PM.
Posted 19 March 2009 - 06:15 PM
Lifting the ban on federal funding is a good thing because it grants researchers the freedom to determine scientifically what are and what are not promising lines of research.
For anyone who is pro-science, lifting restrictions and allowing scientists maximum flexibility in pursuing their research agendas is a no-brainer.
Posted 19 March 2009 - 07:01 PM
Ugghh... so boring... How many times are you going to repeat yourself. Start a new thread already and be done with it.
Repetition does not win debates.
![]()
Lifting the ban on federal funding is a good thing because it grants researchers the freedom to determine scientifically what are and what are not promising lines of research.
For anyone who is pro-science, lifting restrictions and allowing scientists maximum flexibility in pursuing their research agendas is a no-brainer.
Posted 19 March 2009 - 09:09 PM
I say this because there has been no rebuttals of a scientific nature. It is philosophical theorizing.
Posted 19 March 2009 - 09:18 PM
there has been no rebuttals of a scientific nature. It is philosophical theorizing.
They are all obvious & blatant lies.
some of you are just flat-out brain dead.
Posted 19 March 2009 - 09:28 PM
resorting to crazy absurd posting tactics
Edited by eternaltraveler, 19 March 2009 - 11:07 PM.
Posted 19 March 2009 - 09:46 PM
Posted 19 March 2009 - 11:08 PM
I'd slightly disagree with you in that I think having a discussion on the merits of ESCs in the aftermath of the iPSC breakthrough is a good thing.
If such a discussion is attempted in good faith, I think it would be legitimate.
Edited by eternaltraveler, 19 March 2009 - 11:14 PM.
Posted 19 March 2009 - 11:13 PM
luv2increase: Nothing I stated there was repetitious in the least. Why don't you quote what I said that was said in an earlier post? I bet you can't do it.
That is a challenge.
It is factual that no progress whatsoever has been made with embryonic stem-cell research. This is sadly in spite of the millions/billions of dollars spent on embryonic stem-cell research.
years of funding and research done on it with ABSOLUTELY NO PROGRESS WHATSOEVER.
There has already been millions if not billions of dollars spend on embryonic stem-cell research and no results.
There has been much effort into ESR, AND ABSOLUTELY NO "POSITIVE" RESULTS
Posted 20 March 2009 - 09:07 PM
resorting to crazy absurd posting tactics
…
You mean like the pile of personal attacks you vomit forth.
All of your arguments have a religious basis (or a basis in mental illness). You've learned to veil these, but quite frankly you aren't very good at it. Whenever one of us actually gets annoyed enough by you to get enough motivation to respond you get utterly demolished in debate. If you'd like to get demolished again be more annoying. I haven't passed my threshold yet. But its pretty much a waste of time for us. Sorry.
Posted 20 March 2009 - 09:10 PM
luv2increase: Nothing I stated there was repetitious in the least. Why don't you quote what I said that was said in an earlier post? I bet you can't do it.
That is a challenge.
Are you for real?
luv states the same thing:It is factual that no progress whatsoever has been made with embryonic stem-cell research. This is sadly in spite of the millions/billions of dollars spent on embryonic stem-cell research.
overyears of funding and research done on it with ABSOLUTELY NO PROGRESS WHATSOEVER.
and overThere has already been millions if not billions of dollars spend on embryonic stem-cell research and no results.
and over again.There has been much effort into ESR, AND ABSOLUTELY NO "POSITIVE" RESULTS
Again, start a new thread and I'd be happy to dissect your propoganda.
Posted 20 March 2009 - 10:49 PM
That is one of the key points of my argument. Why haven't you been able to fend against it yet?
Posted 21 March 2009 - 12:33 AM
Posted 21 March 2009 - 01:49 AM
I never thought I would be saying this but is Bush the godfather of inducible pluripotent stem cells (IPS)? Could Bush be the catalyst for stem cell treatments that have already arrived in the clinic? Could it be that due to his and his constituency's scientifically uninspired views that one of the most significant stem cell discoveries - IPS - came about? We have seen time and time again that innovation thrives on constraint and once again this proved true. Faced with absurd and unprecedented restrictions on stem cell research, scientists had no choice but to channel their resources into deriving high pluripotency stem cells without resorting to the embryo. And they succeeded magnificently. Companies such as Mesoblast and Osiris would not have had their pipeline accelerated into clinic-ready stem cell therapeutics were it not for this ban. In fact, were it not for this restriction they may today not be operating at all.
It's difficult to envisage precisely how stem cell science would have evolved without Bush's 8-year enforced moratorium but I think what we would have seen is a lot of research into directing ES fate and many bungled experiments that would have generated bad press.
