The beginnings of any new field of science are full of unknowns and mistakes.  
But over time, we learn, while trying to minimize mistakes.  If we let our 
fears prevent us from ever exploring the unknown, then we would never have gone 
to the moon, or anywhere else.  We wouldn't have any technology, or medicine, 
or colloidal silver.

It is reasonable to stop moving in a wrong direction.

It is not reasonbale to stop moving altogether.

Dick




________________________________
From: Alan Jones <alanmjo...@gmail.com>
To: silver-list@eskimo.com
Sent: Thu, March 4, 2010 11:11:28 AM
Subject: Re: CS>Take a stand now and reject Mon San To's GMO drive

This is the crux of the problem, the arrogance of these scientists.  Yes, they 
THINK they know what the modification will do, but from what I've been reading, 
they're wrong.  AS USUAL.

Alan


On Thu, Mar 4, 2010 at 8:39 AM, Richard Goodwin <dickgoodwin2...@yahoo.com> 
wrote:

I would agree that it would not be a good idea to genetically modify stuff 
blindly without having any idea what the modification will do.  But as far as I 
know, they DO know what these modifications will do, which is why they do them 
in the first place.  
-- 
Alan Jones