• @[email protected]
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    1542 months ago

    Ethics are supposed to throttle human activity. That’s their fucking job. That guy is a goddamn sociopath.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      not necessarily throttle, but divert into more ethical directions.

      the nazi twin ‘experiments’ for example, were monstrous but produced like no useful data.

      atrocities do not necessarily mean better science. sometimes you’re just being an edgelord.

    • @[email protected]
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      82 months ago

      He gave the children of HIV positive fathers, conceived via in vitro fertilization, resistance to HIV. I don’t think it’s as bad as everyone suspects. I’m not sure children conceived the normal way would have survived.

      • @[email protected]
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        322 months ago

        Hi, I am graduating in biotechnology and my professors discussed this in class. The main points they brought up were:

        1: the technique used for gene editing in those test subjects was and still is not 100% specific. With the correct primers you can still have incorrect breaks in the DNA and incorrect adhesion of your gene of interest, pair of bases can be lost and/or introduced indirectly, causing mutations that range from luckily encoding the same aminoacid to a sequence break, altering all of the following aminoacids and resulting in either a truncated protein that luckily does nothing to a protein that results in who knows what damage to the cell. This is ok in situations where you’re changing just a few calls inside or outside of the body, but when you’re changing the genome of an entire person, that is extremely dangerous for no real gain because

        2: the gene he edited was still being studied and was not guaranteed to give them immunity and it turned out they didn’t gain immunity to HIV.

        3: there are better ways to guarantee a baby is not born with HIV that are better known, do not involve possibly giving ultra cancer to babies and have been throughout tested before, they did not advance our scientific knowledge and put people’s lives in danger for no guaranteed benefit besides his own ego.

        There’s a reason why the entire scientific community was against his actions, especially those who work with genetic editing.

      • @[email protected]
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        41 month ago

        The road to hell is paved with good intentions. Just because he’s trying to achieve something admirable, that doesn’t automatically mean his actions are ethical.

    • @[email protected]
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      102 months ago

      I honestly think that is the most important point to make. It is a fundamental truth and force the person to talk specifics. Why is it bad there?

      • @[email protected]
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        No he used crispr to give babies HIV resistance.

        People on the side of classical ethics say the outcome was unknown so manipulating the embryo was wrong (ie maybe it makes them more likely to have a birth defect or something else wrong with them). Others might say “an embryo isn’t a person” or “the risk was low and the gain was high” but unfortunately he also didn’t tell anyone so.

        There’s also the fake “ethics” where people claim humans have more inherent value than chimps or mice, which of course we do not. Unfortunately this false platform is where a lot of the arguments are based: humans special, so we can’t manipulate their genome before birth. Once they are born of course these kids would get HIV and die, or be sent to work in a suicide (apple) factory, or help murder Uyghurs…but god forbid you experiment on people that’s bad.

        I’m on the side of he shouldn’t have done things the way he did, but there are hiv-resistant babies and we know how to make them now and it’s easy.

        • @[email protected]
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          2 months ago

          There’s no guarantee that they are HIV resistant, and there’s a good chance that West Nile or tick borne diseases will be more harmful than them.

          Playing mad scientist with human lives is unjustifiable. If he wanted to make “HIV resistant babies” he should have done preliminary testing to show that what he was doing was safe, communicated openly about what he was doing, ran his studies by an IRB, told the parents about the potential risks and benefits about what he was doing and then only moved forward with their CONSENT.

          What he instead did was mess with someone’s babies on a wild hare. That’s not how science works.

          Edit: also - it didn’t even work. The girls had copies of both genes, and not the HIV resistant trait.

          • @[email protected]
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            31 month ago

            Noone has consent before being born. Why is forcing a baby into this world any better or worse than changing their genes? Why is it worse to do it to a human than a monkey?

            • @[email protected]
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              The mother has autonomy over her body at bare minimum. You don’t have to even get into arguments about parents versus children there. She (or the rare he or they) has full control over what is done to her person/physical body. That’s kinda research ethics 101.

              I don’t think it’s particular great to do at random to monkeys either. The fact that Neurolink just got to randomly torture and slaughter monkeys is very upsetting to me, and is something I will probably harp on about next time I get to incorporate an “scientific ethics” lecture in a safe space. Any kind of animal research at a university or any other respectable organization - at least if the critter has a backbone - is going to require some sort of serious justification for any unavoidable pain or suffering. My own lab experience was with invertebrates but we didn’t kill them without reason. We killed lots of them, if bug hell exists I will be there, but we didn’t torture them.