I think Bush's moratorium may have given the science an opportunity to mature and rethink itself. I was besides myself when I first heard of it but now I think it was not so bad after all. Obama has lifted the chains at the right time.
Posted 21 March 2009 - 02:05 AM
Bush was the catalyst for a lot of things, like the rise of the Shi'a Crescent, the death and injury of countless people, the further damaging of Earth and its economy, but IPS? I don't think so. I would say that the development of IPS was driven more by the difficulty of transferring the patient's genome to the ESC than anything else. If innovation really thrives on constraint, then lets outlaw PCR and chromatography. That should result in all kinds of innovation.I never thought I would be saying this but is Bush the godfather of inducible pluripotent stem cells (IPS)? Could Bush be the catalyst for stem cell treatments that have already arrived in the clinic? Could it be that due to his and his constituency's scientifically uninspired views that one of the most significant stem cell discoveries - IPS - came about? We have seen time and time again that innovation thrives on constraint and once again this proved true.
Posted 21 March 2009 - 10:25 AM
Lol.. I knew someone was bound to pick that up.. An astute observation. However, the Japanese were not ignorant of the legal and ethical ramifications in developing technology that underpinned an appropriate stem cell therapeutic strategy. The global trends were unequivocal.First, the iPS break through happened in Japan where there were/are no restrictions on ESCR. So why weren't they engaged in lots of bungled ESC experiments that "would have generated bad press"? I would contend that the reason is that change in the prevailing research trajectory of the scientific community had very little to do with restriction on federal funding in the US, but instead had a lot to do with scientists recognizing where the more promising lines of research were and pursuing them. (And further, most stem cell specialist have always been bearish about using ESCs directly for treatments). I think you're assigning credit where no credit is due.
Posted 21 March 2009 - 02:10 PM
However, the Japanese were not ignorant of the legal and ethical ramifications in developing technology that underpinned an appropriate stem cell therapeutic strategy. The global trends were unequivocal.
Posted 21 March 2009 - 03:15 PM
Ideally, having stem cell lines that are universally histocompatible is the way of the future but we haven't gotten there yet.
I think Bush's moratorium may have given the science an opportunity to mature and rethink itself. I was besides myself when I first heard of it but now I think it was not so bad after all. Obama has lifted the chains at the right time.
Posted 22 March 2009 - 12:19 AM
You've summed up my position better than I did.a ethical/socio-political road block forced science to come up with an (alternative) novel solution (iPS). At the heart of this contention is the assumption that all other nations of the world take marching orders from the US.
You could, but to do yourself justice you need to have an understanding of the sentiment in scientific circles at that time. Maybe Mondey could chime in and give us her views of the European perspective. In Australia ESC research was fairly taboo and scientific investigators are not a particularly politically activist bunch, rather they live in constant anxiety from grant to grant. Terrible way to operate (but that's another matter). The only country that continued to conduct some (fairly ordinary) ESC research at that time was China but nothing defining came out of that work. In China it was 'lets shove some ESCs here and see what happens' attitude. And rather than playing around with mice they were doing it on their own population.Versus my view which is that the US, while often a leader in research because of the structure and sheer size of its economy, is not immune from falling behind other nations when its public policy is intentionally putting the brakes on research.
One could argue argue that because of the chilling effect of restricted funding to ESCR in the US, the iPS breakthrough was actually delayed.
Yep, its a good time now. Brave new world stuff. Grad students growing human teratomas in petri dishes. Maybe one may get flushed down a NY toilet, and still viable, encounter a whole new culture medium..So cleawrly, we're interpreting events differently. But in any event, it's besides the point since we're now both in agreement that lifting federal restriction on ESCR is a good thing.
Posted 23 March 2009 - 08:02 AM
You could, but to do yourself justice you need to have an understanding of the sentiment in scientific circles at that time....
From a personal perspective I went from a thought paradigm of ESCs being a panacea to looking at mesenchymals, which are far more interesting (in my view) and therapeutically viable. This would not have happened if there was a blank cheque on ESCs. Then, everybody would have been looking at ways to restrict them prior to grafting, which is what adult cells do anyway, and the problem of immunogenicity would still need to be resolved.
So cleawrly, we're interpreting events differently. But in any event, it's besides the point since we're now both in agreement that lifting federal restriction on ESCR is a good thing.
Yep, its a good time now. Brave new world stuff. Grad students growing human teratomas in petri dishes. Maybe one may get flushed down a NY toilet, and still viable, encounter a whole new culture medium..
Posted 23 March 2009 - 08:24 AM
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