Open Sesame. What David Shukman (BBC Science editor) says - "Inside the world’s most ‘impossible’ science project" isn't that odd to me: I have been to and work with people from many of the nations embroiled in problems and deal with them on a weekly basis and even in amongst the world's most unstable region when science is allowed to transcend politics and religion - where your nationality or sex or religion doesn't matter - there will always be seeds of hope: in this case a Sesame seed.
Saturday, December 01, 2012
Open -ology...
Open Sesame. What David Shukman (BBC Science editor) says - "Inside the world’s most ‘impossible’ science project" isn't that odd to me: I have been to and work with people from many of the nations embroiled in problems and deal with them on a weekly basis and even in amongst the world's most unstable region when science is allowed to transcend politics and religion - where your nationality or sex or religion doesn't matter - there will always be seeds of hope: in this case a Sesame seed.
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2 comments:
I agree, my only surprise with this story is that the Chinese aren't in there somewhere.
I'm sure they are...behind a few of the others no doubt.
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