I saw the movie The Fly and some girl eat cloned food and she lived, but she said it tasted like nothing so there wouldn't be much point! lol
Poll
would you eat cloned Food?
Yes | 82% | 82% - 74 | ||||
No | 17% | 17% - 16 | ||||
Total: 90 |
If its dead and it tastes good I'll eat it .
t'is aye, otherwise known as a phallic obelisk, it's called "the Stone of Destiny" or "Lia Fáil" in the Irish, and according to Irish/Celtic mythology was the The sacred stone of the Tuatha dé DanannKrappyappy wrote:
[offtopic]
what is that in your signature, a giant rock penis?
[/offtopic]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tuatha_D%C3%A9_Danann
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lia_F%C3%A1il
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hill_of_Tara
I'll eat materialized Star Trek food before cloned. Wouldn't mess with my mind as much.
The Irish ripped that off from Willow.IG-Calibre wrote:
Tuatha dé Danann
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2007-01-01 05:37:13)
As long as my girlfriend didn't cook it .
Xbone Stormsurgezz
O please spare me your ignorance, if anything George Lucas pillaged Celtic Mythology for the writing of that film..unnamednewbie13 wrote:
I'll eat materialized Star Trek food before cloned. Wouldn't mess with my mind as much.The Irish ripped that off from Willow.IG-Calibre wrote:
Tuatha dé Danann
Oh. My. God. A prime example of in-your-face sarcasm sweeping directly over the head of its intended victim.IG-Calibre wrote:
O please spare me your ignorance, if anything George Lucas pillaged Celtic Mythology for the writing of that film..unnamednewbie13 wrote:
I'll eat materialized Star Trek food before cloned. Wouldn't mess with my mind as much.The Irish ripped that off from Willow.IG-Calibre wrote:
Tuatha dé Danann
...says you to a guy with 'Bydand' in his signature, too.
Last edited by unnamednewbie13 (2007-01-01 06:19:06)
Its only steroids...Turquoise wrote:
What I'm not fine with are the growth hormones we shoot up our livestock with.


If you eat hot dogs, you should never complain about eating anything.
Yeah, Yeah, surrrrrrrrrrrrrre thing, that's right, "you were being....... sarcastic" pffffffftunnamednewbie13 wrote:
Oh. My. God. A prime example of in-your-face sarcasm sweeping directly over the head of its intended victim.IG-Calibre wrote:
O please spare me your ignorance, if anything George Lucas pillaged Celtic Mythology for the writing of that film..unnamednewbie13 wrote:
I'll eat materialized Star Trek food before cloned. Wouldn't mess with my mind as much.
The Irish ripped that off from Willow.
...says you to a guy with 'Bydand' in his signature, too.
I don't think there is a problem, as long as everything is tested completley before it's publicly introduced. At least we're not killing species anymore... Now about those dumb polar bears...
I'll eat anything with A-1 sauce.
Malloy must go
Good point.... I stopped eating them quite a while ago....jsnipy wrote:
If you eat hot dogs, you should never complain about eating anything.
Flaming_Maniac wrote:
Why not?
How shall I put it...
I'd eat cloned food, but rather dislike the idea of eating cloned animals or plants.
I'd eat cloned food, but rather dislike the idea of eating cloned animals or plants.
Since I know next to nothing about this sort of stuff........... can mad cow disease be pretty much eliminated with cloned cattle?
Theoretically, yes. There is an easier way to do it as well. Farmers need to stop feeding cows ground up carcasses.usmarine2007 wrote:
Since I know next to nothing about this sort of stuff........... can mad cow disease be pretty much eliminated with cloned cattle?
Sure, it will all taste the same then - like chicken?
Funny, my married sister has decided not to have kids (as have I and my brother, our mom is so sad the genetic line ends here ), and my aunt said it was "very greedy" of her to NOT have any kids. I can't stop laughing whenever I hear that.CommieChipmunk wrote:
I've been thinking about vegetarianism for quite a while, and from a morality standpoint, now is probably not a bad time to go for it.
EDIT: If there isn't enough food to go around, people should start thinking about not having 4,5 and 6 kids. It's selfish and every species has it's population limit. But that would be the only reason I could think of to clone animals.
As for cloned food, naw, no objection. The only objection I have is that eventually all cattle would then be of a select FEW varieties of cows, and if a disease that came along and was lethal to one variety, well, there goes our food source. It's what happened to our corn a few decades ago. Don't go against cloning because of the food itself, but because of corporate greed that wants to put all our eggs in one basket, so to speak.
QFE. I probably would avoid cloned food just because it seems more likely to be less naturally raised than non-cloned.Turquoise wrote:
I'm fine with cloned food. What I'm not fine with are the growth hormones we shoot up our livestock with.
that would be awesome
Potato famine anyone?[RDH]Warlord wrote:
Funny, my married sister has decided not to have kids (as have I and my brother, our mom is so sad the genetic line ends here ), and my aunt said it was "very greedy" of her to NOT have any kids. I can't stop laughing whenever I hear that.CommieChipmunk wrote:
I've been thinking about vegetarianism for quite a while, and from a morality standpoint, now is probably not a bad time to go for it.
EDIT: If there isn't enough food to go around, people should start thinking about not having 4,5 and 6 kids. It's selfish and every species has it's population limit. But that would be the only reason I could think of to clone animals.
As for cloned food, naw, no objection. The only objection I have is that eventually all cattle would then be of a select FEW varieties of cows, and if a disease that came along and was lethal to one variety, well, there goes our food source. It's what happened to our corn a few decades ago. Don't go against cloning because of the food itself, but because of corporate greed that wants to put all our eggs in one basket, so to speak.
Organic food is the ideal, but of course, that could be cloned as well.jonsimon wrote:
QFE. I probably would avoid cloned food just because it seems more likely to be less naturally raised than non-cloned.Turquoise wrote:
I'm fine with cloned food. What I'm not fine with are the growth hormones we shoot up our livestock with.
I seriously never thought this would be a serious question in my lifetime.
Bah. Now you are.IG-Calibre wrote:
Yeah, Yeah, surrrrrrrrrrrrrre thing, that's right, "you were being....... sarcastic" pffffffftunnamednewbie13 wrote:
Oh. My. God. A prime example of in-your-face sarcasm sweeping directly over the head of its intended victim.IG-Calibre wrote:
O please spare me your ignorance, if anything George Lucas pillaged Celtic Mythology for the writing of that film..
...says you to a guy with 'Bydand' in his signature, too.