              With humans though, we have a bit more capacity to feel things like despair and anguish or even perhaps positive emotions, as rare as they might be in the modern world. A human can feel complicated emotions about having been changed. A human can feel pain from a medical condition caused by the fact that genetic mutations are complicated as fuck and we still don’t quite know what’s going on everywhere yet?

              I think the last 20 years of RNA research probably shows we don’t quite understand everything yet - I’m just a generalist so I’m not super familiar with how all that works but when folks have trusted me enough to do high school biology a good chunk of my lecture time is “genetics is extremely complicated, things like a start/stop codon getting messed up could change a lot, this is also why binary understandings of ‘sex’ are incompatible etc…” I’m not a biologist and I am always happy for a biologist to step in and correct me, but we don’t understand even a fraction of what there is to know about how all of this works together yet. Fuck, add in epigenetics (Lamarck as a headless horseman) and it gets even more fucky wucky.

              If you fuck up, you could make a being who experiences profound suffering for their entire life because of your actions. Yeah, nature does that, but the fact that the universe is cruel does not give humans permission to be so.

              The complicated interaction between all of it is fascinating and needs more research - on living human beings who consent to having their genetics studied. Changing random bits in vitro is not necessarily going to result in solid science in vivo.

        • @[email protected]
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          91 month ago

          He did things in a completely non reproducible way, which is not science or research. If any of the victims have better outcomes that is pure chance.

          • @[email protected]
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            Where is there a document that describes that part?

            It looks like the mutation wasn’t perfect but I don’t see anything that indicates it wouldn’t be reproducible.

    • @[email protected]
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      11 month ago

      But there is probably a lot of wiggle room between what we have currently and stitching babies together at the skull or whatever people think of.

      We can’t have the perfect ethics. And I’m pretty certain company’s use ethical limits to limit competition like the do everything else.

  • Endymion_Mallorn
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    1782 months ago

    If a person’s criticism is of “ethics” in general, that individual should not be allowed in a position of authority or trust. If you have a specific constraint for which you can make a case that it goes too far and hinders responsible science and growth (and would have repeatable, reliable results), then state the specific point clearly and the arguments in your favor.

    • MrPistachios
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      742 months ago

      So if we put these extra pair of legs on babies then they can stand in more extreme angles making them better at construction at a time when there is a housing shortage

      • @[email protected]
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        162 months ago

        For acceptance in the US we will also add more hands so the baby can hold an AR 15 while doing construction work.

        • @[email protected]
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          162 months ago

          I am in agreement, but a point of contention: only ONE extra pair of legs? Or is this negotiable?

          • Dharma Curious (he/him)
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            132 months ago

            Spiderbaby, spiderbaby, does whatever a spider can, spiderbaby, spiderbaby, it’s mother refused to nurse it!

            • @[email protected]
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              22 months ago

              Splice with spider genes? I’ll allow that, too.

              On a completely unrelated note I just bought a new Porche and condo.

          • ivanafterall ☑️
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            22 months ago

            If we’re going along with all you liberal scientists, it seems only fair that the child should be extra circumcised to keep things fair?

    • @[email protected]
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      342 months ago

      And we already have a safety valve for when conventional ethics is standing in the way of vital research: the researchers test on themselves.

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-experimentation_in_medicine

      If it’s that vital, surely you would do it to yourself?

      It’s not terribly common because most useful research is perfectly ethical, but we have a good number of cases of researchers deciding that there’s no way for someone to ethically volunteer for what they need to do, so they do it to themselves. Sometimes they die. Sometimes they make very valuable discoveries. Sometimes both.

      So the next time someone wantz to strap someone to a rocket engine and fire it into a wall, all they have to do is go first and be part of the testing pool.

      • KubeRoot
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        122 months ago

        If it’s that vital, surely you would do it to yourself?

        You can’t really do the kind of experiments being done genetically modifying growing infants on yourself, I imagine. Not that that should be an excuse, of course.

          • @[email protected]
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            72 months ago

            The babies were born to HIV infected fathers, so the part about “never worrying about HIV in the first place” isn’t quite accurate.

            But honestly, that makes it even more infuriating. There probably would have been patients that would have CONSENTED to this if given the opportunity. He probably could have done things the right way - worked with animal studies, gone through the ethics process.

