http://www.ctv9.ca/health.jsp?id=/yhealth/stories/2007/06/yhealth-20070611.htm
whats your opinions?
Yes, very interesting, but since it deals with "cloning" the U.S. bureaucrats will probably fight it. There is a lot of money to be had by the pharmaceutical industry and since the poli-ticians (the plastic people) are in the pharmaceutical (and oils) back pockets finding cures for the little people is not in their best interests.
Good find though...
If I was balding and the treatment was banned in the US, I would just go over to europe to get it done. Where there is a will there is a way.
Sounds like a good idea to me and I hope it works-out so that baldness in the future will be able to be eliminated by those who desire to have hair on their heads.
Thanks for bringing this article to our attention. Much appreciated.
Good find, Otaku.
Bruce
Hey. Thanks, Otaku. Thanks for keeping us all apprised of scientific advances in hair cloning. Shwew.
"What ARE your opinions?", you meant to have asked.
Hey, if you can go and find a doctor, or doctors, to make YOU resemble Christian Bale's character, the shape-shifting sorcerer "Howl" in the brilliant Japanese anime director Hayao Miyazaki's "Howl's Moving Castle", why, once they perfect hair cloning, they had jus' better allow peops who wanna have hypertrichosis, jus' like the world-renowned Hairy Rodriguez Family, to get THAT done, don'tcha think?
Wouldn't that be something? Made to look like Lon Chaney, Jr. from the classic Universal horror film from the 1930's, "The Wolfman"? Well, wouldn't it? Only thing is . . . you could never, ever change back again! . . . LOL . . . Chris H., please take note of this. Arroooooooooo!
Yours for weird Frankenstein science AND longhaired camaraderie,
Quenyan (+;-)}