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Eat Less - Live Longer

Bates writes "In the New York Times (free reg required) there is an article telling about a gene in fruitflies that when disabled doubles the lifespan of the fruitfly. The gene has been affectionately nicknamed "I'm Not Dead Yet." The gene actually manipulates your metabolism by makeing it so the LESS of your food is converted into calories. The article speculates about the possibility of a pill for humans that will partialy disable the same gene in humans. Maybe someone will beat Methuselah sometime in the future."

270 comments

  1. Just what we need.... by Quintin+Stone · · Score: 1

    A pill to give us even more overweight Americans!

    --

    "Prejudice is wrong; you should hate everyone the same."

    1. Re:Just what we need.... by Quintin+Stone · · Score: 1

      Oh, gimme a break. It was a joke. I'm a friggin American.

      --

      "Prejudice is wrong; you should hate everyone the same."

    2. Re:Just what we need.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yeah, stupid like the Americans, who's shambolic voting system has left them with a man who lost the election, who's as thick as pig shit, and who only won the election because his daddy told the Supreme Court to make a pissy decision. So much for democracy, so much for justice and so much for Americans enjoying the lifestyles that they're used to now!

    3. Re:Just what we need.... by Andux · · Score: 1

      Probably means "sham of a..."

      --
      (Do not sign anything.) -- Fell, Planescape: Torment
    4. Re:Just what we need.... by non-plus · · Score: 1

      Hey, Junior Birdman, last time I checked, my Webster's (a nice hard cover) did have a few illustrations. So, the last time you opened a dictionary was.....?

  2. Anorexic by JFMulder · · Score: 1

    So now all the anorexic people out there can eat less and still manage to be in shape. That should make Calista Flockhart happy!!!

    1. Re:Anorexic by clifyt · · Score: 2

      Yeah I know this was intended as a Joke, but there are SOOOOOO many fat people that get offended by people like Calista saying that it is seting bad precident and showing unhealthy lifestyles. There are studies every other month showing that the Barbie dolls are unhealty rolemodels for American teens as they try to look just like that.

      Being thin is not unhealthy. Being a fat fucking American is (heh...I've gone pretty much vegitarian and I still weigh 220...I've actually gained weight since the transition...damn carbohydrates). We just don't seem to get it and our cities and work and all that don't make exercising any easier.

      Hell, I just biked 3 miles in the snow to work today as my car broke down and now I'm actually thinking that wasn't as bad an idea as I thought it was on the way in. Who needs genetically altered parts when we already have the ability to get off our asses and be in shape and live a whole hell of a long time more than we would with out exercising anyways.

      blah

      clif

    2. Re:Anorexic by cactopus · · Score: 2

      Being thin anorexically is very unhealthy...period.

      Being fat because you don't do anything and gorge on empty foods or harmful foods is unhealthy.

      Being fat because you don't do anything and gorge on healthy foods is somewhat harmful but we don't know for sure

      Being fat because you have a low metabolism, but you eat right and excercise moderately is sometimes healthier than a thin person who does the same thing for fat dynamic reasons.. i.e. retaining vitamins and calcium.

      Being thin and eating right with moderate exercise is ok too.

      Being thin and eating a ton because you have a high metabolism might be ok depending on what you eat.

      What you eat does not depend on fat intake, cholesterol intake, quantity of meat or other, but simply the inclusion of a balanced diet and the 96 essential vitamins and minerals with a low intake of trans-fats.

      Strenuous excercise is very bad too... if one eats only salad and jogs every day they are going to die young. They aren't getting certain proteins and they're wearing out their joints, their heart muscles, and many other things especially if they have no body fat to burn....and they're getting ugly and stringy too. (I won't continue in this vein because I could fill many paragraphs that way)

    3. Re:Anorexic by AssFace · · Score: 1

      the carbs aren't the problem directly - it is the insulin rush that accopanies it - I'd say you are getting too many low glycemic ones and you need high instead.
      ------------------------------------------------ --

      --

      There are some odd things afoot now, in the Villa Straylight.
  3. The obvious solution... by Shoeboy · · Score: 5

    Would be to ensure that the body converts none of its food intake to calories. That way, you'd live even longer.
    And don't give me any crap about starving to death. If I learned one thing from The Matrix it's that the human body gives off more energy than it takes in.
    --Shoeboy

    1. Re:The obvious solution... by WheyAye · · Score: 1
      Actually while we're on the topic of humorising the matrix... what actually happens if someone gets hit by a bus? They'd die on there but it would mean flushing a perfectly good 'battery'. *snigger*.

      Not very efficient is it? :-)

    2. Re:The obvious solution... by cactopus · · Score: 1

      so how does one feed humans on holographic food that was created by the computers in order to generate the energy to feed the computers. Given the real world outside the matrix is incapable of sustaining the cow to make the real version of the holographic steak the traitor guy ate, it is sort of like building a perpetual motion machine... unless they are talking about the real way they feed the people ... which was with the dead, except that would mean the death rate was higher than the birth rate... oops... What fun irony

    3. Re:The obvious solution... by Soruk · · Score: 3

      Despite all the advances in medical science and technology, the human mortality rate remains fixed at 100%.

      --
      -- Soruk
    4. Re:The obvious solution... by T-Ranger · · Score: 2
      Not true.

      Given the total global population today (~6billion), and the total number of people that have ever lived (~10billion by some estemates), its clear to me that the mortality rate is 60%.

      I for one am planning on living forever. Clearly is possible - Im living proof :)

    5. Re:The obvious solution... by daftgirl · · Score: 1
      Given the total global population today (~6billion), and the total number of people that have ever lived (~10billion by some estemates), its clear to me that the mortality rate is 60%.

      Wouldn't that be a mortality rate of 40%? i.e. (10billion-6billion)/10billion.
      That's even better! I also plan on living forever, and so far, it's working.

    6. Re:The obvious solution... by Jace+of+Fuse! · · Score: 1

      As off topic as ALL of this may be...

      I always just assumed that food was synthesized by the machines. "...this, coupled with a form of fusion..." It's pretty obvious the humanoids only provided part of the AI's energy needs.

      So it is that humans COULD live without the machines, so it will be that the machines COULD live without the humans.

      Or something like that.

      -=-

      --

      "Everything you know is wrong. (And stupid.)"

      Moderation Totals: Wrong=2, Stupid=3, Total=5.
    7. Re:The obvious solution... by fudboy · · Score: 2

      if you go to the matrix website and read some of the conceptual and supporting info, you will see that the humans were originally used for 'extra CPU cycles' in the story (as it probably should be) but my thinking is that this confused test audiences and the studio mandated a dumbdown.

      Also, it strikes me that 'mandating a dumbdown' is a useful notion. can anyone think of a good word to indicate this concept? thanks,

      :)Fudboy

      --

      :)Fudboy

      I guess I'm only a Fudboy, looking for that real Transmeta
    8. Re:The obvious solution... by Rendus · · Score: 2

      I call it "moronizing" personally.

    9. Re:The obvious solution... by hawkear · · Score: 1

      I think that would be the immortality rate... ;-)

  4. Hmmm..... by EFGearman · · Score: 3

    I don't know... I'm kind of leary about that. I know that they will (hopefully) test this a good bit before unleashing it on us. Anything that turns on or off certain genes can have extremely dangerous side effects. Plus, adding to the age without fixing other problems (senility, arthritis, etc.) associated with old age will cause the new old age to become a living hell for people.

    Eric Gearman
    --

    --
    Atomic batteries to power! Turbines to speed!
    1. Re:Hmmm..... by roman_mir · · Score: 3

      Isn't it weird that the most obvious solution - eating less, does not come to mind of most people. They should not switch off 'calorie burning gene' they should boost up 'will power gene'.

    2. Re:Hmmm..... by Muggins+the+Mad · · Score: 1

      > Isn't it weird that the most obvious solution - eating less, does not come to mind of most people.

      For many people, being able to get *enough* food is difficult.

      Not everyone overeats, you know!

      In fact many people die from insufficient diets.

      - Muggins the Mad

    3. Re:Hmmm..... by roman_mir · · Score: 2

      Well, since the drug that this company is testing is probably an expensive one, I would completely exclude most of the rest of the world except for that parts of it where starvation to death is the most unlikely reason to die. We are talking about a drug to 'decrease metabolism' defenetely it is only needed for the most industrialized countries. Thus, when I say 'most people' I mean most people who should be included as potential customers. Defenetely not most people in the world.

    4. Re:Hmmm..... by noims · · Score: 1

      In fact the flies ages slower throughout their lifespan. The symptoms of old-age started appearing later in their lives too.

      Admittedly old-age does last longer, but only in proportion to the increase in lifespan.

      Noims

      --
      This is not the greatest sig in the world. This is just a tribute.
    5. Re:Hmmm..... by joshuaos · · Score: 1
      I know that they will (hopefully) test this a good bit before unleashing it on us.

      Who the fuck are they and why would they unleash anything on anyone? You won't catch me taking or recieving or whatever it is "they" plan to produce from this research, I don't trust the bastards.

      I do, however, think there is a huge corilation(sp?) between diet and lifespan. There's lots of interesting websites and books out there about Natural Heigine and Breatharianism and the like.

      Cheers! Joshua

      Terradot

      --

      When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout!

  5. If it was that simple... by Muggins+the+Mad · · Score: 5

    If it was as simple as turning a single gene on
    or off, I'm sure evolution would already have done
    it for us...

    Presumably there's some penalty (other than living many years past senility :) )

    1. Re:If it was that simple... by Oztun · · Score: 1

      Does that mean evolution likes us more than the fruitfly?

    2. Re:If it was that simple... by avandesande · · Score: 4

      And there lies the crux of the problem- the ability to quickly gain weight is an evolutionary advantage in areas where food availability is inconsistent. People who can 'put on the pounds' during harvest season are more likely to make it through a tough winter or drought.

      --
      love is just extroverted narcissism
    3. Re:If it was that simple... by EboMike · · Score: 1
      Presumably there's some penalty (other than living many years past senility :) )

      Oh actually there is. You'll have people live much longer than they're supposed to be. Imagine, say, Tokyo citizens living twice as long as they already do. Housing space is that limited there, people would really SUFFER.

      Every man is an awkward waste of resources. He has a car, wastes huge amounts of electricity, buys an uncountable number of consumer goods, each and every single thing eating at our soon-to-be-depleted resources.

      Why do you think did the gas price rise that much? (At least in places other than the US). Just because the mineral oil industry felt like fucking us in the ass? What do you think would happen if there were twice as many cars on the roads?

      Yes, I would like to live forever (as long as I'd stay fit, both physically and mentally), but as long as we haven't spread out to other planets that we can conquer and exploit, things would REALLY look dim around here.

      Be thankful there is death in so many forms as a keeper of balance. It's tough shit, but that's life.

    4. Re:If it was that simple... by JWW · · Score: 2

      Evolution is like walking around bumping into walls. Eventaully it finds a door and goes through it.

      Unless there would be some special aspect that would allow people with this type of gene to have a higher survival rate to their childbearing years(all that matters to pass your genes forward). There really wouldn't be much of a case for this causing natural selection to cause this to be prevalent in all people.

    5. Re:If it was that simple... by clary · · Score: 2
      Under the natural selection model, there is no obvious reproductive advantage to living beyond what it takes to get offspring raised to self-sufficiency.

      Disclaimer: I am not a paleontologist. In fact, I am rather a fan of Michael Behe....

      --

      "Rub her feet." -- L.L.

    6. Re:If it was that simple... by weave · · Score: 3
      If it was as simple as turning a single gene on or off, I'm sure evolution would already have done it for us...

      Nah, not necessarily. Evolution tends to favor situations that lead to the point of reproduction. Once you're past reproductive age, evolution doesn't do much for you. You've served your purpose, now just hurry up and die please!

      However, that's less the case for men who can do their part far longer than females, but that's the fault of women in general. If women of child-bearing age would just stop screwing men old enough to be their fathers, that feature would probably die off too!

      Come to think of it, that's probably why men are considered to age more gracefully than women. The better looking old fucks tend to still get the young chicks and their "good looking old man" genes tend to carry on because of it.

    7. Re:If it was that simple... by Muggins+the+Mad · · Score: 1

      Unless there would be some special aspect that would allow people with this type of gene to have a higher survival rate to their childbearing years(all that matters to pass your genes forward). There really wouldn't be much of a case for this causing natural selection to cause this to be prevalent in all people.

      I disagree, we're already living well beyond the end of our childbearing years, and not just in the last few hundred years. Being able to stay alive and pass on cultural wisdom is a very strong survival trait. And if it's just one gene being activated or not, with no other penalties, I think it's unlikely that it wouldn't have happened already. Sure it's random, but there have been an awful lot of people born in human history. I actually think the person who mentioned that being able to stock up on and store calories when food was available is probably a stronger trait than living longer to pass on knowledge. - Muggins
    8. Re:If it was that simple... by scotay · · Score: 1

      Once you get passed breeding age, there is no longer any evolutionary rationale for extending lifespan past that date.

      I know most geeks won't understand this, but in evolutionary terms, most people would have been expected to have sex by their twenties and fulfilled their evolutionary destiny.

    9. Re:If it was that simple... by JWW · · Score: 1

      I agree it's probably happened. I was referring to it becoming a common trait across humanity. That would be very difficult if it did not provide some strong driver for natural selection based on the trait.

    10. Re:If it was that simple... by Garc · · Score: 1

      The article states that the altered fruit flys are reproducing longer than normal flies. One guess is that they're capable of reproduction for the same percentage of their life as normal flies.

      Also, they appear to be living normal lives, so again, perhaps that they'd only become senile for the last percentage of their life. Think in relative terms instead of absolute terms.

      garc

    11. Re:If it was that simple... by tburkhol · · Score: 1
      Unless there would be some special aspect that would allow people with this type of gene to have a higher survival rate to their childbearing years

      This gene might even be negatively selective. Having a bunch of old, non-reproducing people around taking food away from those who are reproducing diminishes the chances of survival.

    12. Re:If it was that simple... by drooling-dog · · Score: 1
      The thing is, evolution doesn't "want" us to live any longer. In fact, just about every species that exists today has evolved with genes that limit lifespan. We don't grow old and die because our bodies "wear out" in the sense that a machine does; we grow old and die because we're programmed to by our genes. Why? Because evolution isn't very efficient if previous generations hang around too long competing with newer generations for resources and mating opportunities. An immortal species would have trouble maintaining its average fitness in competion with other species that have a higher turnover rate.

      Nobody's ever shown this as far as I know, but I'll bet that even the fact that we get uglier as we age is genetically programmed; it keeps the level of intergenerational mating under control (unless you're rich, but that's another subject).

      It may well be that science will find a solution to the aging "problem", but we should realize that we're screwing with something very fundamental here, and the long-term consequences could be pretty nasty.

    13. Re:If it was that simple... by hammock · · Score: 1

      Check out MC Stephen Hawkings mad pimpin lyrical funkmasta rhymes from his 1997 album, E = MC Hawking

      F*ck The Creationists.mp3

      His other works include:

      The Hawkman Cometh EP (1992)
      A Brief History of Rhyme (1994)

    14. Re:If it was that simple... by perlyking · · Score: 1

      You know, i'd like to think the same thing - that evolution has made us more or less perfect.
      The truth is stranger than that, why are women born with 200,000 eggs but don't live long enough to actually use them? What about (recently on slashdot here) the fact that the human genome contains latrge amounts of apparently junk material?
      I believe in evolutions ability to produce optimal creatures but either what we think is optimal is not optimal for evolution - after all humans living forever is bad for evolution, how does the race evolve if we dont die?

      --
      no sig.
    15. Re:If it was that simple... by F13 · · Score: 1

      Like you said there must be some other penalty

      I don't think we would evolve a certain way
      unless it was needed for our survival. I guess
      living extra long simply is not necessary for
      the survial of the species.

    16. Re:If it was that simple... by ryanvm · · Score: 1

      >If it was as simple as turning a single gene on
      >or off, I'm sure evolution would already have done
      >it for us...

      You are quite wrong - evolution doesn't work that way. Death is an evolutionary necessity because in order for a species to evole, the old (and possibly inferior) must stop reproducing and die so that the new (and possibly improved) can reproduce.

      And logically, the longer a generation lasts, the slower that species will evolve.

      I can guarantee you that I've grossly over-simplified; but rest assurred, really long lifespans are NOT an evolutionary advantage.

    17. Re:If it was that simple... by Glabrezu · · Score: 1

      That evolution brings species to their optimum capabilites its probably wrong. You can say that it brings it to a better state than it was before, but that doesnt means that the state at wich you arrive is the optimum state (think it as a tree with many branches, we could be following one way up, but that is not the only way ;) What i can't understand is why people always say that the things that humans create are unnatural things. That medicine, genetic manipulation, robotics, are not natural because humans made them. Well, when i see a birds nest i still consider it natural, even if it was created by a bird. Why is not possible to believe that human society and advancement is in fact just another form of natural evolution? We are just another kind of animals, but we are animals. Anyway, its possible that making people live longer would bring other problems, like overpopulation, and social security crisis ;).SantiagoEvolution, There's More Than One Way To Do It:)

      --
      Santiago
    18. Re:If it was that simple... by Relic+of+the+Future · · Score: 1
      Why? Evolutions goal (if a non-sentient concept can be said to have a "goal") is not to extend the life on the individual, but to pass on the individuals genes to the next generation. If a longer life doesn't help that, then genes that promote longer life will not be selected for. Evolution doesn't make perfect organisms, it only makes organisms that are just barely good enough.

      God does not play dice with the universe. Albert Einstein

      --
      Those who fail to understand communication protocols, are doomed to repeat them over port 80.
    19. Re:If it was that simple... by Rainy · · Score: 1

      Why would evolution do that? Evolution wants you dead as quick as possible, as soon as you raise a few children. It's our luck that evolution is sloppy, or else we'd die at precisely 35 y.o. or so. Why you ask? One word: adaptability of population - the faster generations change, the quicker can a given population adapt to changing environment. Where do you think the death comes from? There's no inherent reason why a living organism should die unless killed, and yet they all die cause they're programmed so. OTOH, this 'feature' has been with us for so long it's probably distributed over huge amount of genes/mechanisms so it won't be easy to just turn it off. Might take another thousand years so don't get your hopes up :-).

      --
      -- ATTENTION: do not read this sig. It doesn't say much.
    20. Re:If it was that simple... by duke_trinity · · Score: 1

      I think the drawback is slower cultural evolution... I'm not sure if there would be an impact on Darwin's survival of the fittest (except maybe that older reproductive males could beat on younger ones, killing off their competition using more advanced skills acquired during a long life, and thus ending the collective life of the species in a few generations by killing off all young males) but I know for certain that science and technology would develop at Ent-like speeds if we didn't have all these impetuous youths inventing new fangled things like "Linux" and "computers". Generally speaking, from a species point of view, there's no reason to keep non-productive members around. However, from the point of view of someone who will get old and would like to eventually retire to shuffle board and other non-productive pursuits, I would like people to live as long as possible.

