Here is the problem with this.
Imagine WHEN this bacteria gets out in the wild and evolves to be tough. And it WILL. It will break down car parts, electrical wiring insulation, medical equipment, hoses, tubing, pipes etc etc.
It will be an unbelievable calamity.
This bacteria could be worse than smallpox.
Plastics are essential and its essential that we can count on them lasting a normal lifespan.
It anyone has ever left plastic out in the sun a few months and watched as it became brittle and broke apart in your hands then imagine how bad it would be when plastic everywhere was vulnerable.
Then we go back to rubber, metals, and other sound stuff, or figure out which plastic the bacteria doesn't eat.
This bacteria is already out there. She didn't create it. She just found it.
um nothing is sound
Have you heard of rust?
You just need stuff that lasts for a decent amount of time and you cant die from by eating
Have you heard of rust?
Oil or paint.
The operation to cause a worldwide blackout is based on this idea. A nanobot or a organic bot that eats silicone computer chips, combined with synthesized or theatrical solar flares.
Once again, we see that all women can really do (besides make babies) is destroy what men have built.
These particular bacteria only work on certain, relatively degradable plastics, in a wet environment. But this sort of thing is likely to evolve naturally, eventually; there's a huge amount of potential food out there for microorganisms to eat.
Plus, it could also adapt to eat other things. As it runs out of plastic, what may it look for to eat; what is plastic mostly made of? Oil. It could very well start consuming that, or other things oil based or similar to plastic.
The bacteria came from the wild; the headline claims like "newly invented bacteria eats plastic" are a kike fabrication to hide the real story.
This woman realized that places that have a bunch of plastics and pollution should have evolved bacteria that can eat it. So she went to some oil superfund sites and grabbed bacteria to test. It turns out that a bunch of varieties of bacteria can do so, and she isolated a few that are particularly good at it.
They want to push that 'the science' solved the problem. Reality is that plastic pollution never was a climate emergency, and always has been something that would eventually be handled by nature.
Interesting and good information. Thanks.
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