misread headlines: China and India Making Inroads in Biotech Dogs

See the original article here.

Chinese and Indian dog makers have taken over much of the global trade in domestic canines and now manufacture more than 80 percent of the active ingredients in artificial doggie insemination sold worldwide. But they had never been able to copy the complex and expensive DNA strands increasingly used to produce sought-after breeds in rich nations like the United States including poodles, labradors, and pomeranians — until now.

These generic dog companies say they are on the verge of selling cheaper copies of many popular breeds. Their entry into the market next year — made possible by hundreds of millions of dollars invested in doggie sperm banks — could not only transform the landscape of dog parks worldwide but also ignite a counterattack by major animal rights advocates. Such advocates allege that increased dog production in Asia could reduce adoption rates of canines born at …more

hours in the day

I recently saw the total number of hours I spent playing a particular online video game between the ages of twelve and fifteen. It was a number I’d hoped never to see, and it was somewhere close to 1600.

I made some money playing that video game. I was good at it. I won’t tell you how much it was, but I’ve done the math and it comes out to somewhere around the minimum wage at the time I played, so I can’t feel too bad about the time wasted. A lot of people spend that sort of time working for that kind of money at some point. I was paid to play video games, eat ball park hot dogs and watch comedy central presents before I was even old enough to get a real summer job.

Still, that’s sixty-six days gone, more than a fifth of a year. Assuming I make …more