            Instead, he decided to move fast and break things, without regard for others autonomy or consent.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 month ago

      This argument applies just as well to libertarians who oppose “regulation.” There are some truly insane libertarians who want all regulation gone, but a lot of people who say they are opposed to “regulation” really mean that they want to add more barriers to adding regulation, and repeal some known-to-be-problematic regulations. I’m sure that when this person says “ethics” is holding back scientific progress, he means the latter. To assert he just means getting rid of “ethics” entirely is absurd. There is only so much detail you can put in a tweet.

      • Endymion_Mallorn
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        11 month ago

        I mean, he was imprisoned for genetic experimentation on babies without informing the parents or basically anyone else. So… I don’t think he means that in a specific way. He wants to do whatever he feels like without oversight.

  • AwesomeLowlander
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    322 months ago

    Not that I support it in any way of course, but he’s not wrong. There’s probably a lot of medical knowledge to be gained by seeing how the babies he experimented on develop in the future. It’s just that the ends don’t justify the means.

    • AnyOldName3
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      452 months ago

      It depends on the specifics of the experiment. Throughout the 20th century, the people most keen on unethical medical experiments seemed the least able to design useful experiments. Sometimes people claim that we learned lots from the horrific medical experiments taking place at Nazi concentration camps or Japanese facilities under Unit 731, but at best, it’s stuff like how long does it take a horribly malnourished person to die if their organs are removed without anaesthesia or how long does it take a horribly malnourished person who’s been beaten for weeks to freeze to death, which aren’t much use.

      • @[email protected]
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        152 months ago

        I’m pretty sure that 80% if what we learned from the Nazi/Imperial Japan super unethical experiments was “what can a psychotic doctor justify in order to have an excuse to torture people to death.”

        Maybe 20% was arguably useful, and most of that could have been researched ethically with other methods.

      • Comrade Spood
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        142 months ago

        The potential value to the Americans of Japanese-provided data, encompassing human research subjects, delivery system theories, and successful field trials, was immense. However, historian Sheldon H. Harris concluded that the Japanese data failed to meet American standards, suggesting instead that the findings from the unit were of minor importance at best. Harris characterized the research results from the Japanese camp as disappointing, concurring with the assessment of Murray Sanders, who characterized the experiments as “crude” and “ineffective.”

        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unit_731

        To back up your point that the research gained by unit 731 was useless.

      • comfy
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        22 months ago

        This one was making a child with an HIV-positive parent resistant to HIV, so it’s a bit better than 731 torture.

        • @[email protected]
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          42 months ago

          It’s crazy that people are trying to make this comparison. They are worlds apart. Notice how the post and most people talking about it aren’t discussing what he actually did? Because the situation gets a lot murkier when you learn the details.

          “Experimenting on babies” - What?! That’s unethical and immoral! Must be junk science with no benefit!

          “Made babies at risk of HIV immune to it” - Well… That’s good for the babies, but maybe he should have gone through proper channels.

    • @[email protected]
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      132 months ago

      Eh, usually less than you would expect. We’re really good at math and are quite capable of making synthetic experiments where we find people who either require the procedure, or where it’s been done incidentally and then inferring the results as though deliberate.

      We can also develop a framework for showing benefit from the intervention, perform the intervention ethically, and then compare that to people who didn’t get the intervention after the fact. With proper math you can construct the same confidence as a proper study without denying treatment or intentionally inflicting harm.

      It’s how we have evidence that tooth brushing is good for you. It would be unethical to do a study where we believe we’re intentionally inflicting permeant dental damage to people by telling them not to brush for an extended period, but we can find people who don’t and look at them.

      • AwesomeLowlander
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        12 months ago

        The current context is modifying babies to make them HIV resistant. How would you model something similar without performing the experiment?

        • @[email protected]
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          12 months ago

          He inserted a naturally occuring genetic variation.
          Off the top of my head and not an expert: screen a very large number of people for having that variation, and monitor those that do for HIV infection. That phase will take a while.
          Identify a collection of people interested in in vitro fertilization, ideally with some coming from your previous sample group. Since the process produces more embryos than can be used, perform your procedure on a random selection of discards. Inspection and sequencing of the modified segment should be indistinguishable from unmodified embryos bearing then variation naturally.
          Now that you have confidence that the variation provides protection, and that you can make the change, identify people where the intervention offers a better chance than not having it, even though it’s experimental. This would likely be HIV positive women desiring IVF who would not be able to tolerate standard HIV treatment during the pregnancy. Engineering the embryo to be resistant therefore becomes the best available way to prevent infection.
          You can then look back and compare infection rates with children born to untreated parents and parents who underwent treatment.