      -Duke, creator of Slashdot's longest single sentence (see above)



  6. This doesn't solve the underlying problems by Dan+Hayes · · Score: 5

    Whilst this is a great advance for both people with weight problems and in general for extending lifespans it doesn't really solve the underlying social problems that make us as Americans quite so unhealthy. After all, all this pill does is simulate something we can do quite well on our own with a bit of willpower - eat less.

    Why do most Americans feel that unless they eat enough to feed a dozen starving African refugees they've somehow been cheated of what is their right? There's no real need for a steak the size of a toilet seat, and yet restaurants make this their proud boast. Quite frankly its disgusting that people are this selfish and greedy, but then again, it's the American Dream to consume as much as possible.

    Maybe if we as a nation were less greedy we wouldn't need this pill. Simply having the willpower to live a healthy lifestyle would do wonders for the average lifespan in the US.

    1. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by AviN · · Score: 1

      > Why do most Americans feel that unless they eat enough to feed a dozen starving African refugees they've somehow been cheated of what is their right?

      And I suppose you eat the amount of food as starving African refugees eat, and then give the other 11/12 of your food to other starving Africans?

      > There's no real need for a steak the size of a toilet seat, and yet restaurants make this their proud boast.

      Sure there's no real need, but why not? People would rather eat good food and not be hungry all the time. I don't see any problem here. As long as people recognize that it will probably shorten their life in the long run ...

      > Quite frankly its disgusting that people are this selfish and greedy,

      It's human nature to be selfish and greedy. The only difference is that Americans can afford it.

      > but then again, it's the American Dream to consume as much as possible.

      It's called capitalism.

      > Maybe if we as a nation were less greedy we wouldn't need this pill. Simply having the willpower to live a healthy lifestyle would do wonders for the average lifespan in the US.

      It's easier to swallow a pill than to have willpower. :-)

    2. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by Hard_Code · · Score: 2

      What are you talking about? That's the American way!

      --

      It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
    3. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by eellis · · Score: 1
      There's no real need for a steak the size of a toilet seat, and yet restaurants make this their proud boast.

      Mmm.. sounds so enticing.

      It never ceases to amaze me how much food one gets in the US compared to the UK. I thought we pretty much had fattening food covered with the deep-fried mars-bar thing, but that simply cannot compete with restaurants that give you 3 tons of food for about 50pUK.

      I think americans need to evaluate the cost they put on food (not to mention petrol, but that's another matter). It's gross overconsumption such as this that leads to global warming, and global malnutrition.

    4. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by Cannonball · · Score: 5

      I hate this argument...it really pisses me off. It's almost like saying "Exercise some willpower and STOP BEING GAY" or similar. Some of us have extraordinary appetites as part of our genetic code. For me, I built it up while I was swimming competitively in high school and college. When I finally left the sport (thanks to tendonitis in both shoulders so bad I couldn't swim anymore) I was left with a huge appetite and no way of managing the caloric intake on a daily basis. So I gained wait. It's not like I was eating a ton, but my calories weren't being used. Now, I work for a living. I get into the office at 7:30 and don't get home til 6:30pm. I don't have time for a workout, but still I eat. Should I feel bad for eating better than African refugees? Hell no. Why should I? I work very hard to pay my rent and have my big steak on Saturday.

      --
      So there I was. Naked. In a refrigerator. With a potroast on my knees. Smokin a cigar. That's when it got REALLY weird.
    5. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by Cannonball · · Score: 2
      jesus...you'd think I could spell. That should read "I gained weight"

      --
      So there I was. Naked. In a refrigerator. With a potroast on my knees. Smokin a cigar. That's when it got REALLY weird.
    6. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by swcrissman · · Score: 1
      And I suppose you eat the amount of food as starving African refugees eat, and then give the other 11/12 of your food to other starving Africans?

      This is just plain rediculus. If he only ate what the starving African refugees eat, he would be starving too.

      Obviously, he eats just an ounce or two more, and then gives the remaining 10/12 of his food away. You should be more realistic in your expectations.

    7. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by Eccles · · Score: 1

      After all, all this pill does is simulate something we can do quite well on our own with a bit of willpower - eat less.

      Spoken like a thin person.

      Unlike an addiction to a drug or one of those trivial ailments, trying to cut down on taking in food has a withdrawal symptom (hunger) that NEVER GOES AWAY. Don't eat, and I'll be hungry from now until I go to bed, and then again when I wake up in the morning.

      We're out of shape due to a lack of activity, which itself is mostly due to information technology professions exercising only one's fingers. Give me a job that gives me a good workout and I'd be in pretty good shape.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    8. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by rmst · · Score: 2
      What's wrong with eating a steak the size of a toilet seat? I don't want to get off on a rant here, but what if I was hungry? It's not like it would go to waste. It's one thing if I take a single bite, then throw the rest to the dog, even though that is acceptable, after all, I'm sure a lot of American dogs eat better than these starving Afric refugees you speak of.

      But, is it really wrong for me to desire a toilet bowl filled with cooked meat and potatoes? I don't think it is. That's like saying to the A frican refugees that they can no longer have something that they happen to have because there are some even less fortunate people over on the corner. If they wanted toilet meats, they could come over here like the rest of us did. I mean, it's not like we really populated North America quickly last week. We've been building up a land of Toilet-Sized steaks for quite a while. And meal portions are increasing. I'm waiting for my local McDonald's to introduce the 'Veal McNugget'. It's essentially an entire calf deep fried and server with a tart dipping sauce.

      So whqt else can we do but consume? I'd be skeptical of any man that doesn't want to eat a steak the size of a toilet seat. That's like saying 'no, don't put a bag on my Picasso, I'm just going to throw it out anyways.'. It's just like that. You have it so much better than African refugees, and yet you complain that some people have it even better than you do perhaps? Maybe you cannot afford toilet steaks? I suspect that is so. Even if it's not, maybe you're a vegitarian or, god forbid, a vegan.

      But, sir, my real question is why you have such a problem with the American Dream being to 'consume as much as possible'. I mean, nothing precludes those African Refugees from coming over here and starting a business, you know, nothing fancy, maybe an astrology shop. Then they can build up to a nationwide chain and afford toilet-sized steaks and potatoes AND maybe a couple of cokes for those cute girls at the bar. I suspect you really don't want the African Refugees to suceed, because then you have no one to look to and talk about how badly they have it. Living for your own hapiness isn't good enough, you have to piss and moan about how other people are unhappy too.

      BUt I digress.

      Have a happy afternoon.

      --
      --------

      Never call a man a fool. Borrow from him.

    9. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by Cannonball · · Score: 1

      Hey dipshit, if I had time for a four hour workout each day, I'd do it, but I'm busy getting my ass out of debt after college and it's not like my genetics are helping me any. So shove it.

      --
      So there I was. Naked. In a refrigerator. With a potroast on my knees. Smokin a cigar. That's when it got REALLY weird.
    10. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by NineNine · · Score: 1

      You can still eat less, fatass. Try eating nothing for a few days. I'll guarantee 100% that you lose weight.

    11. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by Cannonball · · Score: 2

      yeah if I don't mind not going to work and being effective. I think my boss MIGHT notice if I suddenly was totally unable to produce cogent thoughts. That's what happens when you begin to starve yourself. Ever seen an intelligent anorexic?

      --
      So there I was. Naked. In a refrigerator. With a potroast on my knees. Smokin a cigar. That's when it got REALLY weird.
    12. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by cactopus · · Score: 1

      You tell him Cannonball... what a loser.

      I'm in the same boat... big debt... it's not fun at all.

      BTW I am skinny and I can still tell those skinny fat bigots to fuck off and mind their own business. Of course they need a target to make themselves feel better.

      Regards
      AJ

    13. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by ChannelX · · Score: 1

      Funny enough I dont have time for a four hour workout each day either, am 'getting my ass out of debt after college' and am losing weight at the same time (and no I dont have some super-human metabolism...that ended in college). Its about making a choice to do something about it (in my case eating a little less without depriving myself of anything and eating healthier). Its fine that you dont want to do anything to improve your health....just dont complain too loudly when people call you on it.

      --
      My blog: http://jkratz.dyndns.org/~jason/blog/
    14. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by ChannelX · · Score: 1

      You digress? You just proved the guy's point in a nutshell. The fact that you can't seem to see anything beyond your own existence is pretty pathetic but hardly surprising. At the very least I hope you have the excuse of extreme youth.

      --
      My blog: http://jkratz.dyndns.org/~jason/blog/
    15. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by Cannonball · · Score: 2

      To be quite honest, I'm perfectly healthy. My cholesterol is in the healthy range, my blood pressure is normal, I just pack a few extra (okay 30) pounds on my body. I'm okay with it, you should be too. I'm tired of all these fitness psychos telling me I have to be thin, when that's not who I am, or who I've ever been.

      --
      So there I was. Naked. In a refrigerator. With a potroast on my knees. Smokin a cigar. That's when it got REALLY weird.
    16. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by mwalker · · Score: 2

      After all, all this pill does is simulate something we can do quite well on our own with a bit of willpower - eat less.

      Actually no, if you read the article, it does something quite different, it slows down the speed with which you metabolize what you eat:

      "The researchers discovered that it directs cells to make a protein that is in membranes and helps move nutrients into cells. The protein is concentrated in places where nutrients are absorbed and utilized."

      The difference is that you metabolize your meals more slowly, so you feel hungry less and have a more consistent energy level. It has nothing to do with the rate at which you eat, but rather the rate at which your metabolism "eats", which cannot be controlled by any diet (except perhaps limited high glycemic-index carbs)

      My guess is you already knew that, and were just trying to stir up trouble. But who knows.

    17. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by corbettw · · Score: 1
      I think americans need to evaluate the cost they put on food (not to mention petrol, but that's another matter). It's gross overconsumption such as this that leads to global warming, and global malnutrition.

      Bullshit. Food is cheap here because we grow *lots* of it. We export more food than most of the rest of the world grows *combined*. So don't blame us for "global malnutrition". If anything, blame the greens out there that want to eliminate any effective insectiside and genetically modified food that has more nutrients than the type provided by nature.

      There's only one reason why Americans eat a lot: we're rich (as a country). And there's only one reason why people in other countries don't want us eating a lot: they're jealous.

      --
      God invented whiskey so the Irish would not rule the world.
    18. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by The+Troll+Catcher · · Score: 1

      Try the Hacker's Diet. It REALLY works, trust me. Just do a search on /. for it. The only time I have trouble concentrating is when I haven't eaten in the morning, but that's sort of to be expected.

      IIRC, the guy who created the diet was the CEO of Autodesk and he said that it didn't impair his performance whatsoever, and he was actually MORE productive.

    19. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by Kiasoft · · Score: 1

      hmm... more consumerism to promote anti-consumerism... I think I heard a piece on NPR about a national non-consumption day where everyone should decide not to buy anything on that day and the group that was promoting this day also sells tons of propoganda on the issue. It will be difficult to ever escape being a consumer no matter how hard you try. Our society is just too in debt to this model of living.

      --
      This is me... and that is all I can be.
    20. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by jafac · · Score: 2

      There is a HUGE biological pressure (and evolutionary/survival trait) that compels us to eat as much as our stomachs can hold without barfing. It's not simply a matter of will power.

      It's likely that people with "will power" are likely mutants, who, "in the wild" would not survive, because in times of plenty, they wouldn't "fatten up" so during times of famine, they'd die off. And quickly.

      There is a biological basis, and if you'd do a little research, you'd find many studies supporting that, and none supporting the notion that fat people, or people who consume too much simply have "no will power" (and by your implication, are worthless human beings - wasteful, greedy, selfish, and thoughtless towards your sensibilities).

      And no, I'm not fat. I'm 5'8" and 210 lbs of solid muscle, and I work out 1 hour a day, 7 days a week, and I happen to know quite a bit about "will power" and the biological basis behind it. (or supposed lack of it)

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    21. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by fawlty · · Score: 1
      I see two different issues here. In the beginning, you are saying that you don't have a choice how much you eat. ("Some of us have extraordinary appetites")

      In the second part, you seem to be defending your choice to eat and not feel guilty about it. ("I work very hard to pay my rent and have my big steak on Saturday")

      So what's the big deal? Do you want to change your weight? If not, then why are you defending your helplessness to change it? If you do want to change your weight, then why are you defending your choice to eat big steaks?

      I have a problem with my weight. I want to weigh less, but I have difficulties keeping to a diet. This may be a habit, or it may be genetic -- I don't care. I learned how to drive in California, and I escaped a fundamentalist background, so I figure that with enough effort I can overpower my instincts and bad habits on anything. But it's like smoking. It's proven to be usually detrimental, and damned hard to quit, but if you work consistently at it, you CAN stop.

    22. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by Cannonball · · Score: 2

      I would like to change my weight, not because it would make me more healthy (I'm healthy already) but because it would make stronger my professional relationships (which btw, still are based on sight, much to some of our chagrins...). However, at the same time, I don't think that drastic changes in my habits (like say, becoming vegan, or going on the Atkins diet) or suddenly shocking my body into health. So, I'll exercise slowly, but still eat my steaks on the weekend (one a week can't kill you, trust me).

      --
      So there I was. Naked. In a refrigerator. With a potroast on my knees. Smokin a cigar. That's when it got REALLY weird.
    23. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by rmst · · Score: 1
      ybdeActually, the idea was to amuse myself, writing it did, and so did reading his response. But, amusement aside, his point really only becomes valid if we have wishy-washy rules about 'too much' and 'not enough'. Hows about, I eat what I can afford and want, being most happy if they're mutually accomadating, and you do the same. Do I 'need' a huge steak? No. I'm sure I could survive on a nourishing paste made solely from vegetables. But would I be as happy? I really don't think so. If I can and want to eat anything, it's not for you to say that's wrong. You can say 'Boy, I'd never do that because I'm a morally upright mofo', but don't you dare say I'm not morally grounded, because I am!

      And in future, please attempt to be more funny when replying to stuff like the above. I laughed at the other reply to my response. Now it was funny.

      Oh, and one more thingy.
      It's not that I don't see anything beyond my own existance, it's all about my pleasure vs. someone else's survival. Quite frankly, that doesn't do it for me. I'm sorry. I really am. I wish I could be like you, taking a vow of poverty for the common good. Oh... What's that you say, you havn't? So it's the thought that counts? You don't subsist on the bare minimum, enabling you to maximize the number of poor you can feed? Oh. In that case, get off your high horse!

      --
      --------

      Never call a man a fool. Borrow from him.

    24. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by Rainy · · Score: 1

      Well we got 2 people one of them says 'bah you're just lazy.. if you tried, i mean *really* tried, you could control it' and the other one 'nah it's my genes, if you had genes like that I'd love to see how you handle it'. Who's right? Uh.. that's impossible to tell! We don't know yet, people! How the hell you're going to prove something like that? On a related note, I personally don't have a problem with eating too much: i have a problem with eating enough. It's probably as hard for me to finish that steak as for another guy to keep himself away from second helping. That would seem to point to 'genes' view, but it may well be because I'm just not eating right - but I'm trying to fix that.. Oh yeah, who knows, maybe it's a combination of genes/will power/circumstances? It probably is.

      --
      -- ATTENTION: do not read this sig. It doesn't say much.
    25. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by ChannelX · · Score: 1
      Actually, the idea was to amuse myself, writing it did, and so did reading his response.

      Then here's a hint cubby....why not make that obvious for Gentle Reader? Ever notice that it's quite hard to discern 'amusement' from text that shows no intent of 'the idea was to amuse myself'?

      But, amusement aside, his point really only becomes valid if we have wishy-washy rules about 'too much' and 'not enough'.

      No. His point is valid regardless. 'Wishy-washy' or any other type of rules are not necessary with a little bit of empathy and thought. If you choose not to act that way fine but dont try to play it off like you're not. It's funny that you keep trying to assert your rights to do what you wish and try at the same time to make it seem like I don't have the right to argue with you if I think its wrong. Doesn't that seem sort of strange to you?

      And in future, please attempt to be more funny when replying to stuff like the above. I laughed at the other reply to my response. Now it was funny.

      Hows about I reply the way I wish and you do the same? Incidentally I didn't find anything amusing in your post or the follow-up that you're referring to.

      It's not that I don't see anything beyond my own existance, it's all about my pleasure vs. someone else's survival. Quite frankly, that doesn't do it for me. I'm sorry. I really am. I wish I could be like you, taking a vow of poverty for the common good.

      So on the one hand you say youre morally grounded and then you say that quite frankly you dont give a shit about someone elses survival if it comes up against your pleasure? Please dont mind if I don't believe you when you say you're morally grounded.

      Funny enough I don't ever remember saying anything about taking a vow of poverty being necessary for the common good. Again you're showing the limits of your thought. Hint: there are many ways to help the 'common good' without taking a 'vow of poverty'.

      Oh... What's that you say, you havn't? So it's the thought that counts? You don't subsist on the bare minimum, enabling you to maximize the number of poor you can feed? Oh. In that case, get off your high horse!

      Yes...actually it *is* the thought that counts. However you have to have the thought first before it does count. No. I dont subsist on the bare minimum. However I put a lot more thought into my purchases besides how much its gonna cost me. Get it? Didn't think so.

      --
      My blog: http://jkratz.dyndns.org/~jason/blog/
    26. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by ChannelX · · Score: 1

      Actually being thin has nothing to do with it. If you are in shape (which you implied you werent...at least to me) it really doesnt make any diff whether you have extra weight or not. Thats what mostly everything seems to be saying these days. People who are rail thin and who dont get any exercise are just as unhealthy as the person who is overweight who doesnt get any exercise.

      --
      My blog: http://jkratz.dyndns.org/~jason/blog/
    27. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by Cannonball · · Score: 2
      I may not get the daily 30 minutes of aerobic level exercise recommended by doctors, nor do I get the chances (mainly because I can't afford them) to lift weights in a prescribed manner, I am still is good health. Normal blood pressure, cholesterol level, resting heart beat. It's just I carry around some extra weight. So don't get pissed at me when I eat a fucking steak, jeesus christ.

      --
      So there I was. Naked. In a refrigerator. With a potroast on my knees. Smokin a cigar. That's when it got REALLY weird.
    28. Re:This doesn't solve the underlying problems by sam_vilain · · Score: 1
      Unlike an addiction to a drug or one of those trivial ailments, trying to cut down on taking in food has a withdrawal symptom (hunger) that NEVER GOES AWAY. Don't eat, and I'll be hungry from now until I go to bed, and then again when I wake up in the morning.

