My Blog Search

All parcels are

forakin at gmail dot com

Comment notice:

You are free to leave comments on my blogs as long as they are polite, reasoned and within the context of what I have written.

I will NOT entertain insults, abuse or expletives; your strength of emotion should be expressed without resorting to uncouth expression.

Since, it is my blog, I reserve the right to accept, review, edit without losing the context or delete the comment - if it does not meet standards of decent and polite discourse.

Finally, your comments cannot be anonymous, please give a name when leaving a comment.

Thanks for reading my blog and leaving a comment.

My Popular Tags

                                                           

My Mini Search

 

My Moon Days

««Nov 2009»»
SMTWTFS
1
23
4
5
6
7
8
91011
12
1314
15
16
1718
19
2021
222324
25
26
27
28
2930

My Flickr Badge

www.flickr.com
This is a Flickr badge showing public photos from akinnld. Make your own badge here.

Cloning: Vitually indistinguishable shit

posted Sunday, 20 January 2008

Not alone about the clone

Whilst the science of cloning might be fascinating and amazing the reality of the same does leave one rather concerned about the consequences.

Just imagine my angst when I arrived in Europe to notice that the can of plum tomatoes could be kept in my larder for another 3 years.

Coming from Nigeria then, where the slightest discolouration on a fresh tomato consigned it to the gutter without sympathy for the seller.

I thought, if we were all being pumped full of E numbers there would be nothing natural left of us - after a while, our blood metabolises to contain formaldehyde properties – someone took my thinking to a conclusion and released the film – Death Becomes Her.

It starred Meryl, Goldie and Bruce, you should know them – the ladies chanced upon this elixir of life (for example, cloned food?) that kept them immortal as their bodies disintegrated, Bruce as plastic surgeon patched them up.

Virtually indistinguishable?

Before I digress, what worries me more is the conclusion of the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) in the United States that cloned foods are virtually indistinguishable from conventional sources.

Despite the concerns that people still have about the possible long-term effects of ingesting cloned foods, the FDA after a 5-year study has also decided that foods do not need to be labelled, disallowing customers from discriminating between the sources of food.

If I were to view this decision from a very fundamental perspective I could say just because I have identical twins or even identical quadruplets, I would give them the same name since they are virtually indistinguishable.

Obviously, when it comes to food, the analysis goes deeper than visual inspection, it does not however mean the ability to choose between cloned and conventional foods be removed from the opportunity of the general populace.

I must join in the hysteria about cloning because our democratic right to choose has been taken away and our economic right to pay what we deem the cost of produce based on full-disclosure of what we are purchasing has been curtailed.

Clone taken out labels

I would expect that certain food manufacturers who do not subscribe to the cloning ideal might just go for counter-labelling, indicating that their foods do not contain cloned sources, then charge us more.

However, I cannot but recall that a nursery rhyme (Hey Diddle Diddle) might just paint a picture of the dangers of cloning and what the reaction of normally inanimate objects might be – I never thought any of this might become true, but with cloning – the reality would be beyond expanse of delirium.

Here goes the nursery rhyme:

    Hey diddle diddle,

    The cat and the fiddle,

    The cow jumped over the moon

    The little dog laughed to see such fun,

    And the dish ran away with spoon.

Go figure! Cats playing fiddles, cows in astronomical dressage, dogs laughing and the terrified plates and cutlery refusing to take the food – that is the nightmare of cloning – I had better boil my eggs before I crack them open and find mangoes.

tags:                  

links: digg this    del.icio.us    technorati    reddit

AddThis Social Bookmark Button




Tag Related Posts

A slumbering machine operator

Saturday, 3 October 2009
Sleep and food with introductions to others.

Kwakoe - A multicultural festival in Amsterdam

Sunday, 9 August 2009
I visited the Kwakoe multicultural festival at Bijlmerpark in South East Amsterdam.

Thought Picnic: A malaise of inexactitudes

Saturday, 7 March 2009
The My Pikin issue is just an extreme manifestation of a malaise we have with not being exact.

Bailout: The premise that stinking shit becomes durable gold

Thursday, 25 September 2008
I am still not convinced that toxic assets when acquired with the bailout of $700 billion of tax payers' money would suddenly lose their toxicity and become durable and worthwhile assets. Bull!

Who is buying this shit?

Cloning: Vitually indistinguishable shit

Sunday, 20 January 2008
Cloned food might be virtually indistinguishable from conventional produce but it does not give the FDA the right to not require cloned foods be specifically labelled.

The Nigerian restaurant kaleidoscope - Part 2

Tuesday, 23 October 2007
A continuation of my experience at the Nigerian restaurant on Sunday.

The Nigerian restaurant kaleidoscope - Part 1

Tuesday, 23 October 2007
A visit to a Nigerian restaurant and insights to other things in a many parts.

Food Science 102: Coal tars

Wednesday, 9 May 2007
More food additives and it is all about colour and preservation. With the amount of tar in these products, the road does lead to the stomach.

Food Science 101 - Additives

Tuesday, 1 May 2007
Sometimes an empty stomach is better than ingesting additives.

Save us from the Carbon Nazis

Wednesday, 25 April 2007
All this carbon footprint talk and how it affects me - I am seriously concerned.

Of food, class, greasy kebabs and Eton

Thursday, 6 April 2006
Having watched an episode of Eating With... on the BBC, it is nice to see people take cooking seriously, especially the POSH types.

The beauty of the dead cow

Wednesday, 22 February 2006
We tamper with food to our peril as scares and aesthetics take food from natural to chemically enhanced. Now, meat is keeps its red colouring by being treated with carbon monoxide. Harmless, they say, harmless, indeed.

Not at any cost

Tuesday, 31 January 2006
A dog food company offers food aid - modified for humans - to Kenya as Hamas is about to be denied aid - necessary to run their government. A bizarre conflict of perceptions arises.