          You also do a better job ensuring the parents know about the risks and what they entail. Informed consent and all that.

          If this is really hard to do because you can’t find people that fit the criteria, maybe your research isn’t actually that critical. If HIV medication is essentially universally tolerated in pregnancy and is nearly 100% effective at preventing transmission to the infant without long-term side effects, then it might just be the case that while gene editing would work, it doesn’t provide enough of an advantage to be worth exploring for that disease.

          Medical research is still medicine. You’re still obligated to do what’s best for the patient, even if it’s difficult or you’re curious about what would happen.

  • Hikuro-93
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    Ironic thing, we already tried this approach multiple times before, specially on war times. And each time humanity concluded that some knowledge has too high a price and we’re better off not finding out some things.

    Knowledge for the sake of knowledge, especially with a heavy blood cost, isn’t the way to progress as a species.

    And I should know, as a person greatly defined by curiosity about everything and more limited emotional capacity than other people due to mental limitations.

    • @[email protected]
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      212 months ago

      If you’re talking about unit 731 and the nazis then there was very little, if anything, scientifically valuable there.

      They had terrible research methodology that rendered what data they gathered mostly useless, and even if it wasn’t, most of the information could have been surmised by other methods. Some of the things they did served no conceivable practical or scientific purpose whatsoever.

      It was pretty much just sadism with a thin veneer of justification to buy them the small amount of legitimacy they needed to operate within their fascist governments.

      • guldukat
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        62 months ago

        From what I read, a tiny bit of radiation and frostbite research was useful. Huge cost, of course, but minimally useful.

      • Hikuro-93
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        Exactly. Society should never conflate knowledge driven by curiosity and knowledge as an excuse for sadism.

        There’s a difference between experimenting by following rules, and then observing the results vs giving in to base forbidden desires just to see what happens or trying to bend reality to confirm one’s bias - I mean, just look at how people tried to justify until decades ago a black person’s ‘inferiority’ and their discrimination by coming up with all sorts of anatomical observations. That’s the danger.

    • @[email protected]
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      172 months ago

      Also the motivation of such research is usually not purely scientific, if at all, so the data gathered is often useless.

  • KayLeadfoot
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    132 months ago

    I know him!!! He featured heavily in that one Walter Isaacson biography, The Codebreaker. About Dr. Doudna of course.

    Did he get his PHD? Well, good on him. I see China has a better anti-recidivism program than the USA has. Last I heard, he was doing hard time in Chinese prison for mad scientist stuff.

    • Skua
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      292 months ago

      He got his PhD in 2010, he was imprisoned 2020 - 2023

  • @[email protected]
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    112 months ago

    Wasn’t he the guy who was trying to find a way for HIV-positive couples to have HIV-negative babies?

        • OBJECTION!
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          We don’t need to compare the two, they both committed atrocities horrific beyond comprehension.

        • @[email protected]
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          91 month ago

          doesn’t get enough attention, true, but both are so far over the moral event horizon, anyone who tolerates either one living should be shot.

  • admin
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    152 months ago

    Testing testing. Running an example instance. Please ignore this OP :>

  • (⬤ᴥ⬤)
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    372 months ago

    wait he’s not a fucking parody account?? i thought he was like. larping as an umbrella corp researcher

  • Encephalotrocity
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    To all the commenters saying this guy was a saint for doing what he did, would you say the same thing had the outcome been disastrous? Babies born without HIV, but with constant excruciating pain or mental deficiency?

    He took an extraordinarily reckless and permanently life-altering, for good or bad, risk with children’s lives.

    edit: spelling

    • @[email protected]
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      141 month ago

      The good old adage: “you don’t have a gambling addiction as long as you keep winning”

    • @[email protected]
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      41 month ago

      This is the moral dilemma.

      The whole Grimdank universe of just randomly testing things on people to make humans genetically more superior will absolutely improve life for future humans. No question. On paper anyways.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 month ago

      Sure lets just torture all the poor people so a handfull of rich fucks can afford stem-cell-zinfandel, never mind that 100,000 people were tortured and killed, at least we discovered a new anti-wrinkle cream. If you don’t think that’s what it always is in practice you’re delusional. Shit like that is just as likely to cause mass disease or our extinction than it is to discover something useful, perhaps even more so

    • @[email protected]
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      This is very hypothetical. You could make the same argument about any experimental medical intervention in a child’s life. If I had the choice of being born with HIV or an experimental procedure with some (how much?) chance of risk, I’d chose the procedure. I think the criticism of this form of treatment is highly coloured because it sounds like “playing god.”