      The solution is simple and timeless, and is a recurring theme in many chinese philosophies.

      When hungry, eat. When thirsty, drink. When tired, sleep.

      Don't eat until you are full. If you feel full, it is your body telling you that you have eaten too much.

      The secret is desiring not to be full, similar to the Taoist paradox of desiring not to desire.

      --

  7. Famine diet by https · · Score: 1

    Hmmn, this fits with someone telling me that in countries with a tradition of a famine diet, like Japan and China, people do live longer. Of course, what you actually eat less of is probably important also.

  8. Re:Eat MORE - Live Longer by roman_mir · · Score: 2

    The whole 'calorie' thing is over marketed by the drug companies. It really will not matter that much for your survival if you start consuming twice as little food as you do now. For six years I've being on almost strict vegan diet and mostly I eat only once a day (raw vegetables, fruits, nuts) and it did not kill me in six years, I work out often even though my 'energy' intake is much less than of anybody else in the gym. I just don't buy the 'calorie' crap.

  9. Amazing new discovery! by pallex · · Score: 3

    In a breakthrough announced today, scientists believe they may have solved one of natures most enduring problems - how to lose weight.

    It appears that by actually putting less food into your mouth, and instead taking a little excercise, you can reduce surplus weight to absolutely any level you require.

    "We were astonished" said the scientists. "We always thought the answer had to be in the genes somewhere. But apparantly you dont need expensive, patented drugs to solve this problem. Just a little common sense, and the ability to understand that solving some problems takes a little time and effort."

    1. Re:Amazing new discovery! by NineNine · · Score: 1

      Actually, from what I've heard, those new 'fat trapping pills' work pretty well. Essentially, eat what you want, then shit it all out! Heck, bulimia works! Being a big fan of shitting, I try to eat as much as possible, but just take a little pill with every gorging.

    2. Re:Amazing new discovery! by pallex · · Score: 1

      Yeah, well theres that special new low fat fat that they`ve been putting into crisps and cakes and that. Only i`ve heard nasty things about leakage problems at `the other end`... you brake too hard and the whiplash clears out your lower intestine!

    3. Re:Amazing new discovery! by darthpenguin · · Score: 1

      Even though this is meant as a joke, it's still not very true. Personally, I eat about 600-800 calories per day at the most. I am also on my high school swim team, and was also on the cross country team, and probably get more exercise in one or two days than many "healthy" people get in a week. Yet this is just barely enough to *maintain* my weight. It would be hard to put "less food into my mouth", and to do any more exercise would reduce my schedule to having NO time to even get my homework done. In other words, keeping weight down for some people is not easy at all.
      -mdek.net

    4. Re:Amazing new discovery! by torokun · · Score: 1

      Some people are predisposed to gaining weight. It may be that you are one of these people, but the vast majority are not. I suggest that it also matters _what_ you eat, and what you do to work out... There are more strenuous things you could do, such as climbing or martial arts, possibly giving you more time for other things....

  10. You can also read this at msnbc by Stalemate · · Score: 1

    http://www.msnbc.com/news/503556.asp

    No registration required


    --

  11. Eat right, exercise, and die anyway. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2
    I want to see a study that compares "healthiness of livestyle" vs. "eventual cause of death".

    You know, I may drop dead of a stroke in my 60s from all the high cholesterol, high sugar, high fat foods, but when I go, I'll go fast like my dad did, and not a slow and gradual progression towards death that horribly ravages everyone's emotions over a period of months to years, as the "healthy" person slowly becomes crippled up, bedridden, loses bowel control, gets cancer, gets alzhimers, or just ends up a vegetable because her healthy body outlived her brain.

    There is such a thing as honour in death too. And the studies need to consider this.

    1. Re:Eat right, exercise, and die anyway. by roman_mir · · Score: 2

      The only thing is that most of the illnesses that you have counted for come as result of bad life style choices. For example cancer is said to develop less in those people who have more vegetarian food, the alzhimers is highest in Canada, where more than anywhere in the world various hormones, antibiotics and pesticides are added to food etc. Thus the argument is false.

    2. Re:Eat right, exercise, and die anyway. by Kotetsu · · Score: 4

      In most places where the diet is primarily vegetarian it's because of food shortages. In the same places the expected life span is considerably shorter than in the wealthier nations. Cancer and Alzheimers are primarily diseases of elderly people. When a relatively small percentage of the population lives to become elderly you wouldn't expect to see much of those diseases.

      It's also worth noting that one out of every three people who die in the world die of some form of dysentery. Death by dysentery is almost unheard of in the wealthier nations. When we are able to help the poorer peoples of the world protect themselves from conditions like starvation and dysentery, we will start seeing them die of the same sorts of things we are (in a general sense).

      The thing medical people seem to ignore/forget is that you're going to die, and you're going to die of something. They've been working to eliminate the various causes of death on the almost unconscious theory that if you remove all causes of death then people won't die. If they somehow made it so we could live forever, people would still die of suicide, and they would decide that the desire to die is a treatable condition which they should find a cure for.

      I don't disagree with the idea that we should eat well, exercise, and all that, but the whole blaming health problems on "bad life style choices" is just another way of blaming bad things that happen to you on the "fact" that you're a bad person. If you get cancer, it's because you did bad things like smoke, hang around people who smoke, eat wrong, or not exercise enough. In the end, no matter what you do, you're going t oget sick and die, and some doctor will say that it's because you made some bad choice earlier in your life.

      --

      "Bite me, it's fun!" - Crowe T. Robot
    3. Re:Eat right, exercise, and die anyway. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Healthiness: poor. Cause of death: usually something nasty, like cancer or liver failure. Accompanied by lots and lots of non-fatal but extremely painful, embarrassing or inconveninet ailments like gout and loss of bowel control Healthiness: high. Cause of death: peacefully in sleep surrounded by loving great-grandchildren. Happy now?

    4. Re:Eat right, exercise, and die anyway. by suwain_2 · · Score: 1

      This was actually some question I was asked a while ago... "If you could live forever, would you?" Most people answered "no" to it. Everyone's afraid of dying, but living *forever*? There's more uncertainty in that than in death!

      --
      ________________________________________________
      suwain_2 :: quality slashdot p
  12. Eat less food by dmuth · · Score: 2
    "When it comes to mammals, the only way anyone has found to extend their lives is to restrict their food, giving them about 40 percent fewer calories than they would eat if left to their own devices, Dr. Helfand noted. Then they live 30 percent longer than would be expected."
    Hear that, IT managers? Lock up your geeks in their offices and cut off their food supply! They'll live longer which means that they'll get more work done!

    <g>

  13. It's always about a pill... by nido · · Score: 2

    It's long been known that a diet rich in nutrients but poor in calories extendeds the life of living organisms. "Calorie restriction (CR) has extended the 39-month maximum life span of mice to an impressive 56 months, which would correspond proportionally to a 158 year-old human. " - http://www.pbs.org/stealingtime/living/calories.ht m.

    Just taking a pill will never be enough to extend lifespan in lifeforms more complex than a fruitfly. If you're really interested in life extension, check out http://www.walford.com/, with sample meal plans in the "Anti-Aging program", or this report on superhealth.

    --
    Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly.
    www.teslabox.com
  14. the title reminds me of a true story by mirko · · Score: 2

    Famous French philosopher Fontenelle was about to die before he was 50...
    His doctor told him that unless he would follow a damn'-strict diet he wouldn't be 50.
    Fontenelle accepoted this diet and died almost 50 years later.
    --

    --
    Trolling using another account since 2005.
    1. Re:the title reminds me of a true story by Howie · · Score: 1

      so the doctor was likely wrong

      --
      "don't fall into the fallacy of believing that Perl can solve social problems. Maybe Perl 6 can, but that's a ways off"
  15. Net Gains? by COLUG · · Score: 1

    Would the increased use of pesticides used to control the exploding fruit fly population would negate any human life expectancy gain?

    Or...

    Would life just seem longer with all of the damn flies and constant hunger. :)
    ---------

  16. No shit... by Fatal0E · · Score: 1

    lets see, eating as much of anything you can get your hands on != long and healthy life :: being a fat tub of lard is bad. Someone notify the Nobel Commitee, we have a breakthrough here!
    "Me Ted"

  17. Whimsical gene names. by Guppy · · Score: 5
    The gene has been affectionately nicknamed "I'm Not Dead Yet."

    Geneticists, especially Drosophila ones, have a long history of giving genes interesting names.

    Several years ago, the Annals of Improbable Research had a story writing contest where the objective was to write a short story using only the names of genes, for instance, like the one below:
    In the LOT behind CLUB ETHER-A-GOGO, AMY PRUNE's BREATHLESS TORSO was SPLAYED in the GRAVEL. Her CROOKED-NECK was BENT over the STONEWALL in an ABRUPT TWIST. Her REFRINGENT THRONG was DISHEVELED and her WHITE-MOTTLED MINI UPTURNED . But no COPPER would ARREST the DERANGED KILLER-OF-PRUNE. No CELL would HOLD-UP that HEARTLESS SNAKE. For a SHOTGUN had REDUCED OSKAR's BIG-BRAIN into STARDUST and FAINT-LITTLE-BALLS.

    Every single one of the capitalized words happens to be a real name of a Drosophila gene.
    1. Re:Whimsical gene names. by Snard · · Score: 1

      Now all we need is a gene named "I'm getting better" or "I feel happy".

      --
      - Mike
    2. Re:Whimsical gene names. by update() · · Score: 2
      In grad school, I cloned a Drosophila gene I wanted to name good 'n' plenty, for reasons I'll forgo explaining. My boss made me ask the Leaf Candy Co. for permission, which they refused. Had that happened a few years later, I could have enlisted Michael and the Your Rights Online mob to fight for my right to misappropriate other people's intellectual property.

      My all-time favorite is the gene where mutant males, but not females, have some extra pigmentation. The researchers named it male chauvinist pigmentation. Unfortunately it was renamed during the same bout of political correctness that caused fruity (mutant males try to mate with other males) to be renamed fruitless.

    3. Re:Whimsical gene names. by Lee+Cremeans · · Score: 1

      What about a gene called "I love you"?

      :D

      -lee

    4. Re:Whimsical gene names. by jbuhler · · Score: 2

      BTW, Drosophila genes are an excellent scheme for hostnames. I talked my advisor into naming the first server for our comp bio group 'wingless'. Now I need to get him to buy 'hedgehog' and 'engrailed'...

  18. One problem with this... by The+Gline · · Score: 1

    Less caloric intake mess you have that many less calories to convert to energy. Sure you'd live longer, but I suspect that would mean you would be doing a whole lot less. I don't particularly like the idea of being able to live for 150 years -- albeit confined to my bed! (Having maybe enough energy to type is cold comfort -- I don't want to spend 100 years surfing the web!)

    I seem to remember Stanislaw Lem mentioning something like this in a short story of his, in which the people in question were able to live incredible lifespans, but basically could not DO anything with their time. He called them "imperpetutrons." Does anyone else remember this?

    --
    Honorary Member of Jackie Chan's Kung Fu Process Servers
  19. Eat Less, Live Longer? by krystal_blade · · Score: 1
    This should be some pretty good news to those starving people in Ethiopia.

    krystal_blade

    --
    It will be easy to motivate our fellow man; there is hardly anything people treasure more than not being annihilated.
    1. Re:Eat Less, Live Longer? by compwiz3688 · · Score: 1

      Oh my... Imagine the world overrun by homeless people! Perhaps I should donate more for the food drive...
      ---

  20. infection and disease by mr_gerbik · · Score: 2

    This study is great and all for something with a lifespan of 40 days.. but what about the long term effects of low calorie intake in a human over the course of say, 75 years. Little nourishment does little for our immune system.. I would rather live a healthy life than a long sickly one. Besides, at 80 years old with another 80 to go.. our immune system is going to need all the gusto it can get from proper nutrition.

    -gerbik

    1. Re:infection and disease by cactopus · · Score: 1

      Yes I think the real cause of this is the fact that by gaining less in terms of calories, the fly becomes more lethargic which means they beat their wings less often and wear their bodies out slower. It is sort of like a slight hibernation. The idea of doing the same thing in humans would just create people less willing to move. They might not even lose weight... just be lazier ... sort of like what happens when people with heart arrhythymias start to make sudden movements... they nearly pass out.
      I am also outraged with those people who think fat people or Americans who eat a lot are greedy. That's a pile of crap. Everyone is greedy, and I'd rather people be greedy over food than money any day. Besides fat people are beautiful and not to be erased by science any more than short people or balding people
      on a more subtle note.. genes aren't really capable of being turned partially off (that would indicate that there are several genes responsible for something) Just disabling one gene in a set will not cause a decrease in action necessarily, it might cause something totally insane to happen.

    2. Re:infection and disease by KATN · · Score: 1

      Why do people insist on confusing proper nutrition and low calorie intake as if they are mutually exclusive concepts? Americans in general eat MUCH more then is required, but much of it does not take into account proper nutrition. Were we to eat less, but of the right foods this is a very sound theory. The fact of the matter is, Americans specifically, don't eat healthy. We just eat. -KATN

    3. Re:infection and disease by Weedhopper · · Score: 1
      Actually, it turns out that in mice, caloric restriction enhances the immune system as well as lengthening life. Mice normally have a maximum lifespan of 39 months but by selectively restricting the diet, lifespan has been increased to up to 56 months.

      I thought I remembered reading an article in SciAm or Discover about this but can't seem to find it. Here's some other links, though.

      A part of the PBS documentery on the subject

      UCLA news article

    4. Re:infection and disease by update() · · Score: 1

      The key here is that this is under lab conditions. PETA notwithstanding, lab animals are raised under extremely healthy conditions and have excellent medical care. (Generally, better medical care than the grad student and postdoc researchers receive, but that's another issue.) I'm very skeptical that caloric restriction would be favorable in the real world.

    5. Re:infection and disease by maarten_delft · · Score: 1

      Must people refuse to believe that 75 grams of animal proteins is the optimal amount. So no more meat than a quarter pounder (tm) every other day!

      --
      --[rosso bright]--
    6. Re:infection and disease by macsforever2001 · · Score: 1


      Obviously poor nutrition will make one more sickly, but that has nothing to do with lowering your calories. I can personally attest that eating less and being healthy can easily be attained. I have not been sick in about 10 years since I started eating a healthy vegetarian diet. Before that it was an annual flu, colds, etc.

      Sure if you take the standard unhealthy American diet and simply eat less of the same thing, you might be unhealthy due to lack of some nutrients. You need to change your diet to get the benefit of eating less.

  21. Tokyo people by DigitalDragon · · Score: 1

    They already live very very long. And that's because they are not obsessive about food as Americans, and they don't it that much, and they eat much healthier. So that's why their lifespan is longer.

    --
    http://dtum.livejournal.com
  22. Quality of life? by bjorky · · Score: 1

    This is an interesting prospect... but what about the physiological differences in humans and fruitflies? Does this slow down tha aging of tissues for all body structures, i.e., when I'm 50, do I have the body of a 25-30 year old or a 50 year old?.. when I'm 140 am I still able to hobble around, or am I confined to a bed like T. Herman Zwiebel?

    Granted something like this might be great for extending life, but what kind of life would you have? ~80 years of playing bingo, eating pudding, and yelling at kids to stay off your lawn?

    -----

    --

    "Defenestration" is to throw out of a window; what's a word for throwing 'Windows' out of something?
  23. And if everybody takes your advice... by compwiz3688 · · Score: 1

    ...the buffet restaurants are going out of business.
    Or, people are still going to the buffet, and the managers will make big bucks.

    On another note, it's deja vu alllll over again. The world population goes up.
    ---

  24. an apple a day? by mr_gerbik · · Score: 2

    So let me get this straight....

    A tic-tac a day keeps the doctor away?

    -gerbik

    1. Re:an apple a day? by radja · · Score: 2

      nah... not apples or tictacs. nothing can keep the doctor away. unless it's a dentist, in which case 7 bulbs of garlic a day and not brushing your teeth will do the trick.

      //rdj, promoting chemical warfare.

      --

      No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
      --Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
  25. Eat Less?!?!?!?!? by Spit_Fire1 · · Score: 1

    Why would you want to live longer if you had to eat less,and that just adds years to the end of your life and those aren't fun anyway.

    --

    "The secret of success is to know something nobody else knows." -Aristotle Onassis
  26. Judgmentalism won't solve them either by code_rage · · Score: 3
    You may have a point, but you're pointing the greed finger at the wrong Americans. The American corporations which market food may have more to do with it than the American consumers. American consumers have the same genetics as people worldwide, because we are a nation of immigrants. The difference is that Americans have more disposable income and the corporations compete ruthlessly for that income.

    Next time you walk through a shopping mall food court, make a note of the smells the fast-food joints pump into the air. The corporations have tested what lures people into their restaurants and what sells more products. They don't make too many mistakes, or they go out of business. Then some other company takes that spot, selling even more unhealthy food.

    I concur that garden variety overweightness has increased as our population has become more sedentary. But pathological (i.e. dangerous) eating disorders are also on the rise. Is that because American consumers are more greedy than those in other countries, or because our society has more disposable income, more food available, more aggressive marketing of food, and more stress (which is a documented trigger for overeating in some individuals)? I don't think that 'greed' explains why people overeat when they themselves acknowledge on a rational basis that they are harming themselves by doing so.

    1. Re:Judgmentalism won't solve them either by debber · · Score: 1

      Indeed the corporations tell you what to do (through advertising, smells, ...) No one can deny the fact that advertising works. But if you take one of them pills that make you convert food into less calories. That is what the corporations want, you can eat even more without dying on the spot. You would need less will power and still keep the same weight, but at that point a steak will be the size of a bath instead of a toilet seat, and we would be having the same discussion.

    2. Re:Judgmentalism won't solve them either by karnal · · Score: 1

      I don't know if you've ever walked past a KFC before, but that's not an appealing smell at all.

      I think the marketing gurus were out to lunch at McDonalds that day.

      --
      Karnal
  27. The Twinkie Diet by Fatal0E · · Score: 1

    Thats why I eat lots of twinkies. With all those preservatives I should increase my shelf life to at least equal that of 1 twinkie (120 years).
    "Me Ted"

  28. Why this is harder in humans..... by RobL3 · · Score: 2

    Althogh this is great news for the fruitfly, it dosen't neccesarly translate into a fountain of youth for humans. With the fruitflys, something about a shorter lifespan was geneticly selected as a GOOD THING, and the gene was passed on successfully through the generations. This gene acts as a sort of "timer" that limits the fruitfly lifecycle. In humans, our 23 chromesomes still play a role in longitivity,but not in the same way. Putting aside the role that our genes play in predisposing us or protecting us from certain diseases, it's the replication of our DNA and the errors that occur during the DNA/RNA transcription procces of creating protiens and enzymes that cause us to age. As we build new cells over the years these transcription errors add up and multiply, our bodys begin to break down or function less efficiently. Controlling this proccess is one of the key's to longer human life.
    Of course, environment is prbably more important than genetic predisposition anyway, so get up and go for a walk!

