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Topic: virus: eply to walter and some smurfy thoughts... (Read 610 times) |
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DrSebby
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...Oh, you smell of lambs!

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virus: eply to walter and some smurfy thoughts...
« on: 2003-09-02 03:26:47 » |
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...thank you very much walter for you welcoming back...i feel a bit like Cotter. other than that...i have an interesting thought....
...down the road, lets suppose the issue of controlled procreation were brought to bear on the world...fuck it, this country lets say to simplify things. lets suppose everyone were in agreement as to its importance. doesnt it seem reasonable that people would then start bickering as to who and which groups should be more enforced than others? e.g...."blacks" only comprise 12-14% of our population, so wouldnt they have reason to be upset that said population control would keep them in the minority while white and or hispanic culture has had the early advantage in overpopulating, outnumbering them, and thus overpowering them? what about asians? american indians?(they'd really have a position) etc. is there really any hope of change? should we give up the thought and focus instead on progress and expanding beyond this planet? or should we maintain the notion and primarily focus on the logistics of the issue? or should we just clone zillions of Hermits, Joe Dees, and Davey McFazdens and await the exciting galactic world war between the new vulcans, klingons, and humans? or should i simply invent the OTHER teletubbies we werent allowed to know about? (the Mauve teletubbie is truly something to behold)...(you'd know what true terror was if you encountered it)
p.s. the smurfs were happy little things...was the source of their happiness the fact that they only had masturbation to deal with, and not women? did this eliminate most of their competitive spirit? do smurfberries taste like a mixture of strawberries and passionfruit like i imagine? why did gargamel want to eat smurfs? and how many packs a day did smurfette smoke to get a voice like she does? and did the smurfs ever distill smurfberries?...they should make a fine wine. i need answers!
DrSebby. "Courage...and shuffle the cards".
----Original Message Follows---- From: Walter Watts <wlwatts@cox.net> Reply-To: virus@lucifer.com To: virus@lucifer.com Subject: Re: virus: Call me conceited... Date: Sat, 09 Aug 2003 18:59:09 -0500
WW's just happy Sebby's back and happy------;'>
WW
Dr Sebby wrote:
> ...Davy Jones....this is a brilliant little creation of yours! the > reputation system has long been the pillar of any social creature....it > seems that when societies get too large or communities too alienated from > one another, we aspire to place lawbooks as a substitute - which invariably > fails due to the notion that such legal matters as "proof" and "evidence" > are tragically innaccurate...as well as the notion that legislation allows > for no 'grey' areas. > > well done old chap. well done. > > DrSebby. > "Courage...and shuffle the cards". > > ----Original Message Follows---- > From: "David McFadzean" <david@lucifer.com> > Reply-To: virus@lucifer.com > To: <virus@lucifer.com> > Subject: Re: virus: Call me conceited... > Date: Sat, 9 Aug 2003 13:15:03 -0400 > > From: "David McFadzean" <david@lucifer.com> > > > You will soon be able to nominate your paper on the new voting system. > > Hopefully later today. > > OK, ready for beta testing: > http://virus.lucifer.com/bbs/index.php?board=;action=vote1 > --- > To unsubscribe from the Virus list go to > <http://www.lucifer.com/cgi-bin/virus-l> > > _________________________________________________________________ > Tired of spam? Get advanced junk mail protection with MSN 8. > http://join.msn.com/?page=features/junkmail > > --- > To unsubscribe from the Virus list go to <http://www.lucifer.com/cgi-bin/virus-l>
--
Walter Watts Tulsa Network Solutions, Inc.
"Reminding you to help control the human population. Have your sexual partner spayed or neutered."
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"courage and shuffle the cards..."
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Blunderov
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"We think in generalities, we live in details"
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RE: virus: eply to walter and some smurfy thoughts...
« Reply #1 on: 2003-09-02 04:25:03 » |
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Dr Sebby wrote: <snip> was the source of their happiness the fact that they only had masturbation to deal with, and not
women? </snip>
I was reminded of an article I read in the Sunday papers the other day in which some or another eminent professor of genetics predicted the end of the male, and also that women of the future would successfully reproduce with one another using only x. The reason given for this was that the y chromosome was riddled with defects and anomalies and would, like the Marxist state, whither away.
Turns out the smurfs have no need to worry and may continue to cast their seed upon the ground with gay abandon: http://www.wellcome.ac.uk/en/genome/thegenome/hg01n003.html
<snip> The self-repairing Y chromosome unveiled 18/6/03. By MIT
In the biological battle between the sexes, the Y chromosome has suffered defeat after defeat. The male-determining chromosome has seen its gene supply shrink from more than 1000 genes when sex chromosomes first evolved, to what scientists once thought was only a handful of genes, a downward trend predicted to continue until the Y disappeared altogether.
But two studies presented on 18 June 2003 and published in the journal Nature suggest that the rumours of the Y's demise have been greatly exaggerated. Researchers from Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research in Cambridge, Mass., and Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis found that not only does the Y contain far more genes than scientists thought - the team found about 78 genes - it also includes a large number of genes arranged in pairs along this single chromosome in ways that may allow the Y to mimic the paired chromosome structure of the rest of the genome.
The Y contains more genes than expected and can repair injured genes. The findings, involving observations in both human and chimp male chromosomes, could explain how the Y repairs injured genes without the benefit of sexual recombination - the method of gene repair used by all other chromosomes. It's an elegant system that would debunk the theory of a 'rotting Y' - the widely held notion that the male chromosome and its dead or dying genes will continue to rot away over the next 5 million years until there's nothing left.
"We have a new way of understanding how the rotting tendencies of the Y are counteracted," said lead researcher David Page.
All chromosomes in the nucleus come in pairs - except the Y. Each member of a chromosomal pair draws on its mate for genetic repair through sexual recombination. When one half suffers a genetic injury, as is the case with many diseases, it can discard the mutated gene and replace it with a normal copy drawn from the other member of the pair. But the Y has no sexual 'partner' with which to swap out defective genes.
"Genes constantly are being bombarded with little injuries - mutations. Mutations can either be beneficial or detrimental, but they are far more often detrimental," said Page. "On the Y, detrimental mutations cannot be discarded."
There's no question that this inability to discard has cost the Y hundreds of genes over time. Many of the chromosome's genes either have weakened or died out altogether. Sexual recombination is a card game the Y just can't win. But this new research suggests it doesn't always need to. For critical genes, it swaps with itself.
"This study shows that the Y chromosome has become very efficient at preserving its important genes," said co-lead investigator Richard K Wilson, director of the Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis. "It's found different ways to do the things chromosomes must do to evolve, survive and thrive." </snip>
Perhaps there are here at least some of the answers you requested Dr. Sebby?
Fond Regards and love to the smurfs Blunderov
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DrSebby
Adept   
Gender: 
Posts: 456 Reputation: 7.44 Rate DrSebby

