DNA testing can never prove anything. It can rule out someone completely and statistically make it very unlikely to be anyone else. But what about identical sib's. They all have exactly the same DNA! There are cases of such children where one becomes a pillar of society and the other less so. A DNA database would allow loads of stuff to be done. How about a designed disease or toxin that only affects certain gene carriers. This could be added to the food chain at any time you wanted to incapacitate a particular person or group of people without comprimising any one else. Fun hmmm!!!
DNA of identical siblings is identical? I guess that makes sense, since we're really split after conception... so explain why my brother has smooth hands and fingers with almost no prints (lucky bastard!) and mine look like mother teresa's face... (probably more now than before, eh?) X ~> -----Original Message----- ~> From: owner-cypherpunks@minder.net ~> [mailto:owner-cypherpunks@minder.net]On Behalf Of ~> Richard.Bragg@ssa.co.uk ~> Sent: Wednesday, October 14, 1998 2:44 AM ~> To: mmotyka@lsil.com ~> Cc: cypherpunks@toad.com ~> Subject: RE: DNA ~> ~> ~> DNA testing can never prove anything. It can rule out someone completely ~> and statistically make it ~> very unlikely to be anyone else. But what about identical ~> sib's. They all ~> have exactly the same DNA! ~> ~> There are cases of such children where one becomes a pillar of ~> society and ~> the other less so. ~> ~> A DNA database would allow loads of stuff to be done. How about ~> a designed ~> disease or toxin that ~> only affects certain gene carriers. This could be added to the ~> food chain ~> at any time you wanted ~> to incapacitate a particular person or group of people without ~> comprimising ~> any one else. ~> ~> Fun hmmm!!! ~> ~> ~>
X wrote:
DNA of identical siblings is identical? I guess that makes sense, since we're really split after conception... so explain why my brother has smooth hands and fingers with almost no prints (lucky bastard!) and mine look like mother teresa's face... (probably more now than before, eh?)
X
What about the difference in twins being that one can be from two ovum and two sperm?? Did you ever think of that?? Thus a brother and sister that are twins? Maybe you are one of said twins two eggs two sperm... Is if fraternal VS paternal twins? I forget... or maternal VS paternal?? Maybe paternal two sperms maternal the egg split twice... High School Biology was so long ago and I do computers now, not biology or medicine. - lhe - lhe
Because the fingerprint pattern is not genetically pre-determined. It is apparently part of the fetal development process. Minor environmental differences and random cell division differences will make the prints different even between identical twins. X wrote:
DNA of identical siblings is identical? I guess that makes sense, since we're really split after conception... so explain why my brother has smooth hands and fingers with almost no prints (lucky bastard!) and mine look like mother teresa's face... (probably more now than before, eh?)
X
participants (4)
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Leif Ericksen
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Marty Levy
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Richard.Bragg@ssa.co.uk
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X