- Apr 27, 2002
- 5,506
- 5,800
Right, I am saying worst case, what could be done with the data?
could be bought by/sold to insurance companies and used to determine/restrict coverage...
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Right, I am saying worst case, what could be done with the data?
It goes much deeper than that...As a whole I think religion is merely a coping mechanism. A method of soothing our need to solve the human existential crisis. Add in the all the trauma that encompasses the black experience, I see why we cling to religion so heavily.
Bigger problem is a lot don't care eitherIt goes much deeper than that...
"Religion" in general has it's roots in the ancient Babylonian mystery school system, and the pagan "gods".
As far as the so called black experience, the root issue with people of color in the Western Hemisphere is we suffer from a lack of knowledge. We don't know who we are.
Bigger problem is a lot don't care either
Right, I am saying worst case, what could be done with the data?

Got chills watching this man.
G was feelin it!

If what they did totHenrietta Lacks and HeLa cells don't make you fearful imagine what they know and don't tell folks.
DNA genome has been mapped already. Imagine what they really know but don't tell.
95 percent of DNA classified as junk is more than likely a misdirection to the public.
henrietta lacks comes to mind. Go do ya googles.
A prestigious laboratory is in the midst of a dispute over its decision to publish the genome of one of the world’s most studied human cell lines: a set of cervical cancer cells, called HeLa cells, made famous by Rebecca Skloot’s 2011 book “The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks.”
The cells were taken in 1951 from Lacks, without her consent. Her descendants argue that the published genome may reveal genetic traits of family members.
The HeLa cells are exceptionally easy to grow in the lab and have become the cellular equivalent of lab rats. For decades, scientists have worked with these cells to unravel the secrets of cancer and develop vaccines and treatments.
After publishing the HeLa genome in an online journal last month, the researchers, led by Lars Steinmetz at the European Molecular Biology Laboratory (EMBL) in Heidelberg, Germany, withdrew the data following a barrage of objections.
“It shouldn’t have been published without our consent. . . . That is private family information,” said Lacks’s granddaughter Jeri Lacks-Whye, according to a New York Times commentary by Skloot.
Got chills watching this man.
G was feelin it!
