... given the efficacy - or lack thereof - demonstrated by mRNA vaccines I would submit that a hold on anything mRNA while the discrepancy between what was sold and what was delivered is in order.
But no, let's just throw DNA changes at people until we get Chaos Daemons, I guess...
So they want to damage the heart to make it heal itself. I can see this going horribly bad for anyone who is at an age group that is predispose to heart attacks.
Almost the equivalent of the SRS surgeons for virology.
"Look at all these people who are giving us all this money to try weird experimental shit on them, and will thank us for doing so."
And because of how society is. Any successes are shouted loudly and paraded about, no matter how few, and anyone who suspects they may have been conned is handwaved away.
That's the thing about lobotomies that people forget. There were enough success stories to point to to sell it to the mainstream. But when you can pick a handful from thousands...
... given the efficacy - or lack thereof - demonstrated by mRNA vaccines I would submit that a hold on anything mRNA while the discrepancy between what was sold and what was delivered is in order.
But no, let's just throw DNA changes at people until we get Chaos Daemons, I guess...
Speaking of which, have you seen FlashGitz's Furry Apocalypse series based on 40k?
AVENGE ME, BROTHER! AVENGE ME!
You underestimate the amount of rope we have.
So they want to damage the heart to make it heal itself. I can see this going horribly bad for anyone who is at an age group that is predispose to heart attacks.
This is clearly people fucking around with technology they have no idea how to use. Some with malicious intent, others because "ooo, shiny!"
Almost the equivalent of the SRS surgeons for virology.
"Look at all these people who are giving us all this money to try weird experimental shit on them, and will thank us for doing so."
And because of how society is. Any successes are shouted loudly and paraded about, no matter how few, and anyone who suspects they may have been conned is handwaved away.
That's the thing about lobotomies that people forget. There were enough success stories to point to to sell it to the mainstream. But when you can pick a handful from thousands...
Engineers always ask the question "Can we do this?" but never ask the question "Should we do this?"
Apply that same approach to human DNA, and you're in mad scientist territory.
Not to mention the entire field of computer science.