  29. Not that easy for all by airship · · Score: 5

    I get upset when I read a comment by some person without a weight problem that "all you have to do is eat less" to lose weight. While this is certainly _true_ in an absolute sense, there are extreme genetic differences in people, and for some people these differences make it much, much more difficult to do. Appetite is regulated in the brain, and brain chemistry is quite different from person to person. Just as some people are predisposed to other addictions, many of us are brain-chemistry-dictated food addicts. Likewise, there are wide variations in metabolism. I think you might be surprised if you monitored the food intake of fat people - while you'd certainly find a fair share of overeaters, you'd also find a great many with low metabolic rates who consume no more - and even less - than 'normal' people. Storing up the excess calories as fat is an adaptation that was a great advantage in the Ice Age, but it's a real life-threatener in these affleuent times. BTW, you'd have to do more than double your lifespan to exceed Methuselah - he lived to be over 800 years old!

    --
    Serving your airship needs since 1995.
    1. Re:Not that easy for all by radja · · Score: 2

      I just know I used to have a HUGE joules-intake... and I had a weight problem: I was too light. I don't understand fat people, fat people don't understand me. but it's definately 2 way: not just the fat people getting slack from thin people... I have been called anorexic, which I certainly am not. it works both ways. (yes, I've also heard: just eat more. won't work with my metabolism...)

      //rdj

      //rdj

      --

      No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
      --Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
    2. Re:Not that easy for all by ragnar · · Score: 2
      and I'm tired of people complaining that they have no control over their own bodies. I'm amazed at how many excuses people will make in order to justify their choice to be unhealthy. Granted, there are a few exceptions to the rule, but if most people put half as much energy into their diet as they do into their bag of excuses, they would be fine.

      Personally, I am very athletic. I do aerobic exercise over 20 hours a week (cycling) and my body fat is about 4%. I don't expect everyone to do what I do, but I hurt on a daily basis for my fitness. Incidentally, I have to consume about 3500 calories a day (versus the normal 2500) in order to maintain good health.

      My point here is that everyone has ownership of their health and excuses are pretty easy to come up with. This may seem a little harsh, but I see pain as a way of life. If it is important you are willing to hurt for it. I would prefer if people who avoid good diets and fitness would simply say that it isn't a priority than shrug it off as being too hard.

      --
      -- Solaris Central - http://w
    3. Re:Not that easy for all by grymor1 · · Score: 1

      Not everyone is a masochist. Sorry, I don't have the will power to spare, getting up in the morning is hard enough.

    4. Re:Not that easy for all by ragnar · · Score: 2

      It's a choice. Plain and simple. The way I see it, a person can choose the discipline required for good fitness or they can choose to suffer the consequences. The consequences may take 40 years to manifest, and there are always exceptions to the rule, but everyone has the choice. Hurt now under your own volition or hurt when it is generally too late to make a significant difference in the outcome.

      --
      -- Solaris Central - http://w
    5. Re:Not that easy for all by Bongo · · Score: 1

      Appetite is regulated in the brain

      Apparently, it takes 10 minutes or so for the brain to get the message that the stomach is 'full'. By eating more slowly, you will have eaten less past the mark (otherwise, a lot can be eaten in ten minutes).

    6. Re:Not that easy for all by jafac · · Score: 2

      Nobody has said that they have NO control over their bodies. But there are a LOT of biological factors that you apparently have no idea about. Some people simply have very strong, very difficult to supress or fight appetites. It's just a fact. Some people have high metabolisms. Some have slower metabolisms. Some people have high metabolisms that slow down abruptly, especially women after childbirth, and menopause.

      Another very strong factor is, many people are disabled. Some people have bad joints, degenerated cartilege, or even from sports injuries. I, for one, have a bad back. It's genetic, it's inherited, every male in my family has it. I still manage to work out. I thank God, I'm not like others who have bad knees or bad ankles, because then I wouldn't be able to cycle or surf. Don't be so quick to judge. There are a lot of lazy-ass fat people out there, but you apparently would be suprised to the percentage of those who would not be fat if they didn't have such strong biological or physical limitations, like strong appetite, slow metabolism, thyroid conditions, asthma, or other disabilities. Very few people are gifted with perfect physical characteristics.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    7. Re:Not that easy for all by ragnar · · Score: 2
      I believe I did make the obligitory statement that there are a few exceptions, but the fact is that most people give lip service to health and then ignore it, especially around this time of year.

      As an example, I woke up at 6am on Thanksgiving morning to go for a bike ride. Later that afternoon I had a large meal along with the rest of the family. Naturally some people started bemoaning how much they have eaten and they start to exclaim how they will gain weight. I politely suggested the idea of going for a evening walk to get a little excercise and no one was interested. Mind you, this is a room full of able bodied people who simply don't give a damn. They want to complain. They want an excuse, but I guarantee you they don't really want fitness.

      The fact is that fitness isn't easy. If it were I suppose everyone would do it. There are some who simply can't excercise, and that is unfortunate, but the fact is that most people simply don't make it a priority. If something is a priority you find a way to do it.

      --
      -- Solaris Central - http://w
    8. Re:Not that easy for all by jidar · · Score: 1

      And the benefits of that type of excercise are what? You look good for the ladies. heh

      Don't smoke, don't drink, eat okay and get a little excercise is all you have to do for longevity. Everything else is just dumb luck.

      "Self improvement is masturbation." -- Tyler Durden

      --
      Sigs are awesome huh?
  30. Where are anorexic actresses from 20yrs ago? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Where are all the skinny waif actresses from 20-30 years ago? You never see them? Why? Probably due to health problems. Older actresses all look like Bette Middler. They may be heavier, but they're the ones still around and still working in hollywood after age 40.

  31. Come one..... by canning · · Score: 1
    come all, get your quick fix for lack of exercise and a bad diet. No more sweating and flavourless food. Now you can eat what you want, when you want, lose weight and live longer.

    Sound too goog to be true, it's not. Be like the fruit fly you've always admired.

    The lazy person's easy way out. I wonder what the price of a month's persciption will be? Less than a gym membership?

    --
    I love the smell of Karma in the morning
  32. American overconsumption of resources by Dan+Hayes · · Score: 2

    And I suppose you eat the amount of food as starving African refugees eat, and then give the other 11/12 of your food to other starving Africans?

    No, you're right I do eat better than these people true, but at the same time I also give to charity every month. I recognise that there are people out there who have no resources and next to no opportunity, and it is, I feel, my duty to at least do something for them.

    Sure there's no real need, but why not? People would rather eat good food and not be hungry all the time. I don't see any problem here. As long as people recognize that it will probably shorten their life in the long run ...

    Why not? Because most of the world's hunger problems are caused by things like this - inefficient use of resources and vast overconsumption by the First World, especially America. For a nation with 5% of the world's population, the fact that we produce 25% of its waste should say something about our living habits.

    As a whole, America is a dirty place.

    It's human nature to be selfish and greedy. The only difference is that Americans can afford it.

    Unless you're a sociobiology fanatic who believes that their genes control every action they make (allowing them to do anything they want), then you have to believe that people can rise above human nature. Just because we may be inclined to be selfish (a debatable proposition anyway) it doesn't mean we have to.

    Quite frankly, your attitude is exceedingly defeatist and gives us a clue as to why people in America today put up with so much crap.

    It's called capitalism.

    No, it's called laissez-faire which is only a variety of capitalism. There are plenty of more sane economic models in which sustainable growth can occur rather than boom and bust models where long-term means five years.

    It's easier to swallow a pill than to have willpower. :-)

    Sadly true.

    1. Re:American overconsumption of resources by Ereth · · Score: 5
      Because most of the world's hunger problems are caused by things like this - inefficient use of resources and vast overconsumption by the First World, especially America.
      Unfortunately, this isn't true. There's more than enough food to feed every man, woman and child in the world full healthy meals, every single day. And it's not that it's being eaten by us Americans that prevents poor starving people from having any. Don't forget, we have our poor, starving people too (we just like to pretend we don't).

      It's not a zero-sum game, in that we can produce far more food than we can eat. If we were short on food then yes, it's conceivable that my eating that big steak might mean somebody else couldn't eat, and then I'd agree with you that perhaps I should feel guilty about it. But whether I eat that big, juicy, delicious steak or not, doesn't affect those poor, starving people in the world in the least. The problems are much more complex than that. If they weren't, we could solve the problem by shipping all the unused food (day old bread, out of date food, etc) to the poor.

      The first, of course, is simple capitalism. The poor, starving people of the world don't have the funds to pay for food. This is one that both individuals and countries can resolve, if they find it in their hearts to want to.

      The second is distribution. Getting the food to those poor, starving people is actually more complex yet. It's not as easy as writing a check, or even sending a ship full of food to their closest city. Remember the scandal in the 80's over all the food sent to Ethiopia and how little of it actually reached the people who needed it most?

      And, as you get farther from First World civilization, the problems increase. Sure, you can set up a food bank and a shelter in Chicago and advertise and people will probably hear about it and come. But how do you get the word out to people who don't live in large communities or cities or towns? How does the small family out in the middle of nowhere, desperately trying to eke out a meager existence, learn that they could have free food if they only knew to travel 100 miles to the closest town? You or I eating less doesn't impact that problem in the slightest.

    2. Re:American overconsumption of resources by painterly · · Score: 1

      Because most of the world's hunger problems are caused by things like this - inefficient use of resources and vast over consumption by the First World, especially America. For a nation with 5% of the world's population, the fact that we produce 25% of its waste should say something about our living habits. The problem of lack of food in Africa and other parts of the world is political, not due to over consumption by the First World. For instance, the Ethiopian issue form the 80's stemmed from a brutal regime trying to starve a secessionist movement, Eritrea from succeeding. Which, by the way, did not work because Eritrea did succeed. Yes, we are a wasteful society but that is not a cause of starvation in other parts of the world. If America had real competition for resources, less purchasing power, we would be more conservative in our consumption and more resourceful in our living habits.

    3. Re:American overconsumption of resources by Vortran · · Score: 1

      Damn straight. The late Sam Kinneson(sp?) said it best: "You live in a DESERT! Nothing GROWS there! See this? It's SAAAAND! Know what's gonna be here a thousand years from now? SAND!"

      Yes.. we could keep the people who have no money living in countries with GNP of zero from starving to death by shipping food from source to endpoint at $14(US) per kilogram. The question is, should we? Is it our moral obligation to do so if we are able? I don't pretend to be able to answer those questions, but I certainly agree with Ereth that it's a complex problem affected negligibly if at all by my consumption of vast quantities of cow.

      --
      Knowledge is like ignorance.. too much can be just as bad as not enough.
    4. Re:American overconsumption of resources by cpeterso · · Score: 2

      The first, of course, is simple capitalism. The poor, starving people of the world don't have the funds to pay for food. This is one that both individuals and countries can resolve, if they find it in their hearts to want to.

      The second is distribution. Getting the food to those poor, starving people is actually more complex yet. It's not as easy as writing a check, or even sending a ship full of food to their closest city. Remember the scandal in the 80's over all the food sent to Ethiopia and how little of it actually reached the people who needed it most?


      Don't forget that during Ethiopia's "famine", the country was actually exporting food grown in Ethiopida to other countries! World hunger is a problem of distribution and money, not food.

  33. Higher Octane? by twisty · · Score: 2
    The older you get the more protein become important to your diet than carbohydrates. It's amazing how much of the american diet is high-fructose corn syrup/sweeteners.

    Before this announcement, the greatest news from longevity research seems to have been related to telomeres. 'Telomerase' is the substance of repeated DNA sequences at the ends of genes. It has been compared to "those plastic sleeves on the end tips of your shoestrings," and serves a similar function to keep the ends from fraying and unravelling.

    While many do not realize the danger of consuming "low octane fuels," I wonder who can tell us if it may also make sense to move to "higher octane" sources? In a car, higher octane burns cooler per the work output, causing less deterioration of the engine, if it's tuned for it. Since the virtues of complex carbohydrates vs simple sugars are well-studied, can anyone tell us if we can benefit from 'higher octane' (cooler burning) foods exists, and how they might benefit us?

    "Eating right doesn't really make you live longer... It only FEELS like it's longer!"

    1. Re:Higher Octane? by jafac · · Score: 2

      I don't know about nutrition, but cooler burning fuels also produce a lot less nitrogen oxides, and other harmful chemicals. Gasoline could also contain much less sulfur. (it could contain zero sulfur, and be much better for car engines' longevity).

      However, if we keep electing oil barons into office, the oil companies will have zero incentive to provide us with higher octane, lower sulfur gasolines. (the current octane ratings, by the way, are quite a bit lower, on average, than was common in the early 1970's. - ask any body who works on classic, aircooled VW engines - and only PART of that has to do with lead content. Lead content had less to do with octane, and more to do with acting as a lubricant for valve seats).

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  34. must start this at young age by peter303 · · Score: 2

    Hyper-nutrition has been accelerating sexual maturity. More and more girls develop at age 9-10. Before 20th century not uncomon to not be able to make child until around 16 years old.

  35. If only we could understand them... by ArthurDent · · Score: 1

    Overheard fruit fly conversation:

    "I'm not dead yet! I'm getting better!"
    "No you're not, you'll be stone dead in a moment!

    hehehe
    Ben

  36. primate experiments underway by peter303 · · Score: 2

    Primates live 30-50 years, so it takes a long time to test this. Even a few humans are trying self-experimentation.

    P.S. Is Tarzan's "Cheetah" still alive? Last time I heard in early 90s he was in late 50s in southern CA. Fur had turned white. Chimps lifespan is about 50.

  37. Fsckin' ungrateful Europeans! by Hairy_Potter · · Score: 2

    You know, I'm sick of your ungrateful Europeans never, ever, ever thanking us Yanks for keeping your climate nice.

    Every day, the sun heats up water in American territorial waters, to the tune of millions of BTUs. Courtesy of the Gulfstream, this water circulates over to Europe and releases it's millions of BTU's of heat, giving Europe, with a latitude of North Dakota, a mild climate.

    Millions of BTU's of our American heat goes to Europe to keep you people warm, and do you ever thank us?

    I'm writing a letter to President Dubya, and as soon as he find s out about this, he's gonna shut the Gulfstream down.

  38. You can't just blame corporations by Dan+Hayes · · Score: 3

    You may have a point, but you're pointing the greed finger at the wrong Americans. The American corporations which market food may have more to do with it than the American consumers.

    Yes, our national "food" industry does indeed have a large role in promoting unhealthy eating habits, but the trend of overconsumption has been in place for a lot longer than the rise of the fast food culture. Whereas most nations have moved away from the gratuitous consumption of vast meals America has indeed moved even futher towards gluttony.

    The difference is that Americans have more disposable income and the corporations compete ruthlessly for that income.

    Sure, but that doesn't make that much of a difference. It doesn't take a vast amount of disposable income to eat enough to become obese, and fast food corporations like Macdonalds compete worldwide for the attention of customers. So why is it that America is the nation with such a huge problem and such a large amount of consumption?

    As I stated elsewhere, Americans believe it is part of their birthright to consume and consume without regard to consequences. It's this attitude that needs to change.

  39. Yeah, but how about Modifying our Wing Size too??? by Presence2 · · Score: 1

    Just because a lab coat created a 40 hour fruit fly instead of a 20 hour one, doesn't mean Jack in terms of replication of the event to Human Organism #1. Fruit Flies aren't people. The reason why they are easy to disect and assemble genetically is their own simplicity compared to humans. All this news is to someone in the field is a cute line-item on future funding proposal requests. Not a biblical Omen.

  40. This has been known for a long time by Frums · · Score: 4
    The news that halving your caloric intake will drastically extend your lifespan has been known for a long time. This has been tested on many different animals, and informally tested on humans (by observation that lifespans into the 120's have been observed, but only in cultures/geographies that tend towards very low food resources).

    The important news in this article is the finding of the gene that will cause the metabolism to do this automatically! In the words of a doctor whose name I cannot remember, ~"when good food is in front of you, it is damn hard to not eat it if you are hungry." Halving caloric input, unless through some tricking of the metabolism via keytone production ala the Atkins diet (nightmare) will make you hungry. Obviously 98% of the population in the world, not just the US, lacks the willpower to not eat when they are A) hungry and B) yummy food is in front of them. It just appears Americans have worse willpower because we tend to have more yummy food in front of us than almost anyone else in the world (when i first moved to the States from Scotland I noticed portions at restaurants are about 2.5x as large).

    In all likelihood a parallel gene will be found in humans, and while tweaking it will have weird side effects, it will be done in the lidetime of the average /. reader. If means are found to reverse or slow the gravity aging effects then the world will become really interesting. Right now, though, this would just result in more frail, stooped, old people running around :)

    Frums

    1. Re:This has been known for a long time by ponos · · Score: 1

      You are correct in saying that such a gene will have adverse side-affects. I have read reports from people that actually try caloric restriction diets claiming that they have reduced their pulse rate below 60 and blood pressure below 90/60 (or less!). Such adaptation (that obviously serves the maximum possible economy in use of calories) propably reflects a general change of pace for what is happening in the body. (all cellular mechanisms) I would really like to see these people, that are under caloric restriction diets, try to run (compared to an average weight person), or perform an average task (mental or manual). All these processes need energy and an organism in a dire condition will allow them to fail in order to support its existence. Living 120 years partially incapacitated by the lack of calories is not an option for me. I seriously doubt (and I do have adequate knowledge of Molecular Biology) that great lengthening of the average life expectancy will occur from such modifications without unbalancing the rate of cellular (and bodily) processes. OTOH, the greatest change in average life expectancy would come by totally eliminating death by accident and drugs. (this is a known fact of epidimiology) I sincerely hope that I am wrong and that a magicall pill will allow us to live much longer. Petros

    2. Re:This has been known for a long time by MousePotato · · Score: 2

      It's not just pure caloric restriction that causes the marked effect in extension of ones life span. CRaN (Calorie Restriction and Nutrient suplementation) is a highly specialized dietary regime where your caloric intake is greatly reduced and controlled while at the same time the nutrient intake is increased so that all essential vitamins and mineral levels are maintained. Note that most CR practitioners that I know strive to avoid the need for additional supplementation of thier vitamins, minerals and nutrients by makeing sure there are 'complete' meals intake not through the use of Vitamin supplements. (all do use some supplements btw but the goal is to make sure everything you need is in your food)If you restrict without additional nutrients you will end up malnourished/starved and eventually you will die way before your median lifespan. Research has proven that this works in various lab animals where life span (I am using mice here as an example) of an adlib group of animals is rougly 36 months and a CRAN group of these animals may live 45-55 months. Primate research is underway at a few universities but the results may take 45-50 years to be fully realized. The mechanism that causes this is probably a lack of free radical damage due to the limited caloric intake but more research will need to be done to prove this as such. The estimates by many noteable gerontologists such as Dr. Roy Walford tends to place the maximum lifespan of man at roughly 120 years. It could be possible for people to attain 130-140 years on this lifestyle if they start early enough (post puberty by say 2-3 years with a 20% degree or greater restriction).More information can be found at some of these links: Calorie Restriction Via Non-Gourmet Cooking
      CR Society Mailing list Archive
      Stealing Time Article on PBS
      Life Extension Magazine CR is NOT for the undisciplined folks out there. It is a very difficult and possibly dangerous regime with many fantastic benefits but it takes a LOT of hard work to do and to do right. My wife and I have been practicing CR on and off for the past two years. When we are doing it correctly I can honestly say I feel awesome(and not very hungry btw) but when we mess up our bodies let us know very quickly that we are eating incorrectly. Back to topic... The interesting thing about the discovery of this particular gene is the potential for use as gene therapy etc.of course none of this matters if you get hit by a bus while crossing the street ;-)

  41. You can't compare greed and homosexuality by Dan+Hayes · · Score: 1

    I hate this argument...it really pisses me off. It's almost like saying "Exercise some willpower and STOP BEING GAY" or similar.

