I think I'm too chicken to do a DNA type test, wvwoman. It's bad enough there's so much information on the internet about us, and I'm not willing to share something far more personal like DNA. Cluck! Cluck!
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Originally posted by writeon View PostI think I'm too chicken to do a DNA type test, wvwoman. It's bad enough there's so much information on the internet about us, and I'm not willing to share something far more personal like DNA. Cluck! Cluck!
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i think you have a point, writeon!
Originally posted by writeon View PostI think I'm too chicken to do a DNA type test, wvwoman. It's bad enough there's so much information on the internet about us, and I'm not willing to share something far more personal like DNA. Cluck! Cluck!
they suggested: be sure lab is in the united states. request that your sample be destroyed, though this doesn't mean it will be. be sure to check the "opt out" box on the paperwork--though it only covers a portion of the problems.
ugh.
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On the other hand, if the findings lead you to pursue medical genetic testing, it's going to be on the record anyway. I miraculously came up negative for all of the cancer predispositions for my racial makeup, but am keeping the results in a research database for future use. A little spit to advance medical science.
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Uh, no thanks...
Maybe I'm paranoid, but if someone has your DNA, they can use it against you. What would the same people who steal your identity do with the very core of your physical body? What would the government do with it? I'd rather hand down medical history by word of mouth, or deal with it as issues arise. If you're predisposed with cancer, there's not much you can do to prevent it. I think by promoting your health and well-being at every level (physical, mental, emotional, psychological and even spiritual) to begin with, most illness can be prevented, even the serious ones.
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Name origin
One of my hobbies is Amateur Radio, within which there is a subset of hobbyists who especially enjoy restoring and using vintage, vacuum tube based equipment. The many small ventilation holes in the cabinets of such equipment combined with the glow of the vacuum tubes cause them to glow in the dark in a pleasing way, in my opinion, bringing me memories of my younger days when I had access to (now) vintage equipment with which to explore the magic of shortwave radio. Those who get a kick out of the old equipment have a saying, "Real Radios Glow in the Dark".
I also enjoy vegetable gardening, clam digging and other gentle outdoor pursuits, so I could have made up a name from those, but on the day I chose a user name I was in a radio mood.
Also, those who know Robert Crumb's off-the-wall comic book creativity will recognize my Avatar, the clueless and impressionable Flaky Foont, Mr. Natural's acolyte.
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Originally posted by YorkiesRule View Postmaradnu, so you are not even partly Jewish? Sorry if I'm being too personal, but you mentioned that you know Hebrew, so I was curious.
The DNA test tells what parts of the world your genes come from, but I doubt any DNA test can tell your religion. There have been substantial Jewish communities in a few of the countries that maradnu mentioned -- Germany, Scotland and France are three that I'm sure about. My family is Jewish and my ancestors came from the Ukraine and Scotland. I have good friends, a retired couple in the Philly suburbs, who both were born and raised in Scotland and both are from Jewish families; she is from Glasgow and he grew up in the Shetland Islands.
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maradnu
maradnu, that's really cool! You know that people who converted to Judaism by choice, without having any ulterior motives, are considered even more Jewish than the people who were born Jewish, because conscious choice is more important than what you are born as, which you have no control over.
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