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Date: | Mon, 4 Jun 2007 09:45:58 +0100 |
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> The formula industry could
>certainly have opted for being only beneficial, for use in cases
>of "need."
>
>The thought of choosing to be only beneficial just gave me this thought
>about the prosthetic limb industry demonstrating how much stronger
>and tougher artificial limbs are than human limbs; immune to cuts,
>strains, blood clots, necrosis and tumors, hygenic and easy to clean,
>cutting our nutritional needs, don't need to exercise any more... and
>wouldn't we want the best for ourselves (or our kids)?
Good analogy!
>
>As for the longterm studies you suggest in terms of their modifications
>(yes I misunderstood), in a way I think that their "science" is growing
>so "fast," (again, not that they even use the best of what they know),
>that any long-term studies might be irrelevent before they're done.
If that's the case - 'we can't do long-term studies because by the
time the subject babies are aged two, we have changed the formulation
again' - then they'd have to made to stop 'improving' their product!
> It
>sure wouldn't hurt them to do a little follow-up though, but that would
>be assuming that they cared, and it would just give them more fuel for
>marketing angles (as one modification will usually outweigh another,
>i.e. prove marketable superiority).
Precisely.
HWN, UK
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