      • Encephalotrocity
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        71 month ago

        You could make the same argument about any experimental medical intervention in a child’s life

        Yup, and there’s even ethics review boards convened solely to analyze that argument with the particulars of a case and rule whether the treatment is okay to go ahead. This guy played god without approval from this review process and deserved the time served.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 month ago

          Okay, I do relate to this argument. It’s the ethics review board’s decision and not his to make. Fair enough. In this case, I am disappointed by the ethic review board’s decision, which is why I sympathize with the doctor.

        • would he, as the God curing the hiv, be more or less moral than the God giving the hiv?

          The power to enact change is not a 100% bad thing. It only looks that way because of rampant corruption. There are good people in the world too. It is the good people who should be powerful. Keep in mind he is not developing something for a monsanto patent thicket; he is curing diseases without it being tied to nor profiting big pharma

    • @[email protected]
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      61 month ago

      A lot of geneticist are DEEPLY against trying these things. This guy’s lucky so far in that his actions haven’t caused serious problems, we really don’t know how adjusting genetics can backfire, but according to the professionals the risks are very very high.

  • @[email protected]
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    222 months ago

    “Speed limits are holding me back from getting from a to B in as little time as possible” yeah, and they reduce the likelihood of injuring/killing a people in the process.

    • @[email protected]
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      41 month ago

      yeah, but, consider: I really want to get to point B. like, so badly. and I’m pretty sure I’m a good driver.

      • @[email protected]
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        11 month ago

        Everyone wants to get to their point B, ad they are all statistically pretty sure you are not as good a driver as you think you are.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 month ago

          okay but what if I’m, like, really sure I’m good? or I just want it so so so so so so bad?

          • @[email protected]
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            11 month ago

            you want it so so so so so bad that you don’t care if other people die in the process?

            We have terms for when one goes on with that, such as “crime”, and it’s penalized.

              • @[email protected]
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                11 month ago

                If you were so sure you are special, and by some divine grace it happened that you were actually right, you are actually that special a driver, then if/when you still run someone over that goes into the field of something like superheroics logistics / insurances or “natural disaster” insurance I guess.

                The problem there becomes, to turn back the analogy to the real case being discussed, how do you compensate someone for being born.

                • @[email protected]
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                  11 month ago

                  okay but like what if I’m really sure I’m special, and have no concept of it not being fine? and besides I’m a great driver, so you’re actually bad for insulting me with a speed limit. how dare you. besides; it’s probably fine.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 month ago

      Then why isn’t the speed limit 0 everywhere? Speed limits are a balance between two opposing concerns.

      In this case, ethics is holding back life-saving treatments. Ethics boards should approve gene editing more than they currently do.

      • @[email protected]
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        31 month ago

        I’m not arguing that ethics boards cant be overly stringent. But there’s a reason we have them in the first place and that still doesn’t make it alright to start conducting unauthorised experiments on people.

        Even if it turned out OK in this case, and we still can’t say that it definitely did, the next person who trys to pull a stunt like this might not be so lucky, qualified, or knowledgable.

        What’s the alternative here?

  • @[email protected]
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    1042 months ago

    Is nobody concerned that illegal experiments on babies only gets you 3 years?

    Maybe they were Uyghurs so it was classified as “property damage” in Chinese law.

    • comfy
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      442 months ago

      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/He_Jiankui_affair

      Laws were changed after this incident:

      In 2020, the National People’s Congress of China passed Civil Code and an amendment to Criminal Law that prohibit human gene editing and cloning with no exceptions

      So, in case you actually meant that weird ignorant remark you made about Uyghurs, the answer is no and no.

      • @[email protected]
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        182 months ago

        Lemmitors downvoting you because actually learning about the case conflicts with their “cHiNa BaD” circlejerk.

      • @[email protected]
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        92 months ago

        Thanks for the information – good to know. I assume that like American law, he couldn’t be punished for something that wasn’t illegal when he did it?

        Regarding the Uyghur comment the other guy made, definitely a bit tasteless but I don’t think it’s that ignorant given the genocide China perpetrated against them.

