From: Eric Ruud (ejruud@ucdavis.edu)
Date: Sun Mar 14 1999 - 15:26:18 MST
-----Original Message-----
From: Sayke@aol.com <Sayke@aol.com>
To: extropians@extropy.com <extropians@extropy.com>
Date: Sunday, March 14, 1999 1:51 PM
Subject: Re: Hiveminds and the Great Filter
>In a message dated 3/14/99 10:04:10 AM PST, spike66@ibm.net writes:
>
>> I mentioned to a fellow >H that if any of the advances that
>> we routinely discuss here (life extension et. al.) became
>> reality, those techniques would be made illegal. Prime
>> example: practically any performance enhancing steroids
>> are banned from sports. spike
>
> true, practically any; however, thats because all but a very few have very
>interisting side effects. but im sure your aware of the success of
creatine
>(boosted by mcgwire hittin 71 homers), and that has no real negitive side
>effects. at least, none that i know of...
> basicly, i think that as we work the bugs out of new techs, they will
become
>both legally accepted, and socially accepted (which i think is in many ways
>more important)...
>
>sayke:
>high grand arch-viceassistant to the
>sub-overpraetor, acting equal with the
>grand poohbah of the hellingbam cabal
>
McGwire also took a legal steroid that Sammy Sosa refused to take because he
felt it was cheating. In a sense I think it is, but then, anyone with a
great deal of inherent talent is also a "cheater"...
-Eric
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