Since a US Government-mandated (and taxpayer paid) 4-year study (ENCODE, led by Dr. Collins) established the scientific fact that (at the least a significant part of) formerly "written off" so-called "non-coding DNA" is massively involved in genome function, US government-supported professionals who after the release of ENCODE (reversal of the Establishment in 2007) neglect to to follow Dr. Collins' mandate that "the scientific community will have to re-think long-held beliefs" are actually liable for a hefty Class Action Lawsuit for Negligence when they disregard the established reversal of protocol and e.g. continue to "write off" investigation of 98.7% of the DNA in cases of grave genomic syndromes.I really try to be fair with people like this, but woah. Can researchers be charged with negligence for what they don't study? (Assuming, that is, that there actually was a total dismissal of non-coding DNA, which there wasn't).
Crankishness.
As a brief follow up to the post about Dr. Andras Pellionisz's Google seminar, I cannot help but quote from his website:
Related articles
- Pellionisz Google Tech presentation
- Forget 25% Of Their Fleet By 2024, Hertz Is Now Dumping 20,000 Electric Cars
- Many Young Scientists Want To Publish Open Access, They Just Don't Want To Pay For It
- Genetic engineering has potential for biotechnological developments
- Kidney Patients Start Dialysis Sooner Than Ever
Comments