GloFish... Unethical or awesome???

black light? harms your eyes very easily, if stared at for a length of time.

Yeah I know that (well it's not THAT easy). I thought it would be different for fish that live under intense sunlight along with the way water can refract and bend light making it more intense.
 
Word...I think most of the public fails to realize that more than 80% of all soybean and corn crops in the US are GMs...and NOT the "line breeding" sort of GMs either.

You can expand that beyond the US btw. :)
 
Banned because they could survive, and thrive in California waterways. Some of which are not polluted by tropical fish releases like some other Southern states.
Banned because gmos are deadly toxic to Unicorns, dim Moonbeams to nearly imperceptible levels, and cause the colors of rainbows to diminish greatly.
Unmodified Zebras are fine and dandy as far as the People's Republic is concerned, and populations pop up from time to time throughout the state, but rarely persist very long.
 
Banned because gmos are deadly toxic to Unicorns, dim Moonbeams to nearly imperceptible levels, and cause the colors of rainbows to diminish.

Ugh! Now I definitely can't GloFish :( I don't want to hurt my pet unicorn! Oh well... Guess I have to just get a pegasus instead...
 
Banned because gmos are deadly toxic to Unicorns, dim Moonbeams to nearly imperceptible levels, and cause the colors of rainbows to diminish greatly.
Unmodified Zebras are fine and dandy as far as the People's Republic is concerned, and populations pop up from time to time throughout the state, but rarely persist very long.

You forgot barking spiders....


Sent from my iPhone using MonsterAquariaNetwork app
 
Banned because they could survive, and thrive in California waterways. Some of which are not polluted by tropical fish releases like some other Southern states.
I know how they feel. Tacky, tacky, tacky
 
I think 90% of glo-fish treat them unethical and put them in a 3 gallon or something less than a 20.

People don't realize these are zebra danios and that they are active, and schooling fish.

Patrick makes a good point. You just know the majority of these fish are going into small or beginner tanks, since they're made to appeal to that market, but what can ya do.
 
AquariaCentral.com