Poor people are working two to three jobs to make ends meet, especially single mothers. Being poor is bad enough, have a higher mortality rate now you want to destroy their health?
Some of these poor people made poor desicisons (due to how they were raisedin their early life)that still hold them back and have lots of mental problems due to family bringing and the environment they grew up in.
"Poor people are working two to three jobs to make ends meet, especially single mothers. Being poor is bad enough, have a higher mortality rate now you want to destroy their health"
I will say the same thing that many say when they want the middle class and anyone earning money to become more of a slave to the government: They need to pay their fair share.
When all of the wealthy people leave, the next ones on the chopping block will be the middle class. Why should everyone successful be punished for making the right decisions in life?
"Some of these poor people made poor desicisons (due to how they were raisedin their early life)that still hold them back and have lots of mental problems due to family bringing and the environment they grew up in."
This is making lots of assumptions about poor people with no proof to back any of it up. Giving someone free money for making poor decisions will only lead to future generations of people being dependent on government handouts. We need to stop this trend, not continue it.
This is something I have been looking into as well.
Those foods vendors carry their supplies in that body addon but I wanted to walk around my apt and have a couple of projectors setup so each wall has a copy of my monitor.
After those 11 years in molecular biology, I am absolutely convinced that the bottleneck of the field is not some fancy method, but a total lack of automation.
Modern "CRISPR" cool methods are done with essentially the same tools as the research from 50 years ago.
I would claim, that computer scientists are lucky ones: they have skills to create their own tools. To make a better, more automated programming language, you would need same skills as to use that language.
Biologists on the other hands are different. The skills to do biology are totally different from skills needed to automate biology. And so the gap appears: biologists don't even think of automating, and mechanical/electrical/computer engineers are not even aware of the problem
Thank your this. I am also very interested in biology and was looking to find a way to buy used equipment. I was reading biotech books and I was blown away by recombinant DNA and how insulin was invented as a medicine.
"I'm planning to participate in Olympic games against the best athletes of the planet. I plan to buy a few used sneakers of a similar size than my feet and a second hand tennis racket that is not too worned out. I plan to win against people with brand new and tailor-made equipment".
In short. Don't do it unless you know what you are buying. If you know what you are buying, don't do it if you can afford doing otherwise.
In most cases used equipment will be sold because either the lab had been crushed by better equipped competitors, or is obsolete.
I love these discoveries.
Are proteins easy to detect and isolate? How does one tell where a protein begins and ends and if one megs protein is not just a bunch of smaller proteins.
Also how do they discover the functions of proteins? Just turn them off and on and try to see what effect it has on the body?
This is such a super interesting field; Any one have good resources (youtube) that show how this stuff is done in the lab?
Interesting! So salt, Magnesium, and potassium only. I want to try fasting for a week or so. Is there a specific type of these supplements you recommend?
Some of these poor people made poor desicisons (due to how they were raisedin their early life)that still hold them back and have lots of mental problems due to family bringing and the environment they grew up in.