    No it's not, you're making a strawman argument. You can't make up some spurious argument linking two different things, prove one wrong and then claim the original one is then wrong by comparison.

    For me, I built it up while I was swimming competitively in high school and college. When I finally left the sport (thanks to tendonitis in both shoulders so bad I couldn't swim anymore) I was left with a huge appetite and no way of managing the caloric intake on a daily basis. So I gained wait. It's not like I was eating a ton, but my calories weren't being used.

    Well there you go. You weren't being greedy, I wasn't talking about you then. It's the huge numbers of Americans who eat without any reason to or way to burn those calories off.

    Should I feel bad for eating better than African refugees? Hell no. Why should I? I work very hard to pay my rent and have my big steak on Saturday.

    You shouldn't feel guilty, but some compassion for those less well off than you wouldn't go amiss.

    1. Re:You can't compare greed and homosexuality by Cannonball · · Score: 2
      No it's not, you're making a strawman argument. You can't make up some spurious argument linking two different things, prove one wrong and then claim the original one is then wrong by comparison.
      Appetite/metabolism is genetic, no question. My brother eats twice to three times as much as I do, but he has a very active Metabolism, whereas I do not. Being Gay is genetic, so the argument transfers.

      It's the huge numbers of Americans who eat without any reason to or way to burn those calories off.
      Now, is it the huge numbers of Americans who eat (steak/Big Macs/cheesecake) or the Americans who eat (salad/tofu/vegetables) that bug you? To be quite honest, I don't think there is any difference. To me, fast food is the ultimate convenience. I don't have time in my two-job day to prepare four-star vegetarian cuisine for myself, so I'll settle for a Big Xtra from Mickey-D's cuz it's got lettuce. Granted, I could walk the extra block for the salad bar at the deli (which I also do occasionally) but hey, that Burger tastes damn good.

      I do feel terribly sorry for the plight of those in this world who do live in poverty conditions, the area of Manderville Jamaica's average employment rate is somewhere near 48%. But hey, if I start giving away what little *I* make, then what am I supposed to pay the rent with? Goodwill? nope.

      --
      So there I was. Naked. In a refrigerator. With a potroast on my knees. Smokin a cigar. That's when it got REALLY weird.
    2. Re:You can't compare greed and homosexuality by Taurine · · Score: 1

      Can you provide any serious research that proves that homosexuallity is genetic? Thats a pretty interesting claim... If it was, wouldn't the trait have died out long ago? I mean its naturally deselecting...

      As far as the salad thing goes, here in the UK we have to put up with this whining traitor old age pensioner called Alistair Cook on the radio, who broadcasts his 'Letter From America'. He is an Englishman who emigrated to the USA at the end of the second world war, and has spent the last fifty years bitching about how much better he likes it there. He is of course comparing the US of the 21st century to the England of 1945, complete with food rationing. Meanwhile, back at the point...

      One of his broadcasts recently was about how America has the healthiest diet in the world, by a long way, in particular because Americans eat less meat and eat a lot more salad and vegetables. Is there any truth in this? Its just that everyone I know who has been to the US, including my best friend who lives there at the moment, says that meals there are like three times bigger than here, and that the meal is _dominated_ by a big chunk of meat.

    3. Re:You can't compare greed and homosexuality by cactopus · · Score: 1

      Alistair Cook never made it to the 21st century he's dead.

      He died a year or two ago.

      He used to host Masterpiece Theater

      Is he reporting from the afterlife again?
      Somebody kick his ass then.

    4. Re:You can't compare greed and homosexuality by rkent · · Score: 4
      Being Gay is genetic, so the argument transfers.

      Oh man, I'd like to see what you're basing that on. I know plenty of people who flat out insist that they CHOOSE to be homosexual, and could go either way.

      If this is based on that one study supposedly showing that gay men have smaller hypothalamus glands or whatever, go back to the drawing board. First of all, the research (to my knowledge) has never been reproduced, causality was not demonstrated, and there was certainly no genetic connection clearly demonstrated. The only good way to go about this would be to measure the size of men's hypo-T glands throughout life and see if guys with the smaller ones go on to be gay. Except I think he had to tear their brains apart to make his "discovery." Plus, how does that explain female homosexuality at all?

      In addition, it's a ridiculous argument at this stage in the game. I think it was an effort to align homosexuality with previously successful civil rights campaigns, all of which centered around liberating a group that was repressed based on traits with which they were born (african americans, women). If homosexuality is one of those, we can't really persecute it, can we? But I think America has finally started the more difficult process of realizing that one lifestyle system isn't right for everyone, and we just have to accept other peoples' non-socially-destructive actions, whether they disgust us or not.

    5. Re:You can't compare greed and homosexuality by pmc · · Score: 2
      Ah - this will be the dead guy who is still broadcasting "Letter from America" then?

      See the LFA web site for details on the high quality work the stiff is providing.

    6. Re:You can't compare greed and homosexuality by gid-foo · · Score: 1

      Ha ha ha, this has to be a joke. Maybe by British standards Americans have a healthy diet but "in the world." The mediterranean countries (Italy, Greece, etc) are supposedly healthy eaters, mostly because they get decent amounts of fresh fruits and vegetables, on a daily basis. I can find some references for this if people want. As an American I can verify that Americans eat like shit for the most part, tasty shit, but all the same... (Who wants some more fried chicken and biscuits and gravy! I do!)

    7. Re:You can't compare greed and homosexuality by cactopus · · Score: 1

      Och dammit©©©© stupid fake deaths I swore the last time I had this happen some magazine reported the late Alec Guinness©©© he actually died two years after I saw the article© So where did I hear this©©© I don't remember Appologies

    8. Re:You can't compare greed and homosexuality by madrone · · Score: 1
      I am unsure about the person you are replying to - but I happen to be attracted to the OPPOSITE sex.

      You may happen to be bi, and really want to get shagadelic with the lads AND the ladies but stick with the opposite gender by CHOICE. That's fine.

      Most straight people I know would flip out if you told them they are as likely to shag a member of the same sex, they just choose not to!

    9. Re:You can't compare greed and homosexuality by jafac · · Score: 4

      family tree and identical twin studies have both pointed to the notion that homosexuality is inherited.

      Now, I could see a "choice factor" in the family tree argument if "in the closet" gay fathers are indoctrinating sons. But in the indentical twins cases (adopted, to separate families)- *not*.

      I am a person who believes in human free-will, but I also believe that there are numerous things that we have no choice in, and many of those things, we may believe that we made a choice - but, in fact, either the choice was made by biological or sociological law, or there was a strong influence or predisposition. And again, in some cases, force of will can overcome the biological predisposition (for instance, disabled athletes). That means that if there is a "gay" trait, sure, not everyone with that trait will adopt a gay lifestyle. They may marry opposite sex, and enjoy fulfilling lives, and may not ever understand or express their same-sex attraction. Many fans of Pro Wrestling are probably in this camp.

      The same is probably true for people who are genetically predisposed with strong appetites. (like myself). These urges can be supressed (with drugs, hypnotherapy, or violence), but the urges are there, and they are stronger in those people than in other people. To suggest a lack of willpower, suggests a lack of intelligence and understanding from the person who made such a suggestion. And even smacks of racism or eugenics! (I'll see your ad hominem attack, and raise you Godwin's law!)

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
    10. Re:You can't compare greed and homosexuality by rkent · · Score: 1
      To suggest a lack of willpower, suggests a lack of intelligence and understanding from the person who made such a suggestion. And even smacks of racism or eugenics! (I'll see your ad hominem attack, and raise you Godwin's law!)

      Hm. Okay, I hope you don't think I was actually trying to attack anyone, or assert that either homosexuals or overeaters have a "lack of willpower." I was just responding to the suggestion that "homosexuals can't help it, it's not their fault." In fact, whether or not they can "help" it, I don't think it's A fault, and to call it a genetic irregularity insults the people who have chosen that lifestyle.

      Of course, there are hereditary predispositions to all sorts of things. It's just that the studies I've seen regarding hereditary homosexuality have been shoddy at best.

    11. Re:You can't compare greed and homosexuality by Damion · · Score: 1

      There are other factors that link twins beyond just genetics. For example, they are both obviously exposed to the same conditions while in the womb. What if homosexuality were caused by the chemical conditions in the womb then?

      --
      Common sense is what tells you the world is flat.
    12. Re:You can't compare greed and homosexuality by RelliK · · Score: 1
      family tree and identical twin studies have both pointed to the notion that homosexuality is inherited.

      ughhm... don't you think it would be a little hard for gays to pass on their genes down their family tree?
      ___

      --
      ___
      If you think big enough, you'll never have to do it.
    13. Re:You can't compare greed and homosexuality by xtal · · Score: 2

      don't you think it would be a little hard for gays to pass on their genes down their family tree?

      There are lots of genes that do this. They just have to be recessive on the X chromosome, carried by an (unafflicted?) female.

      --
      ..don't panic
  42. Hello, Matrix joke by Galvatron · · Score: 1

    Yes, that's the point. It's moronic. But, in the Matrix, somehow the robots were using humans to produce energy in the absence of sunlight. Of course, without sunlight, there's no photosyntesis, and hence no plants, which is the basis of the food chain. He was joking.

    --
    "The question of whether a computer can think is no more interesting than that of whether a submarine can swim" -EWD
  43. No one should artifically live longer... except me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    An immortality (or longjevity) pill will be harmful because it will balloon world population. There will be a lack of food. It will ruin medicare and social security. No one should live longer at the expense of others dying off sooner elsewhere. Blah. Blah. Blah. So says the young idealist until he feels his age creeping up on him at which point he suddenly thinks the long-life pill is the greatest idea ever.

    Me? I want nano-computers injected into my brain. Enough to make a 1-to-1 correleation of brain cel to nano-computer ratio. The nano-computers could then learn the firing patterns and connections made by their associated brain cell. Then after a period of time, you nuke the living brain cells and the nano-computer neural net takes over without interruption, except that it will function for centuries, is easily interfaced to other computers, and when needed, can be run at an accelerated rate (for those college exams for your 25th PhD).

  44. Re:If it was that simple...(evolution explanation) by la1n · · Score: 2

    Re: "If it was as simple as turning a single gene on or off, I'm sure evolution would already have done it for us..."

    There are a few subtle problems with that statement, which is why I keep hearing things like you said ^-^

    (1) With the overabundance of food we've had in the past 100 years in the western world, reducing the ability to utilize food is good at this time. But with a history of thousands of years of famines, it hasn't been that way for very long.

    (2) Evolution is about increasing the number of decendants. If you get pair bonded in your late teens, start having kids before age 20, anything past age 40 is not necessary for increasing your genetic propogation. You're actually consuming food which could be used by your decendants to more efficiently pass on your genes.

    (3) Evolution is not about optimizing a perfect solution, only a "good enough" solution. Animals that perfectly adapt to an environment become extenct when that environment changes. Less specialized solutions tend to win over the long term.
    For more evolution information please check out the most excellant http://www.talkorigins.org/ site.

  45. (offtopic pondering) by Howie · · Score: 1

    **original Homebrew Computer Club member***

    Has this got anything to do with all your posts being monospaced? Are you somehow still posting from your Altair? :) Curious mind would like to know...

    --
    "don't fall into the fallacy of believing that Perl can solve social problems. Maybe Perl 6 can, but that's a ways off"
  46. Is homosexuality genetic? by Dan+Hayes · · Score: 2

    Appetite/metabolism is genetic, no question.

    Perhaps mainly, but environmental factors do contribute.

    Being Gay is genetic, so the argument transfers.

    That's debateable still. Although it does appear that there may be some genetic factors, it's certainly not conclusive, and there is far more evidence to support environmental factors being the cause at present.

    To me, fast food is the ultimate convenience. I don't have time in my two-job day to prepare four-star vegetarian cuisine for myself, so I'll settle for a Big Xtra from Mickey-D's cuz it's got lettuce. Granted, I could walk the extra block for the salad bar at the deli (which I also do occasionally) but hey, that Burger tastes damn good.

    And that's it in a nutshell, convenience over responsibility. Why make the effort to do the right thing when the easy option is so much more, well, easy?

    I do feel terribly sorry for the plight of those in this world who do live in poverty conditions, the area of Manderville Jamaica's average employment rate is somewhere near 48%. But hey, if I start giving away what little *I* make, then what am I supposed to pay the rent with? Goodwill? nope.

    *sigh* You can contribute as much or as little as you feel you can afford you know. Why not set up a standing order to pay a few dollars each month when you get paid? It costs you next to nothing and yet to someone with nothing, it can make all the difference.

    1. Re:Is homosexuality genetic? by Cannonball · · Score: 2
      And that's it in a nutshell, convenience over responsibility. Why make the effort to do the right thing when the easy option is so much more, well, easy?
      It's not about effort, it's also about satisfaction. I could have a plate full of lettuce, which tastes, well, like nothing, or I could have a burger. The burger will cost less, taste better and fill me up more. Where's the disadvantage? Sure, it's long term, it's in the cholesterol and heart attacks, but hey, we're short timers anyway, we might as well enjoy our time here.
      --
      So there I was. Naked. In a refrigerator. With a potroast on my knees. Smokin a cigar. That's when it got REALLY weird.
    2. Re:Is homosexuality genetic? by ChannelX · · Score: 1
      I could have a plate full of lettuce, which tastes, well, like nothing, or I could have a burger. The burger will cost less, taste better and fill me up more.

      Maybe not discussing things which you admittedly have no clue about might be in order. It is very easy to cook up a quick, healthy, filling meal that won't clog up the arteries or involve ingesting hormone-ridden beef....and that tastes great. It *does* take the time to pick up some cookbooks. Hell, it doesn't even take that. There are boatloads of microwaveable healthy frozen dinners out there now.

      As to costing less is it really costing less? Have you even thought about the implications of fast food beyond your pocket book? Funny enough I don't know anybody who thinks eating out every day for most meals (fast food or not) is cheap.

      --
      My blog: http://jkratz.dyndns.org/~jason/blog/
    3. Re:Is homosexuality genetic? by Cannonball · · Score: 2

      I'm mainly talking about the whole lunchtime deal, I manage well enough in the evening time to cook for myself (I am a master at the can of soup) or prepare a salad that does taste great (mmmm jicama) but hey, part of me always wants that medium rare porterhouse, is that so bad?

      --
      So there I was. Naked. In a refrigerator. With a potroast on my knees. Smokin a cigar. That's when it got REALLY weird.
    4. Re:Is homosexuality genetic? by Drakantus · · Score: 1

      I have two problems with what you said. First of all, you talk about how easy it is to make a "healthy, filling meal that won't clog up the arteries". As easy as it may be, many people work at locations where refrigerator space is extreamly limited, and with little or no way to cook food. The second thing is your talk of cost. Eating out fast food is by far the cheapest option. The only reason you think otherwise is because you completely ignore the cost of TIME spent cooking, cleaning dishes, shopping for food, etc. On average lunch at home probably takes me 15 minutes to prepare. If i'm eating a frozen "low fat" meal thing it's already at $2.50 or so, adding in the value of 15 minutes of my time and it's suddenly $5 for a meal, not including any sort of drink, and also without considering the cost to clean dishes, utensils, etc.. also mostly a time cost.

      --
      I love going down to the elementary school, watching all the kids jump and shout, but they dont know I'm using blanks.
    5. Re:Is homosexuality genetic? by ChannelX · · Score: 1
      Always wanting it? No. Always eating it? Probably. ;) The body needs complete protein in whatever form you choose be it chicken, beef, soy, whatever.

      I think what the other poster was trying to get across is that consumption like we practice here in the US is not sustainable. There is an environmental cost to having cows graze land in large numbers required to sustain the rising desire for beef (or pork,etc). Not only that but we set a bad standard for the world in our consumption. It is simply not possible for the world to sustain countries the size of China or India consuming like we do here. IMHO its a crime the way the US treats things like the Kyoto summit. We expect others to lower their emissions before we do when we're one of the major producers! Its shameful.

      --
      My blog: http://jkratz.dyndns.org/~jason/blog/
    6. Re:Is homosexuality genetic? by ChannelX · · Score: 1
      Aside from people who work out of doors I have yet to see an office environment that doesnt have a microwave and coffee machine (and refrigerator). No of course I haven't been everywhere but as I said I have yet to see an office that doesnt have a refridgerator and microwave. Hell...I've even gone to training sessions at various places that had refrigerators and microwaves available for students.

      I have to completely disagree that eating out fast food is the cheapest option even when including time involved. Unless you work in a building that happens to have a fast food place in it you have to go somewhere. Where I work it is going to take you 10-15 minutes minimum to go out, get something, and then come back. I'm also not quite sure how it would take anyone 15 minutes to prepare a lunch at home. With a little foresight while shopping you buy things that you only have to throw in a bag. 15 minutes is ludicrous. If you have a frozen meal available I'm even more dubious that it takes you 15 minutes to prepare a lunch. What is there to prepare that it takes 15 minutes??? You throw the damn thing in your bag and leave. And I have yet to run across a frozen meal that takes more than 5-6 minutes to heat up. Where is the time and money savings?

      You accuse me of ignoring all sorts of things while also doing the same yourself. Sit down and really think it out. You can get healthier food for either the same or cheaper price (and time cost) as eating fast food. If you choose to still eat fast food then fine. I dont have a problem with it per se but its ludicrous to say that it saves you all that much time and money all the time.