        • @[email protected]
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          31 month ago

          What he did was illegal. Even without specific laws about genetic modification or cloning, he did perform experiments with babies without the necessity approvals from ethics and safety, without informed consent from the parents and likely misusing funds allocated to other research.

          3 years is still to short.

    • OBJECTION!
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      192 months ago

      Dang, you can really just pull shit straight out of your ass and people will believe it.

          • @[email protected]
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            122 months ago

            Marxism leninism, it’s a political ideology, subset of communism. Basically the communists that love USSR, China, Cuba, etc. They love running propaganda about how these authoritarian governments did nothing wrong and how all criticism of them is just negative propaganda by the West.

          • @[email protected]
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            2 months ago

            Supposed to mean “machine-learning” Mali, but the developers of Lemmy (whose instance it is) are using it to mean “Marxism-Leninism”, which is a misnomer invented by Stalin. While ml has some non-tankie leftists, that instance is infamous because of them.

            • @[email protected]
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              92 months ago

              It’s actually the TLD for Mali, not explicitly related to machine learning, or leftism. That’s mainly what it’s used for though, outside of Mali.

              • @[email protected]
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                12 months ago

                Great question! The truth is that the CCP and Russian Federation are basically spiritual successors of Marx himself. Here’s a list of bullet points explaining…

        • OBJECTION!
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          2 months ago

          Yes, .ml users do indeed tend to be more concerned with fact-checking and saying things that are actually true as compared to flat.world, thank you for pointing that out.

    • @[email protected]
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      202 months ago

      The devil is in the details…

      You are likely thinking (as I am) that he implanted robotic arms on babies but he may have just rubbed sage oil on them for all we know

    • @[email protected]
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      512 months ago

      Be careful, you might get banned from lemmy dot ml for hatespeech against dictatorships.

      • OBJECTION!
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        92 months ago

        It’s literal misinformation, so it probably should be removed, yes.

        • @[email protected]
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          252 months ago

          Nazis, by definition, do not oppose dictatorships. Not sure where you got that idea, but it certainly wasn’t a level-headed assessment of history.

          • @[email protected]
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            122 months ago

            I read it in Das Kapital, by Joseph Stalin. Don’t you liberal anarkiddies read theory?

          • @[email protected]
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            152 months ago

            The guy you’re responding to is a liberal doing a piss poor parody of a ML.

            You can’t do a good parody if you get angry before the punchline, or don’t understand the thing you’re parodying in the first place.

        • @[email protected]
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          112 months ago

          I wrote that on my phone’s touch keyboard, and I didn’t want to use \. to escape the dot character to avoid autohotlinking.

    • @[email protected]
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      1 month ago

      “Illegal experiments on babies” is a user-provided note, and is not really an accurate label. For one thing, no experiments were done on babies.

      Another thing – unlike “murder,” there is a gradient of what constitutes an “illegal experiment.” The phrase “illegal experiments on babies” sounds terrible, but if you imagine a volume dial on this crime, one could lower it until one finds the minimum violation possible which could technically be described as an “illegal experiment” – for instance, flicking a baby with your index finger to check its reflexes. So it should not be of any surprise that there are such things as “illegal experiments” which are so mild as to warrant just 3 years in prison.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 month ago

        The report confirmed that He had recruited eight couples to participate in his experiment, resulting in two pregnancies, one of which gave birth to the gene- edited twin girls in November 2018. The babies are now under medical supervision. The report further said He had made forged ethical review papers in order to enlist volunteers for the procedure, and had raised his Own funds deliberately evading oversight, and organized a team that included some overseas members to carry out the illegal project.

        I guess it’s right that there was no experiment in babies, the babies were the experiments themselves.

        It would have taken much less time to read about the topic than to make that nonsense response.

    • @[email protected]
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      52 months ago

      Depends how successful the experiment is (and probably on what the goal is as well).

      If he’d been testing the effects of grass vs grain feed on human fat marbling, I’d imagine the sentence would have been a little more severe

      • @[email protected]
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        51 month ago

        A lot of contexts? Like the development depending on formula vs mother’s milk? Experimenting doesn’t need to mean vivisection or injecting unregulated drugs, but if you need to do the experiments illegally, I’m not sure it was something “safe”

  • @[email protected]
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    112 months ago

    Better build a research base on Mars where legal and ethical limitations don’t exist. And IDK, start researching teleportation or something.