Castor wrote:Some specialists / doctors are also worried about the fact that we weaken our naurelle defense (and that of farm animals) by overuse of antibiotics and it seems (let us say) that microorganisms (viruses, or bacteria, this time I know more) become more and more resistant to what we use to fight them.
Hello,
To this question, I can answer, antibiotics are only effective against bacteria, no effect on viruses.
Castor wrote:I am not a very advanced culture on the subject, but it seems that microorganisms have capacities of adaptation and genetic mutation far superior to ours. I wonder what means of "control" do we have.
Somewhere, the fact that the adaptation of a species having a latency between generations of the order of a second (bacteria) is greater than that of a species needing twenty years to see arriving a new generation (the human) is relatively explainable.
If not, to return to the general subject of the post, our scientists will soon find the solution to our problems of waste and pollution due to incinerators: new factories or bacteria will eat our garbage cans to make electricity.
After "no arms, no chocolate", here comes the time for "no waste, no electricity"