      --
      My blog: http://jkratz.dyndns.org/~jason/blog/
    7. Re:Is homosexuality genetic? by Drakantus · · Score: 1

      When I eat fastfood out I drive up, pick up my food, and leave. It takes 5 minutes if there is a line, less otherwise. Usually I do this on the way home from work, on the way to a customer's site, or while doing other things. Where I work currently has fine refrigerated space, but my prior job had one little joke of a refrigerator that was always full. Keep in mind that not everyone even works in an office. As far as time spent, okay you can cook your frozen healthy choice meal in 4-5 minutes. If you use plastic utensils cleaning time is reduced (course have to add price of the utensils, not much though). So it's going to take the same 5 minutes to eat your healthy choice whatever as it will for me to drivethrough and order a chicken sandwich and soda. So the same cost for both, which still proves you wrong as far as healthy food being cheaper. And those frozen meals aren't exactly healthfood, they cut just enough fat to be legally allowed a 'low fat' rating or whatever they claim. If you actually make yourself a meal it's going to take more then 5 minutes. Besides, low fat isn't everything. I can go a day eating nothing but fat free twizzlers and soda, but trust me that isn't going to make me skinny any time soon. Similarly, people who eat "fat free" salad all day but cover it with oily dressing aren't doing themselves much good either.

      Anyway, I'm not trying to be against you. I don't really like usual fastfoods. Mostly I eat at a local non-chain mexican place, and get chicken with rice, hardly what most people think of as unhealthy food. I won't fix food here, however. It's not worth the hassle of bring in food, waiting to use the microwave, taking home dishes, going to the grocery store weekly, etc.

      --
      I love going down to the elementary school, watching all the kids jump and shout, but they dont know I'm using blanks.
  47. Will you take my pills... by crashnbur · · Score: 1
    Will you take these pills? Can you take my medicine pills? Pay for all of these pills...?

    I don't think you will. Sooooo you and me are through.

    (Through with life, ya know, when it's supposed to end. Because the average person won't be taking any life-lengthening medicines any time soon.)

    Sorry for the horrible parody of an overplayed hip hop song. I got caught in the moment.

  48. There is a penalty by maddogsparky · · Score: 1
    According to the article on the AP's website in the science section, the mutation only works if it is on one chromosome. If it occurs on both cromosomes, the lifespan is shorter than normal.

    If a man and woman with one mutated gene had kids, on average 1/4 of their kids would have no mutated genes (normal life span), 1/2 of their kids would have one mutated gene (expanded life span) and 1/4 of their kids would have two mutated genes (shortened life span).

    This would preclude a permanent "tweak" to the human geonome, perhaps via a "friendly" virus. It would help one generation live longer, but doom half their decendants to normal or shorter than normal lives.

    --
    science is a religion
  49. What? by Dan+Hayes · · Score: 1

    Unlike an addiction to a drug or one of those trivial ailments, trying to cut down on taking in food has a withdrawal symptom (hunger) that NEVER GOES AWAY. Don't eat, and I'll be hungry from now until I go to bed, and then again when I wake up in the morning.

    Hi. As I'm pretty sure I said in my original post this is a matter of willpower, of making yourself get past these feelings. It's generally referred to in society as a diet. After some time your body will adjust to the reduced intake of calories and you'll have lost weight and stop feeling hungry. Of course if you can't maintain your diet for the necessary period of time (a few weeks at least) then yeah, you'll always feel hungry if you try it.

    We're out of shape due to a lack of activity, which itself is mostly due to information technology professions exercising only one's fingers. Give me a job that gives me a good workout and I'd be in pretty good shape.

    There are plenty of options to lose weight, not just work. Try going to the gym or going swimming, hell, even walking for half an hour a day can burn off those excess calories. There is no excuse for not exercising unless you're incarcerated. Hell, even then you can exercise, so no, there is no excuse other than a lack of willpower.

    1. Re:What? by ppanon · · Score: 1
      Hi. As I'm pretty sure I said in my original post this is a matter of willpower, of making yourself get past these feelings. It's generally referred to in society as a diet. After some time your body will adjust to the reduced intake of calories and you'll have lost weight and stop feeling hungry. Of course if you can't maintain your diet for the necessary period of time (a few weeks at least) then yeah, you'll always feel hungry if you try it.

      This is a fallacy. Most people's "diets" for losing weight involves eating less than the required number of calories. Your suggestion would seem to follow this line (losing significant weight in a few weeks). Yeah your body will adjust, this behaviour will often turn on the body's "starvation" metabolic response. As soon as regular consumption is restored, the body starts storing even more fat against future starvation. Such yo-yo dieting is often at least as unhealthy as being overweight in the first place.

      A serious problem is that most North American pre-processed foods combine fats and sugars. This increases the body's fat intake. Combined with a sedentary lifestyle, a car culture, and an affluent society, it often leads to obesity. Modify these factors (exercize, eat more healthy food combinations - not less) and you are still subject to the slings and arrows of your genetics. But don't suggest that yo-yo dieting is the solution to somebody's body weight problem. It has about as much validity as any other scientific theories you are likely to read in the National Enquirer.

      I agree some kind of regular activity program is called for. That can be difficult if you work in an industry that encourages working 60-80 hour work weeks. It often is greed that causes people to do those jobs instead of a job that leaves them some time for exercise, but sometimes it's because those people are really dedicated to their work.
      --
      Laissez lire, et laissez danser; ces deux amusements ne feront jamais de mal au monde. - Voltaire
    2. Re:What? by Eccles · · Score: 1

      There is no excuse for not exercising unless you're incarcerated.

      Full-time job, wife who also works full-time, two small children -- and recently, a message from the top that we don't get our "Xmas" bonus until our next version is ready for release. Some of us have our own forms of incarceration...

      Oh, and I was playing indoor soccer until I hyperextended my quadriceps, and walking during my lunch break until it got so d---ed cold around here. I can outrun and outlift most healthy adults.

      In college, I was weightlifting twice a week, playing (serious) badminton four times a week, and soccer three times a week, all for an hour and a half or so at a time. With all that, I got down to the extreme top weight for my height on the insurance tables. My body is not the same as your body.

      --
      Ooh, a sarcasm detector. Oh, that's a real useful invention.
    3. Re:What? by Mawbid · · Score: 1
      As I read in The Hacker's Diet, it's really not realistic to expect to lose a lot of weight through exersise alone. An hour of aerobics (about 400 clories) is barely enough to cover a dab of salad dressing, let alone a Big Mac (about 560 calories).

      Exercise is still important, but the "effort ratio" between eating n+m calories and working m calories off over just eating n calories is so huge that you could just forget that first option.

      On the other hand, it's been said that exercising regularly enables your body to regulate your food intake better. That is, if you get enugh exersise, you won't be hungry unless you really need food.
      --

      --
      Fuck the system? Nah, you might catch something.
  50. Wouldn't it be ironic... by ptomblin · · Score: 3

    According to the article:
    The result, reported today in the journal Science, shows that flies with a mutation in a gene the scientists called INDY, for I'm Not Dead Yet, had average life spans of 71 days rather than the normal 37 days.

    Wouldn't it be ironic if they produced the gene therapy or wonder drug to turn off this gene in humans, and all it did was increase our life span by 44 days?

    --
    The next Cmdr Taco duplicate will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and see it early!
    1. Re:Wouldn't it be ironic... by bv3nut · · Score: 1

      34 days would be even crazier!

    2. Re:Wouldn't it be ironic... by Saib0t · · Score: 1

      Man, I'll get a -1 or something but I don't care, I've been laughing my ass off of this joke for 20 minutes non stop. Just wanted to let you know...

      --

      One shall speak only if what one has to say is more beautiful than silence
  51. You can't just blame Americans by Nephster · · Score: 1

    Your arguement that Americans are more prone to fatness as a result of some personal deficiency is disingenious at best, and insulting to everyone who struggles against what nature has done for them at worst.

    If you consider that fatness is a required trait for survival in most other species you may also understand that eating too much is as base an instinct as suckling, and that all humans regardless of where they are born, raised, or call home suffer this instinct as well.

    We have been engineered over several million years to build up reserves of fat. But then again, someone who lived to 40 was very old indeed. Most of the traits that "fat" people have that render them "unhealthy" don't evidence themeselves until well into maturity. Which in turn renders an arguement based on the long term effects of fatness moot.

    Personally, I find the premise of your argument insulting, even though I am one of those skinny bastards who cannot seem to exceed 190 lbs for the life of me. There is nothing wrong with Americans that makes them prone to being fat, any more than there is something wrong with (insert favored generalization/stereotype).

    The simple fact of the matter is that food is plentiful in America, and bad food is oh so good. You can't blame Americans for not being able to live by your ideals, realistically, I don't think (insert ideal country of choice)ians would fare any better in the same situation.

    Toodles,

    Nephs.

    1. Re:You can't just blame Americans by Wills · · Score: 1

      eating too much is as base an instinct as suckling

      Since when did suckling become a contemptible activity?

  52. Homosexuality is (mostly) genetic by Pentagram · · Score: 2

    Can you provide any serious research that proves that homosexuallity is genetic? Thats a pretty interesting claim...
    If it was, wouldn't the trait have died out long ago? I mean its naturally deselecting...


    The genes for homosexuality are thought to be passed maternally (if you are homosexual, then your most likely candidate for a gay relation would be your uncle on your mother's side), and are advantageous for genes on the y-chromosome.

    If you want a reference, try 'Genome', a popular science book by (I think) Simon Harris where it's covered quite well. I think the latest research suggests that homosexuality is about 60% inherited.

    ---

    1. Re:Homosexuality is (mostly) genetic by gid-foo · · Score: 1

      For the other side of the story check out: "Human Diversity" by Richard Lewontin or "Not in our genes" by Richard Lewontin, Steven Rose + Leon J. Kamin. Both excellent books.

    2. Re:Homosexuality is (mostly) genetic by gid-foo · · Score: 1

      And the book 'Genome' is by Matt Ridley. While an interesting book and good for the beginner (in some ways) it is one view point and the presentation of the gospel of genetic research is biased. Read the two other books I mentioned to balance this book out.

    3. Re:Homosexuality is (mostly) genetic by Taurine · · Score: 1

      Wow, thanks for those details. I am amazed that there is science behind the claim I originally challenged. There is a group in this country (Britain) called the Anti-Nazi League made up of all the ultra-politically correct people. They have teenage members in every school and college. I have always kicked back against political correctness, so have had a conflict or two with this group. I'm pretty sure that this group, who always portray themselves as being in the right, the only right, would denounce that research (and burn all the books about it of course ;-) Just shows that their work has succeeded in closing my mind to an area of research they would like to kill. Essentially they couldn't allow a genetic link to anything to publicly be known, because they think it fuels Nazi fantasies about genocide. I believe that if they could, they would get everyone to believe that race isn't genetic either.

  53. Cultural differences are very important too. by renoX · · Score: 1

    And I would say, that here the habit and the culture are often much more important than genes.

    Your case is clearly a case of habit.

    There are much more people with a weight problem in the US than in Europe, why?
    Our genes are quite similar, and you can find plenty of food in Europe too.

    It is a matter of cultural differences..

    1. Re:Cultural differences are very important too. by Cannonball · · Score: 2

      And our culture is bad precisely why?

      --
      So there I was. Naked. In a refrigerator. With a potroast on my knees. Smokin a cigar. That's when it got REALLY weird.
    2. Re:Cultural differences are very important too. by renoX · · Score: 1

      "is bad" in the sence of having too many people with an overweight problem.

      Because of the MacDonald / fast food / junk food ..

  54. As a college wrestler... by Gregoyle · · Score: 5
    As a college wrestler who has had to lose as much as 10 lbs in a week, I must take issue with some of what you say.

    This article deals with a special kind of "weight loss" that is brought about by calorie deprivation. Many different studies have found that when the human body (and also the rat and now the fruit fly) is routinely denied the amount of calories it is supposed to need, for whatever reason it lives much longer. We are talking say 75% of needed calories, *every day*. I guarantee that anyone who does this *will lose weight*. If my body burns at 3500 calories a day at my current metabolism, and I only eat 2600 a day, it is not able to adjust the metabolism down enough to deal with the difference (normally the metabolism can change as much as 15% or so). My body will then look to process muscle and fat for its energy needs. On an active person (also depending on other nutrition), fat is the first to go.

    The new idea that the calorie deprivation theory introduces is that after all the fat and all the excess muscle is consumed (no I am not saying it is healthy to lose this muscle), we don't just die. If we have proper nutrition otherwise (which means enough protein, vitamins, minerals, and fats) our body seems to adapt further to allow for the low caloric intake. How the body does this is still murky in scientific fields, but it has been shown true in countless cases. One side effect of this also seems to be increased longevity. In lab rats lifespan has been incresed by more than 150%; obviously, YMMV ;-).

    Also, yes, the brain does regulate the appetite, and many people can't control their appetites. It is simply a matter of discipline. I know this, I have done it. You can tell your body to starve itself, and after it gets used to it you don't even have to try hard. Realize, too, that I am not saying this is necessarily a healthy thing to do. You must consult with a nutritionist to develop a diet that is healthy for you, and I do admit that I had a nutritionist's advice for wrestling. My priorities were also different; I was simply looking for a way to lose massive amounts of weight quickly without getting sick or adversely affecting performance. Most people are looking to enrich their lives.

    --

    "He's more machine now than man, twisted and evil."

    1. Re:As a college wrestler... by Col.+Panic · · Score: 1
      Someone is bound to argue with your statement about losing 10 lbs. in a week saying it isn't realistic. Not me. When I was in college I participated in several martial arts tournaments, sometimes weighing in competitors. Most people tried to get in at the top end of whatever weight class they can so they have the advantage of being (usually) strongest.

      One day there was this guy who was about 6 lbs. over the limit of his weight class. He had about 45 minutes before the match, so he said he wanted to lose the weight before being allocated to a weight class. He ran around the auditorium for about 15 minutes, urinated, and stripped to underwear (in front of a large crowd :). He weighed in 5 lbs. lower than on first check. I gave him the mark on basis of scale (in)accuracy.

  55. Mortality sucks. by sanemind · · Score: 3

    Mortality is an evil bitch goddess. When I was four years something happened that would forever change me, and profoundly impact my life. I realized that I was going to die. Not believeing particularly in an afterlife, this was a monumentally horrifying thing for my young mind to grasp. Even now, thinking of it fills me with a sense of vast melancholy.

    I have been unable to discover any proof whatsoever as to the existance of an afterlife, indeed, all available data seems to strongly indicate that the spark of self and sentience that I treasure within me is a mecahnical product of gene competition, and that when I die, all that I have thought and felt, all that I am, all the rich textures of experience and being encoded in the neuralogical circuitry of my brain will dissapate and rot, fading into entropy and erasure.

    Anyway, enough with the mawkish sentiments! I haven't slept in too long. Sure, that's it. Just need to get the day going right, read the morning paper and be about my meary way. heh


    Seriously, though. I have been looking into life extension via caloric reduction for a good while now. From what I understand, it has shown to be remarkably effective in creatures as minor as flanaria [mircoscopic flatworms], all the way up to mice, shrews, small mammels. IF started in the human equivilent of the mid-twenties, the projections are that a human being may have a life expectancy of around 120, maybe more [maybe far less, experimental results are hard with people, we're going to have to wait a long while, obviousl].

    And it's by no means certain that you would spend that time senile. Animals actually seem quite noticably and verifiably to age more slowly. Thus, you would have the physical form of a 40 year old when you were around 55, etc. In experiments with rheuses monkeys that have been going on for a several years now, the calorie-restricted one's actually had the hormonal balances of much younger ones, and no grey hairs like the control group has begun to develop.

    Anyway, take it all with a grain of salt. [Oh wait, that's too much salt, sorry, half a grain!]

    The major secret to the technique is to ensure that you recieve wholly adequate nutrition, r.e. vitamins, protein, proper trace minerals, but a lot less calories they your body thinks it needs. This seems to cause the body to slow down.

    There is a good source of more information here
    Be carefull, this can be dangerous if not done rihgt. I've thought of doing it myself, but I just like food so much! Heh. Actually, my greatest concern is in possibly neurological consequences, I don't want to risk subtly damaging or slowing down my brain in any way. Perhaps this new years resolution will be to flirt with trying it?


    ---
    man sig

    --

    ---
    the pen is mightier then the sword. the sword is mightier then the court. the court is mightier then the pen.
    1. Re:Mortality sucks. by jafac · · Score: 2

      do what the rest of us do.

      rationalize.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  56. Don't be so ignorant by Dan+Hayes · · Score: 2

    I'll get to the rest in a sec, but this comment is just too ignorant to leave...

    You have it so much better than African refugees, and yet you complain that some people have it even better than you do perhaps? Maybe you cannot afford toilet steaks? I suspect that is so. Even if it's not, maybe you're a vegitarian or, god forbid, a vegan.

    In case it had escaped your attention but anyone in the Western world with a job can pretty much afford to eat a steak the size of a toilet seat if they so desire. I certainly can, although I don't, because it's just piggish.

    Anyway, back to the rest of your post...

    It's one thing if I take a single bite, then throw the rest to the dog, even though that is acceptable, after all, I'm sure a lot of American dogs eat better than these starving Afric refugees you speak of.

    So you're proud that you live in a country where it's acceptable for dogs to eat better than some people do? Oh wait, yup, that's America.

    But, is it really wrong for me to desire a toilet bowl filled with cooked meat and potatoes? I don't think it is. That's like saying to the A frican refugees that they can no longer have something that they happen to have because there are some even less fortunate people over on the corner.

    No it's not, your example is once again overconsumption, using more than you can eat. It'd be the same however if your starving African refugee got an entire toilet-seat steak to themselves and then threw away what they couldn't eat rather than share it with their fellow men.

    So whqt else can we do but consume?

    Consume less.

    I'd be skeptical of any man that doesn't want to eat a steak the size of a toilet seat.

    Being greedy isn't actually a sign of manhood you know. You don't have to be a whale to prove your masculinity.

    But, sir, my real question is why you have such a problem with the American Dream being to 'consume as much as possible'.

    Because American culture interprets this as "waste as much as possible" as well. It is possible to consume without such huge levels of waste.

    I mean, nothing precludes those African Refugees from coming over here and starting a business, you know, nothing fancy, maybe an astrology shop.

    Right. And current American immigration policies are obviously geared to this aren't they?

    Living for your own hapiness isn't good enough, you have to piss and moan about how other people are unhappy too.

    I'm happy, and it'd be nice if everyone was happy as well. But you seem to have a real problem with empathising with those less well off than yourself - why?

  57. retirement by direwolf+puppy · · Score: 2

    Just think of how much longer you're going to have to spend at work, because you know the retirement age is going to go up if this happens.

