New Article: Lin28a.

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • hellouser
    Senior Member
    • May 2012
    • 4419

    #16
    Originally posted by PaddyBateman
    ....for hairloss.

    Which , to be fair, wasn't at the top of humanity's concerns for some time. Even if we wish it were.

    You don't need to have had cancer, or AIDs, or heart disease to know how important it is for scientists to concentrate on them.

    But..you do need to have had hairloss to understand how destructive it can be to someone's life, male or female.
    More troubling is their progress with life threatening diseases... none of them have cured anything. They take in millions and billions of dollars a year without having produced a single cure. If you look into the amount of money that goes into breast cancer research, its about 1 billion dollars. but what about marketing? advertising? product partnerships (tic tac has a campaign going now)? etc. Its easily in the billions... many many billions. And what do they have to show for it? NOTHING. Its not just the hair loss world thats suffering.... its all of us... I don't think any of these researcher quacks actually give a shit about anything other than the size of their bank account. I hope they get what they deserve, but thats never the case. Case in point, that incompetent loser president who sent young men and women to die over a false war should be in ****ing JAIL, yet the guy got a promotion for a second term?

    I'm disgusted by humanity.

    Comment

    • burtandernie
      Senior Member
      • Nov 2012
      • 1563

      #17
      Originally posted by walrus
      You have extremely unrealistic views of how science works.
      I understand in some cases they use mice to test, but let me ask you why does anyone honestly care about a report on what you did in a mouse? When you see a result in people in a trial later on then report it after its confirmed working. If its not happening in people it might not work and its not any practical use to anyone. Why not report the tiny progress or mundane tasks you did in the lab every single day to the public too? Neither is really useful just the end result in humans

      Comment

      • clandestine
        Senior Member
        • Aug 2011
        • 2002

        #18
        Des?

        Comment

        Working...