...Oh, you smell of lambs!

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RE: virus: eply to walter and some smurfy thoughts...
« Reply #2 on: 2003-09-02 05:29:57 » |
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...this is one of the many incredibly stupid things offered by random scientists eager to make a name but lacking the integrity or capacity to actually substantiate it.
.;..are we to believe that all the billions of animal forms running off DNA for the past few billion years have been a fluke? especially when considering very complex organisims...!! this idiot should have his doctorate rescinded based on pure un-adulterated stupidity. as the expression goes, if you open your mind too much, your brain will fall out.
DrSebby. "Courage...and shuffle the cards".
----Original Message Follows---- From: "Blunderov" <squooker@mweb.co.za> Reply-To: virus@lucifer.com To: <virus@lucifer.com> Subject: RE: virus: eply to walter and some smurfy thoughts... Date: Tue, 2 Sep 2003 10:25:03 +0200
Dr Sebby wrote: <snip> was the source of their happiness the fact that they only had masturbation to deal with, and not
women? </snip>
I was reminded of an article I read in the Sunday papers the other day in which some or another eminent professor of genetics predicted the end of the male, and also that women of the future would successfully reproduce with one another using only x. The reason given for this was that the y chromosome was riddled with defects and anomalies and would, like the Marxist state, whither away.
Turns out the smurfs have no need to worry and may continue to cast their seed upon the ground with gay abandon:
http://www.wellcome.ac.uk/en/genome/thegenome/hg01n003.html
<snip> The self-repairing Y chromosome unveiled 18/6/03. By MIT
In the biological battle between the sexes, the Y chromosome has suffered defeat after defeat. The male-determining chromosome has seen its gene supply shrink from more than 1000 genes when sex chromosomes first evolved, to what scientists once thought was only a handful of genes, a downward trend predicted to continue until the Y disappeared altogether.
But two studies presented on 18 June 2003 and published in the journal Nature suggest that the rumours of the Y's demise have been greatly exaggerated. Researchers from Whitehead Institute for Biomedical Research in Cambridge, Mass., and Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis found that not only does the Y contain far more genes than scientists thought - the team found about 78 genes - it also includes a large number of genes arranged in pairs along this single chromosome in ways that may allow the Y to mimic the paired chromosome structure of the rest of the genome.
The Y contains more genes than expected and can repair injured genes.
The findings, involving observations in both human and chimp male chromosomes, could explain how the Y repairs injured genes without the benefit of sexual recombination - the method of gene repair used by all other chromosomes. It's an elegant system that would debunk the theory of a 'rotting Y' - the widely held notion that the male chromosome and its dead or dying genes will continue to rot away over the next 5 million years until there's nothing left.
"We have a new way of understanding how the rotting tendencies of the Y are counteracted," said lead researcher David Page.
All chromosomes in the nucleus come in pairs - except the Y. Each member of a chromosomal pair draws on its mate for genetic repair through sexual recombination. When one half suffers a genetic injury, as is the case with many diseases, it can discard the mutated gene and replace it with a normal copy drawn from the other member of the pair. But the Y has no sexual 'partner' with which to swap out defective genes.
"Genes constantly are being bombarded with little injuries - mutations. Mutations can either be beneficial or detrimental, but they are far more often detrimental," said Page. "On the Y, detrimental mutations cannot be discarded."
There's no question that this inability to discard has cost the Y hundreds of genes over time. Many of the chromosome's genes either have weakened or died out altogether. Sexual recombination is a card game the Y just can't win. But this new research suggests it doesn't always need to. For critical genes, it swaps with itself.
"This study shows that the Y chromosome has become very efficient at preserving its important genes," said co-lead investigator Richard K Wilson, director of the Genome Sequencing Center at Washington University School of Medicine in St Louis. "It's found different ways to do the things chromosomes must do to evolve, survive and thrive." </snip>
Perhaps there are here at least some of the answers you requested Dr. Sebby?
Fond Regards and love to the smurfs Blunderov
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