    Bummer

    --


    You rush a Miracle Man, you get rotten miracles - Miracle Max, TPB
  58. Methuselah by trurl3 · · Score: 2
    I'm surprised no one had mentioned this, but wouldn't adding more lifespan to people increase the overcrowding problem on Earth?

    What would happen then? Would this finally be the Malthusian "Menace from Earth"? Or will humanity be threatened by "Methuselah's Children"?

    Dodging dead wombats and rotting cabbage...
    Trurl

    1. Re:Methuselah by TWR · · Score: 2
      What would happen then? Would this finally be the Malthusian "Menace from Earth"? Or will humanity be threatened by "Methuselah's Children"?

      I'm expecting that the Methuselahs will steal the "New Frontiers" hyperdrive ship and leave Earth...

      -jon

      --

      Remember Amalek.

  59. Stick That Up Your Limey Ass by Fleet+Admiral+Ackbar · · Score: 1
    The only reason you don't have any guns in England is because you willingly grabbed your ankles while your government stuck it to ya.

    You can be taxed, jailed, "coshed", denied decent health care, whatever... and you can't do anything about it.

    Sometimes I really wish Operation Sea Lion had gone through. That way, there wouldn't be any socialist countries left.

    --
    Carefree highway, let me slip away on you.
    1. Re:Stick That Up Your Limey Ass by meadowsp · · Score: 1

      national SOCIALISM, you twat.

      And I haven't seen many of you gun-toting Americans doing much about your current election.

      Why don't you (the majority of Americans that voted for Al Gore) turn over your corrupt government and put in the man with the mandate?

      What more are you waiting for?

    2. Re:Stick That Up Your Limey Ass by The+Troll+Catcher · · Score: 1

      Algore didn't have a majority. With Nader, Buchanon, and all the other third parties, both Gush and Bore had less than 50% of the vote.

    3. Re:Stick That Up Your Limey Ass by Fleet+Admiral+Ackbar · · Score: 1
      Just tell me how the Labor Party differs from the Communist party, and we'll be set.

      What's it like, having the ubermenschen buy Rover then shit all over it?

      What's it like, being an economic satellite of the United States?

      What's it like, having a pound with a dollar's worth of buying power?

      I voted for Bush. Put Gore in, and we'll see what happens with armed resistance.

      --
      Carefree highway, let me slip away on you.
    4. Re:Stick That Up Your Limey Ass by el_chicano · · Score: 1
      I voted for Bush. Put Gore in, and we'll see what happens with armed resistance.
      Ruby Ridge? Waco?

      I won't be shedding any tears for your neo-Nazi ass...
      --
      You think being a MIB is all voodoo mind control? You should see the paperwork!
      --
      A man who wants nothing is invincible
    5. Re:Stick That Up Your Limey Ass by el_chicano · · Score: 1
      the ones that voted for Gore are the ones without guns to do anything about it.
      That's what we liberals want you to think. Did you know that lots of minorities serve in the armed forces? That's right, the very same minorities who vote Democratic. I can show you how to field strip an M-16 in under 10 seconds...
      --
      You think being a MIB is all voodoo mind control? You should see the paperwork!
      --
      A man who wants nothing is invincible
  60. This may help longevity, but... by radiashun · · Score: 1

    it does nothing about aging. I don't know about the rest of the world, but I personally would rather die after 90 years than live to be 180 and look like a bag of sun-dried fruit.

  61. caloric restriction is not new by KevinMS · · Score: 1


    its been know to lengthen the life spans of mice. People have also been trying to appy this principle to themselves for years now. This new "discovery" seems to just another method of caloric restriction, maybe high tech, but just as interesting as the fact that having your stomach stapled reduces calories too. And why are they saying its the "I'm not dead yet" gene", its named "Indy" after the guy in that python movie that kept saying "I'm not dead yet". Reporters are such morons.

    --
    Sneakemail is to spam filters what an ounce of prevention is to a pound of cure.
  62. Other similar research by rkent · · Score: 2

    This isn't the first research in this direction. Here is an AP article about a study with monkeys, and there is also an interview here with 2 scientists who did similar studies on rats at U-dub Madison. I could've sworn one of those two followed a "restricted calorie" diet himself, but that could be someone else... ah, hell, I can't find that. Anyway, lots of preliminary evidence out there.

  63. Screw the Matrix by fobbman · · Score: 1

    What lessons did we learn from the movie "The Fly"?

    Don't go using that fly-gene stuff on ME!

  64. Longer Life with calorie restriction by charlesTheLurker · · Score: 1

    One thing to note here is that all of the experiments which show longevity increases with diet restrictions have been done in the lab. Conditions for a rat brought up in a plastic bucket with provided food and water are way different from those for a rat in the wild. The real evolutionary disadvantage of the calorie restriction gene may be a reduction in panic-level strength -- sure you'll live longer if you avoid predators and sickness, but you are also far more vulnerable to them if they come your way. This would hold true for humans as well.

  65. But what's the quality of life? by CubeDweller · · Score: 3

    Scientific American ran an article in one of their special edition magazines this last June called The Famine of Youth. It's a very informative article with several sub-parts covering the type of diet necessary, as well as the type of lifestyle you can expect to live. Unfortunately the web page doesn't seem to contain everything the magazine article did. The full story of Greg Smith that was in the magazine was eye opening and a little frightening.

    After reading this article, it seems to me that the diet involved is quite a bit more severe than is being assumed here. It's not nearly enough just to give up snacking. According to the article It's four or five small meals a day, predominantly vegetables and fruits, and a life in which you are perpetually cold, painfully thin and constantly hungry. Calorie restriction, quite simply, is a Draconian diet and a lifelong one at that. Once you start living this diet, you can lose the ability to produce your own body heat.

    The required diet is so small that it would come close to being torture. As an American I can fully appreciate the need to reduce unnecessary calorie intake. I ate enough to feed three people all through my teenage years. I eat fairly small meals now, but I don't know anyone who even approaches this kind of a diet. This is closer to a carefully controlled anorexia with special attention given to nutrient density.

    I can appreciate this science for its goal, but it's still in the stage where the cure is worse than the disease. I would definitely take 70 comfortable years of life over 100 years of life on this program. Interesting, yes, and I'd expect that this concept will be the foundation to several new and innovative ideas in health, but it's not ready yet. American or no, I don't see too many people being willing to subject themselves to this kind of a life just to tweak out a few more years.


    Seth

    1. Re:But what's the quality of life? by jafac · · Score: 2

      or, subject yourself to a diet like this, and die in 20 when the earth's climate spins radically out of control.

      Or die in 5 years from an anyeurism in your brain.

      Or die in 2 years in a fatal car accident (slowly bleeding to death, with a broken neck, watching your own twisted mangled body twitching through the windsheild as you wait for an ambulance to make it to you through rush hour traffic.

      Or die in 1 year from police storming your house to arrest you for illegal posession of DeCSS source code; "oh, I thought he had a gun, it was a tofu sandwich? It looked like a gun!".

      Or die in 6 months from an out of control irridium satellite crashing through the roof of your house.

      --

      These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  66. Re:If it was that simple...Evolution already did by macnigel · · Score: 1

    "Im sure evolution would already have done it for us" Evolution implented a gene like that as a means of population control and to use resources efficiently. That specific gene allows the population to survive longer and reproduce for a longer period when compared to the *normal* fly, this is only useful in times when food is scarce. (when no food, fly lives longer thus in times of scarcity fly will be able to live reproduce for a longer period)

    --
    aucun potage pour vous!
  67. Exactly by Dan+Hayes · · Score: 1

    This is a fallacy. Most people's "diets" for losing weight involves eating less than the required number of calories. Your suggestion would seem to follow this line (losing significant weight in a few weeks). Yeah your body will adjust, this behaviour will often turn on the body's "starvation" metabolic response. As soon as regular consumption is restored, the body starts storing even more fat against future starvation. Such yo-yo dieting is often at least as unhealthy as being overweight in the first place.

    Yes, which is why I also recommended exercise as well. This is the reason why diet pills and the like don't work unless they're taken continually, and any real diet needs to affect a gradual, long-term shift in eating patterns.

    I'm sorry if you got the impression I was advocating short-term yo-yo dieting, I wasn't, I was merely saying that improvements can start relatively early if you keep a decent diet plan up.

  68. Restaurant portions by SmokeSerpent · · Score: 1
    The plates keep getting bigger!

    2/3 the people think that the restaurants make the portions too big, 1/8 think that they're too small. Who do you think complains?

    My favorite is how they keep shoving all this food in your face, (bread and beverage while you wait, a big salad, a potato, 1 1/2 cups of vegetables, and a 10oz steak, say) then the waitress acts like her day is ruined when you don't order dessert (my quota!).

    --
    All kings is mostly rapscallions. -Mark Twain, The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
  69. This sounds horrible. by Hornsby · · Score: 2

    At the risk of sounding like a troll and a nihilist, humans are living too long as it is. Overpopulation is already a major problem, and it's getting worse all the time. How are we going to have anough food, lodgings, and general environmental resources to support all of these 200 year old scientific wonders. We're always finding some kind of artifical way to go against the natural order of things. If you want to live a long time, all you have to do is eat well, exercise, and stay away from L.A. Our lifespan is already too long with modern medicine today, and the reproductive patterns of humans aren't unlike those of a cancer or bacteria. Let's all just die when we're supposed to and forget all of this nonsense.

    --
    A musician without the RIAA, is like a fish without a bicycle.
  70. Knowledge as a competitive advantage by Wills · · Score: 1

    2. Ancient human environments were tough -- famines, diseases, droughts, warfare. Knowing how to solve problems using accumulated knowledge is a valuable survival skill. The older you are the more you tend to know. Genes for long lifespan could therefore have advantages both to an individual and to the community in which they live.

  71. Slightly OT: feeding refugees by rkent · · Score: 2
    unless they eat enough to feed a dozen starving African refugees...

    Okay, lots of people seem to be latching on to this phrase. I think it's important to realize that it's being used simply for comparison, and not to imply that sending half of each huge-ass American steak to Africa would really solve anything.

    There are many, many reasons that people starve in all areas of the world. Americans eating a lot is generally not one of them. Having been to East Africa, I can tell you that there's PLENTY of food there. Portions in restaurants are generally huge, and it's often considered rude if you're invited over for dinner and don't have 2 or 3 large helpings of the host's painstakingly prepared meal.

    The problem is almost always one of local distribution, particularly in times of draught (which are more frequent and generally more serious than here in America). Even in the best of times, the people who live closest to production (eg, corn farmers) are just barely subsisting because commodity prices are so low that they frequently lose money on a harvest. So, even though they're almost swimming in food, they can't always provide proper nutrition to themselves and their families.

    When there actually is a food shortage, things are even worse. Scarcity of resources drives the prices up, theoretically, but the market is often controlled by corrupt officials and sometimes tons of produce gets sold on the international market for slightly higher prices, without helping the local sitation at all. Result: people starve, farmers still get screwed.

    And, sending food from here often doesn't help. Frequently it gluts the market, screwing the farmers again, and often even rots in transit, so ends up being useless when it gets there. There are all kinds of examples of mismanaged world bank programs that have miserable effects on indigenous cultures everywhere even when they're trying to do good in this way.

    So, go ahead and have your porterhouse. It doesn't cause anyone else to starve. But please also give to charities to help the hungry in America, and try to buy FairTrade commodities (like coffee) to help the agriculturists world-over.

  72. hm, by restricting conversion to calories... by rebelcool · · Score: 1
    I would assume this would be much like olestra, and food would just pass right through your system. Only it would be everything. So after every meal you would do a number on your colon :)

    Theres a reason we have this gene. I think it's fairly dumb to disable it. Perhaps in dangerously obese people it might be useful, but in the general populai? no.

    --

    -

  73. Bovine Planet by Photon+Ghoul · · Score: 1

    I suggest that anyone interested in the serious threat that the American diet poses on our very own survival read (or watch the video) Diet for a New America by John Robbins.

    Did you know that for every 1 lb of grain that could be used to feed a human, it takes 12 lbs of grain to feed a bovine? Know how much water it takes to raise cattle (including growing all of that extra grain)?

    Sadly, our less-than-century-old infatuation with eating like kings and queens will kill not only ourselves but our species. I truly don't believe that there is any turning back until we realize that -woops- our gluttony is bad for our bodies and our environment.

    Remember - Don't Shit Where You Eat

    1. Re:Bovine Planet by madrone · · Score: 1
      Awesome book! I have a copy nestled on a bookshelf at home.

      Check out the page!

      http://www.muzanji.com/jrobbins/index.html

  74. The problem is local and *political* by swb · · Score: 2

    The problems Africans have feeding themselves has more to do with local politics than anything else.

    Country after country in Africa is beset with internal political struggles, half or more of them degrading into armed conflict. Until they figure out their own political problems, they're going to starve (Somalia) and worse (Rwanda and others).

    It's quick and easy to point the blame at the west for "creating" these problems through colonialism, but many of these countries have tribal hatreds that predate any colonialism and many have actually gotten much worse since they lost their colonial masters.

    Unfortunately starvation in Africa is really just a symptom of Africa's inability to forge a political reality that works.

    1. Re:The problem is local and *political* by painterly · · Score: 1

      Exactly! THis post should be rated a 5!

  75. So is that why....? by PsychoKick · · Score: 1

    I've never had much of an appetite and am quite skinny, yet I've always had an incredibly fast recovery rate from diseases and injuries. I guess I'm a mutant freak. ^_^;;

  76. I remember something like this from a while back. by Lord+Kano · · Score: 2

    I remember seeing a scientist who found that earthworms lived about 50% longer when he cut their caloric intake by 1/3.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  77. Metabolism by cfleming · · Score: 1

    A car that burns half as much gas will run twice as long.

    But will it cover more distance?

  78. Prosperity: social and economic power is critical. by Convergence · · Score: 3

    What is actually evolutionary encouraged is not your own reproduction, but your descendents reproduction. A child that has no further children is not evolutionarily encouraged.

    Historically, individual economic and social power is associated with living longer. It's still true. Compare peasants and kings. Compare europe, south america, and africa.

    Since such power tended to derive from muscles and work, women, who are biologically disadvantaged in those areas, have historically lacked power. It is only recently with modern sanitation, medicine, and social equality that the higher 'natural' life expectancy for women has finally become apparent.

    The number one thing that would improve average life expectancy on Earth is PROSPERITY! Affluent societies can afford sanitation, child labor laws, much less back-breaking labor, modern machinery, technology, modern medical care, electricity, anesthetics, literacy. All of these lead, directly and indirectly to a healthier populace and longer life expectancy.

    Anyone who claims that prosperity and technology are wrong are cursing our world to poverty, cursing our world to starving short-lived miserable people. The world has enough of that already. This is a fate that no moral person could wish on anyone. (Unfortunately, there are millions of people that espouse this horrible vision, this is why I dislike the more radical environmental movements, of which Al Gore is a sympathiser. I further note that only people in affluent societies seem to be against progress. Those that do live in poverty seem to feel different.)

    Prosperity has it's flaws, but the benefits far outweigh them.

  79. But will someone beat Methos? by Sabalon · · Score: 1

    'nuff said.

  80. Methuselah? Feh.... by Dice · · Score: 1

    Someone give me a call when they can beat Lazarus Long. 2500 years and still chasing after his own (mother's) tail...

  81. HAHAHAHAHA by operagost · · Score: 1

    Well, maybe in your socialist nation, he would have been the loser. However, here in the nited States we have a thing called the Constitution, which was approved by geographical and cultural bodies called "states". Way back in the early 19th century, we decided to go to an electoral system to make it easier to count votes and give more voting power (not less as claimed by the ignorant) to the individual citizen. Of course, if you weren't such a EU drone you would know that.
    Go trolling elsewhere.

    --

    Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    1. Re:HAHAHAHAHA by el_chicano · · Score: 1
      Way back in the early 19th century, we decided to go to an electoral system to make it easier to count votes and give more voting power (not less as claimed by the ignorant) to the individual citizen.
      Bzzzt... wrong answer!

      Electors are apportioned on a winner take all basis, so it reduces the power of the individual (and large states that consist of large amounts of individuals). For instance, here in Texas the sheeple voted for Bush, who as everyone with half a brain knows is the idiot son of one of the worst presidents we have ever had. Bush won Texas so he got all the electoral votes.

      Had the electoral votes been apportioned on a proportional basis, then Al Gore would have gotten 40% of the electors from Texas. As it stood, my vote for Gore would have been wasted (except for the "meaningless" popular vote) so I went ahead and voted for Nader.

      If the electoral college enhanced the power of the individual, then it would always go hand and hand with the popular vote and there would never be any controversy. If the electoral college did not take power away from me (I'm a yellow dog Democrat) I could have voted for the candidate of my choice rather than vote for another candidate, albeit one with no chance of winning...

      Besides, the article you linked to contains a speculative hypothesis not a provable fact. People are not atoms, and political science is not physics! People don't always act logically, and they often act emotionally.

      How else can you explain racism and sexism? On that note, I keep finding it hard to believe that the two BEST candidates for the nation's highest office are both WHITE MALES!!!
      --
      You think being a MIB is all voodoo mind control? You should see the paperwork!
      --
      A man who wants nothing is invincible
  82. Re:Prosperity: social and economic power is critic by weave · · Score: 2
    I could buy that, but what seems to be happening lately is that the less educated and poorer people are the ones cranking out the babies. Educated and the affluent tend not to have a lot of kids, if any at all...

    In other words, while it's anecdotal, it sure seems that it's welfare that causes reproduction rates to go up, and the under-educated tend not to do a very good job ensuring a good education for their children, hence a real negative drain on overall societal productivity gains since society ends up taking care of them as well...

    In other words, I really think we've peeked evolution wise, it's all downhill from here unless we muck with it artificially (and you know we will). Today, the ones reproducing and carrying on their traits tend to be the *cough* stupid idiots.... :-(

  83. Fruit Fly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Due to the average life of a fruit fly, College isn't really an option. Caps and Gowns down't come in that size anyway.

  84. just a side effect? by rabidcow · · Score: 1

    Now I haven't read the article, and I don't intend to, but does this make them live longer because they motabolize less food into calories, or is that just a side effect?

    Everyone here seems to be assuming that they live longer because they effectively eat less, but is that really what's going on?

  85. What? by shren · · Score: 1

    Why *in the world* would genetic evolution lead us to live *longer*? The longer you live, the slower your reproductive cycles, the slower you evolve compared to shorter-lived beings!

    As they say in evolutionary biology, "What you do after you reproduce, from an evolutionary perspective, doesn't fucking matter."

    --
    Maybe the state's highest function is to grind out insoluble problems. (Zelazny, Hall of Mirrors)
  86. Sounds like magic. by Byteme · · Score: 1
    a gene in fruitflies that when disabled doubles the lifespan of the fruitfly. The gene has been affectionately nicknamed "I'm Not Dead Yet." The gene actually manipulates your metabolism by makeing it so the LESS of your food is converted into calories.

    A gene in a fruitfly will manipulate my metabolism? Amazing. Absolutely amazing.

  87. It's not that simple by code_rage · · Score: 1
    I don't just blame corporations, but I also don't let them off the hook entirely. As several postings have mentioned, there are some genetic tendencies, some behavioral habits, some psychological issues, some chemical issues (e.g. some medications tend to promote weight gain). I felt that your initial posting was unfair because I interpreted it as assigning some moral failing to people who are overweight, and because it assigned this as a uniquely American trait. American hyperconsumerism may play a part in the problem, but I don't see this as a trait unique to Americans. Everyone likes possessions and everyone likes food -- we just have more of them than just about anyone else.

    It may be appropriate to differentiate between those who are a little pudgy and those who are unhealthily overweight. Although we might think pudgy people are weak because they do not resist eating more than they need, the last time I checked, pudginess was not a uniquely American trait. Unhealthy weight levels, however, are a different story. There are individuals who know in the rational sense that they are harming themselves, but who overeat anyway. How does a hypothesis of American greed explain that?

    You're right that the genetic manipulation proposed by the article won't solve all of the problems. It seems unlikely to address the particular problems causing unhealthy obesity, because I believe the condition has deeper issues than flipping a single bit in the DNA. In my opinion, pathological overeating has more in common with drug addiction than it does with moderate overindulgence. It should be addressed as a medical issue, not as some sort of moral failing.

    As to the arguments that other countries with US-style fast food do not have the same problems with overconsumption: it would be interesting to try to determine why that is so. Maybe fast food and hyper-sweetened cereal, etc just hasn't managed to dominate the market to the extent that it has in the US. Maybe it has something to do with the mass media. Maybe it just hasn't had time to become the norm, and we will see problems in a generation.

    As to the power of marketing, sure it's not the sole explanation for eating disorders (both overweight and underweight). But it is almost certainly part of the problem. I read recently (sorry, can't remember where) that women in China are trying to lose weight as compared with the traditional view that a little plumpness was considered attractive. The article correlated this trend with the emergence of western TV in China, promoting a new ideal of beauty: the Kate Moss look. Anyone who remembers the cite, I'd appreciate a posting.

    1. Re:It's not that simple by el_chicano · · Score: 1
      It may be appropriate to differentiate between those who are a little pudgy and those who are unhealthily overweight.
      Pudgy. Now there is a word I haven't heard since I was a kid. :->

      I always used to say what is now Eric Cartman's signature line: "I'm not fat, I'm big boned!"
      --
      You think being a MIB is all voodoo mind control? You should see the paperwork!
      --
      A man who wants nothing is invincible
  88. Re:Prosperity: social and economic power is critic by jafac · · Score: 4

    That's why the offspring of old guys has a better chance of survival and reproduction than young guys.

    Old guys are financially better established (in industrialized nations), and therefore, better able to provide for their offspring, send them to private schools, live in rich, exclusive, safe suburbs, send them to college, and get them elected to the presidency of the united states. (which, as President Bill Clinton proved, is like the BEST way to get laid by a whole bunch of young women).
    (the daughters become debutantes, and progress to the trophy-wife stage, below. Poor chicks either cannot afford the plastic surgery to become a trophy wife, or can afford BAD plastic surgery, which negatively impacts survival rate).

    These young guys though, learn - that getting laid while young is not productive, because you get saddled with wife and kids too early, and either end up divorced or spending your evenings and saturdays at home with the wife and kids instead of working (or playing golf, which, in a career-enhancing sense, is actually working). So they work, and stay childless, until their wives are too old to have kids, they divorce them (pre-nup!) and marry an 18 year old trophy wife, and knock them up. And the cycle repeats.

    The thing I can't understand, is that with all of these pressures, why hasn't some rich guy funded a research into a decent male birth-control method so that young male children of rich old fathers and 18 yr old trophy wife mothers can have sex and not risk pregnancy - this makes no sense at all, because getting laid constantly is one of the perks of the rich, but getting some bimbo knocked up is a huge risk, which can suck away a guy's financial future, and therefore severely compromise the survivabilty of his offspring (meaning - guys with healthy libidos are actually less likey to produce financially robust offspring!). Perhaps child-support laws have not been effective enough for long enough of a time to have had an impact on this.

    --

    These are my friends, See how they glisten. See this one shine, how he smiles in the light.
  89. The skinny mouse by gelfling · · Score: 3

    There's a guy who shows up on TV once in a while who claims that restricting your overall coloric intake by nearly half you can extend your life by some large factor -> 20-30% or more. He brings out a mouse which is about twice as old as any other mouse and which has been fed roughly half of what a normal lifespanned mouse eats.

  90. Living on Light by puddles · · Score: 2

    Well now ... I can see that movement is going to gain momentum again. Why bother converting food into calories when you can live off of light and only eat "occasionally" when you "want to experience the taste".
    Living on Light - formerly Pranic Nourishment

  91. fruitflies != humans by Barbarian · · Score: 2

    And keep in mind that fruitflies live for what, 24 hours? And fruitflies are much smaller than us, and I doubt they have time to get fat in that 24 hour life, or is it 48?

    Applying fruitfly research directly to humans is like the salad craze of the 70's after it was determined that rabbits live longer with more veggies and less meat -- well, rabbits are herbavores normally anyways, and unless you redigest (...) like rabbits do, you're unlikely to have the same results in that case. Same for fruitflies.

    1. Re:fruitflies != humans by Ben+Hutchings · · Score: 1

      How about actually reading the article? The increase was from an average of 37 days to an average of 71 days.

  92. Oxidation Theory? by Doubting+Thomas · · Score: 1

    I believe the proposed cause for this phenomenon is that breaking down sugar produces free radicals, which damage the cells. These are counteracted by antioxidants (assuming you're consuming enough, which most of us apparently don't) which are supposed to capture the free radicals before they do damage, most but not all of the time.

    So if you break down less fuel, you create fewer free radicals, which means less cell damage, which means longer time between cell generations, which means the time bombs built into the cells goes off later, and the organism lasts longer.

    Or so went the theory.

    -

    --
    Just because it works, doesn't mean it isn't broken.
  93. Re:Prosperity: social and economic power is critic by weave · · Score: 1
    I don't think that is so far off. For example, in the early 80s when I was a cashier, I had to know how to figure out change manually (easy, just count it up to the tendered amount) and even add up the coupons manually.

    Now, if cashiers plug in the wrong amount tendered, they are lost and don't have a clue what to do...

  94. Food is a physical addiction by cpeterso · · Score: 2

    It starts when junkie parents first feed food to their children. In the beginning, the food is free, but as an adult I gotta pay big bucks to continue my food habit!

  95. Starvation == Longevity by ddstreet · · Score: 1

    In a study of cultures, regions, and people who live exceptionally long, the only common factor found was starvation. The less you eat, the longer you live.

  96. lol by pid777 · · Score: 1

    I can't believe we need to reverse millions of years of human evolution to make us inefficiant enough to lose weight. How about this: you could find a sport, turns out there a lot of fun even!

  97. Calorific Reduction by Karora · · Score: 1
    Calorific Reduction has been around for years as the only proven method of increasing life expectancy in humans (as well as other lifeforms).

    This research is interesting in that it extends that further, finding a way to control the effect other than through diet management.

    --

    ...heellpppp! I've been captured by little green penguins!
  98. Re:Prosperity: social and economic power is critic by dasunt · · Score: 2

    I once read of a theory which stated that the rise of such technology was not to better our lives, but to keep the same standard of living.

    Aboriginal people with low population densities only have to work a few hours a day to get all their diet needs. Its only when their population increases that they have to resort to farming and a greater expenditure of their time to support their same standard of living. Farming did not lead to more free time, it lead to less, and it also lead to a greater population increase, since the greater percentage of carbohydrates shortened the average time between pregnancies. As the population further increased, people turned more and more to farming, and hunting pretty much disappeared after all the big game had been killed off.

    The theory also stated that the reason behind the gender inequity was a push for less females, and thus, limiting the population growth. By encouraging warfare, villages put a higher value on boys instead of girls, and the warfare between villages had the nice side effect of making "no-man's land" where game animals could grow and breed.

  99. Wrong! by dasunt · · Score: 1

    scotay writes: Once you get passed breeding age, there is no longer any evolutionary rationale for extending lifespan past that date.

    The theory behind why menopause developed was that there is a time when a woman helping take care of her grandchildren will give more of a benefit then going through a risky pregnancy in old age. Grandma taking care of 3 grandchildren while their mother works will do more to ensure the survival of her genes then giving birth in her 50s. Men don't have to deal with risky pregnancies, therefore, we are fertile until the day we die. Menopause isn't normal for most species, its only humans and a type of dolphin/whale that experience it (IIRC). For most animals, having another child is the best way to ensure the survival of the genes, but for us humans, with our long childhoods and community teaching, grandma can be a big help. :)

  100. (OT) The Matrix fails physics by Goonie · · Score: 1
    If I learned one thing from The Matrixit's that the human body gives off more energy than it takes in.
    Was it just me, or did other people want to throw things at the screen when this vital plot point that unfortunately defies the laws of conservation of energy was revealed? Like, a little suspension of disbelief I can handle, but this was just so *ludicrous* . . .
    --

    Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
    --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
    1. Re:(OT) The Matrix fails physics by Zarniwoop · · Score: 1

      I sat their staring at the screen for a good five minutes, thinking to myself 'What did they just say? You have got to be kidding me!'. But then Trinity got another scene, and I got distracted and stopped thinking again ;)


      What do I do, when it seems I relate to Judas more than You?

      --
      Still not dead.
  101. Evolution works better if you DON'T live by human+bean · · Score: 2
    for a long time. The more adaptive strains are lost if they can interbreed to any great extent with older, less adaptive ones.

    After you breed, evolution just considers you a walking refugee from the protein pool.

    --

    *whup* "Get along, little electrons. Heeyah!"

  102. Dr Walford and longevity by Fastman · · Score: 1

    Dr. Walford has been promoting this for a long time. This was one of the reasons he was selected to be one of the scientists on the BioSphere 2 Experiment

    His website lists his many published books and studies.

  103. Along the lines of eternal youth by DeafDumbBlind · · Score: 1

    This story was appeared about a few weeks ago. Immortal skin that's not cancerous. Apparently the result of a small mutation. http://more.abcnews.go.com/sections/science/DyeHar d/dyehard001121.html

    --


    Jesus used to be my co-pilot, but we crashed in the mountains and I had to eat him.
  104. Aborigonals. by Convergence · · Score: 2

    Yeah, I remember hearing about that study. Aboriginies may have 'short' workweeks, but they don't get many of the labor-intensive things like medical care, automobiles, postal system, computers, television, cable, telephones.

    I know I could survive a lot cheaper with less work if I didn't have a computer or a car. (I don't have a car now, getting one would double my monthly expenditures.)

    How short could you make your workweek if you gave up all those toys? I could live on about 10 hours a week at my current pay rate.

  105. This is VERY old news mostly by ajs · · Score: 2

    The part about low caloric intake is quite old. I remember, back when the Extropians were hot, at TV show chronicled a bunch of their antics. One of the more interesting bits was a couple that was planning on extending thier life-spans by eating less.

    They had a very regimented set of diet and excersise that involved having to eat some really out-of-the-way foods to get the right mix of nutrients in such a small diet. It seemed like the kind of life-style that would make me long for a cheeseburger and fries, even if it meant I had to die 10 years younger.

    If the gene-manipulation route works out, does anyone know if we'll still have the same problem, or will your body be polite and take less nutrients from what you eat, but from all the right nutritional cross-sections? Sounds unlikely.

  106. Re:youve got an impersonator on k5 by Lord+Kano · · Score: 2

    Thanks for the info.

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  107. This makes me wonder... by goat_attack · · Score: 1

    I wonder if this extended lifespan thing might just be an evolutionary adaptation? Perhaps, if the fruitfly is living on a reduced calorie diet, it's merely living longer so it can have a chance to sit and wait until conditions are better for the offspring (when there's more food around). I'd like to hear from you biology types about this.

  108. Re:Prosperity: social and economic power is critic by CanadaMan · · Score: 1
    Unfortunately, there are millions of people that espouse this horrible vision, this is why I dislike the more radical environmental movements, of which Al Gore is a sympathiser.

    Oh please, what nonsense. Have you ever had a real conversation with an intelligent enviromentalist? You make the error of equating environmentally unsound industrial practices with benefits in technology and science. Please tell me why it would be impossible to have environmentally friendly methods of producing everything from primary resources like electricity to tertiary resources like computers? By suggesting that one can not have technological progress and environmentally sound manufacturing processes, you effectively perform a 'strawman' logical fallacy of the representation of those ideas which real, intelligent environmentalists espouse. You seem to indicate that prosperity and a clean planet are mutually exclusive; you are incorrect.

    --
    -- This sig is.
  109. Re: Bah. Eat less, tubby. by n+xnezn+juber · · Score: 1

    In some. I dare you to suggest that 0.001% of obese people (I know that is a huge number of people... Americans being fat tubs of lard and all) have mental illnesses that prevent them from stopping their eating. But for these 0.001% of the people, I say eat all you want! Fill up you fat face. But when you're through, join me in the gym. I doubt think those 0.001% of people that can't stop eating are also the exact same 0.001% of obese people that are allergic to exercise.

    Here's my favorite line from my obese adminitrative assistant (a.k.a secretary). "Yeah, I work out. I go to the gym once every other week." Or my other favorite but unrelated was "I'm going to the bank to pay my car loan. It's the American way, right?"

  110. You Fucking Idiots by netrat · · Score: 1

    Basically, this research amounts to shit. Animals are so phisiologically different than humans that any drug that you test on an animal normally has a completely different effect in humans. For example: Tylenol causes Renal bleeding in cats, Aspirin kills dogs, and pigs are unaffected by arsenic. Basically animal testing is scientifically a big fucking joke and the only reason that it is allowed to perpetuate is because big money is involved in it. Every year 100,000 people die from adverse reactions to drugs that were proven "safe" in animals and not even tested in vitro on human cells. Medical expenses for these adverse reactions cost taxpayers about 136 billion dollars a year. So just because removing this gene in a goddamed fruit-fly causes them to live longer doesn't mean it is going to do squat for a human being. Using animals as a model for human medical research is a big lie that is both harmful and mis-leading.News orginizations should be fucking ashamed of themselves for reporting this lie as having any validity.
    ----------------------------------

  111. Re:Prosperity: social and economic power is critic by nomadic · · Score: 2

    Aboriginal people with low population densities only have to work a few hours a day to get all their diet needs.

    While this is true, it doesn't really tell the whole story. The most commonly cited study I've seen is the one done on the !Kung a couple of years ago. While it's true that they worked less hours per week, they also faced much more uncertainty, which is why many of them eagerly switched to manual labor (mostly as cattle herders for neighboring Bantu tribes), which involved a lot more work, but a lot less hours. This may be what happened in the past as urban, agrarian societies began to form when people abandoned hunting for herding and farming.
    --

  112. Conservation of energy violated... by tbo · · Score: 2

    ...by darthpenguin. In another scientific breakthrough, researchers have discovered that darthpenguin is capable of doing thousands of calories of work while only taking in 600-800 calories.

    "We believe he's some form of biological perpetual motion machine. We have already filed a patent." said lead scientist Dr. Benjamin Schwartz.

    According to Dr. B.S., darthpenguin can eat less food than what all normal adults require for minimal subsistence living, and still be able to perform strenuous physical activity, all without losing weight.

    "This is truly remarkable. We intend to harnass him to a giant hampster wheel and use him to solve the world's energy problems. He only produces a minute amount of methane and carbon dioxide a day." another scientist was heard to say.

  113. Re:Prosperity: social and economic power is critic by Convergence · · Score: 2

    Actually yes, I do know a real environmentalist, myself. I am an environmentalist. I do not want to live in filth, I'm glad I live in an affluent society that has similar views. I said nothing about the incompatability of industrial practice and environmentalism. Only the radicals who wish to halt or reverse progress.

    There's a difference between what I think and what the radical environmentalists do. Firebombing. Hysteria over GM crops when golden rice can save millions of children from vitamin A deficiency. Hell, even Greenpeace has backed down on their lunacy about DDT; they actually agree it should still be used to stop Malaria. (25 million lives saved a year!) Food irradiation? How many outbreaks of salmonella and E.Coli, how many deaths could have been prevented? How many millions of people sicken or die each year from food-bourne illnesses? [references available upon request]

    I detest such views. I detest only those who espouse such views. They are morally wrong. No moral person could want tens of thousands of children to go blind, millions to suffer vitamin deficiency. No moral person could ban a chemical that has saved 25 million lives a year.

    I am glad of the environmental movement of the 50's-80's. If you were a member back then, I thank you! But, I find much less to respect about the radical parts of the modern environmental movement.

  114. For those interested in Goodwin's Law by duke_trinity · · Score: 1

    Goodwin's Law of Usenet
    Professor Goodwin, U of I, in 1981 made the observation that Usenet discussions gravitate downhill.

    He postulated that as the length of a discussion thread grows, the probability approaches one (1) that one participant will introduce the terms "Hitler" or "Nazi".

    The custom has evolved that the first party to utter "Hitler" or "Nazi" has lost the discussion, and the thread terminates.
    -Duke


    BTW, if you're interested in finding out from where I have plagiarized this information, it comes from a Tripod website.


  115. Re:My grandma is 83 and eats food fried in lard! by el_chicano · · Score: 1
    It's not "unhealthy". It's traditional Mexican food. Fried in manteca (fat), heavily salted, and the yummy treats heavily sugared.
    That kind of diet works well for people in less developed countries, whose diet is mainly rice and beans with a little meat on the side on rare occasions. It is different for Chicanos in the U.S.; we have a higher risk of suffering from heart attacks, strokes and diabetes. The American Heart Association has recommended that Chicanos should cut lard from their diet to lessen these risks.

    I don't know if you have tried tamales or flour tortillas cooked with vegatable shortening, but they come out dry and flavorless. I personally think giving up a couple years of old age in exchange for real deal is a no-brainer!
    --
    You think being a MIB is all voodoo mind control? You should see the paperwork!
    --
    A man who wants nothing is invincible
  116. A few points, Admiral by meadowsp · · Score: 1

    1) Rover, if Labour was the same as the communists surely they would have bailed out and re-nationalised Rover, rather than seeing them get shat on.

    2) What are you on about?

    3) Are you trying to diss the pound by saying it's the same value as your dollar? Step back and think about it for a minute...