Free State Wyoming Forum
Free State Wyoming (FSW) Promotional => Making the Case for Moving Toward Freedom (and Wyoming!) => Topic started by: Twilight's Last Gleaming on July 17, 2008, 02:39:59 PM
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I've been mentioning Wyoming to my wife on occasion... always just in passing.
It's the slow process of getting Wyoming on her mind.
Problem:
She's getting her PhD in Molecular Biology
Now, I know next to nothing abount molecular biology, except that she messes around with DNA, genetics, chemicals, and radioactive stuff.
Since I lack the background in the field, I can't put forth an argument to convince her to consider Wyoming unless there is some *non-academic* industry in Wyoming that will have a need for a Molecular Biologist in about 5 years.
(the current specializations in the biology departments of the universities in Wyoming are not compatible)
Like I said, I'm clueless about Molecular Biology, so I have no idea what to look for....
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She's getting her PhD in Molecular Biology ... Since I lack the background in the field, I can't put forth an argument to convince her to consider Wyoming unless there is some *non-academic* industry in Wyoming that will have a need for a Molecular Biologist in about 5 years.
I guess the first question is, "Is her PhD and love of molecular biology so important that all other family matters are subordinate?"
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Theres the oil shale industry, to get approvals for expansion they'll need to have people
check for environmental pollution. Mines need consultants for environmental impacts, and on
down the line for various industries.
But she's looking for that six figure Ciba type job, that might be kind of tricky.
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I've been mentioning Wyoming to my wife on occasion... always just in passing.
It's the slow process of getting Wyoming on her mind.
Problem:
She's getting her PhD in Molecular Biology
Now, I know next to nothing abount molecular biology, except that she messes around with DNA, genetics, chemicals, and radioactive stuff.
Since I lack the background in the field, I can't put forth an argument to convince her to consider Wyoming unless there is some *non-academic* industry in Wyoming that will have a need for a Molecular Biologist in about 5 years.
(the current specializations in the biology departments of the universities in Wyoming are not compatible)
Like I said, I'm clueless about Molecular Biology, so I have no idea what to look for....
Is there a reason why a doctorate in molecular biologist can't hang out her own shingle on the Internet?
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I've been mentioning Wyoming to my wife on occasion... always just in passing.
It's the slow process of getting Wyoming on her mind.
Problem:
She's getting her PhD in Molecular Biology
Now, I know next to nothing abount molecular biology, except that she messes around with DNA, genetics, chemicals, and radioactive stuff.
Since I lack the background in the field, I can't put forth an argument to convince her to consider Wyoming unless there is some *non-academic* industry in Wyoming that will have a need for a Molecular Biologist in about 5 years.
(the current specializations in the biology departments of the universities in Wyoming are not compatible)
Like I said, I'm clueless about Molecular Biology, so I have no idea what to look for....
Is there a reason why a doctorate in molecular biologist can't hang out her own shingle on the Internet?
Dice.com or some place like that might give her a lead. I hate to say it though, but Ames, Iowa or
Salt Lake City, Utah would be the only likely spots even close to Wyoming where there any sort
of gene splicing/analytical work. Possibly something in Denver, Colorado or Kansas on a smaller
university lab kind of scale might be viable.
A friend's mother said something about Iowa City for a nuclear medicine work, but that's iffy since the
DOE funding has been pushed over to war funding.
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Well I just did a quick search for jobs in Wyoming and there are a couple of companies that do medical research etc. They have branches in Cheyenne, Laramie and Casper. So If you do a search you will see some that might work.
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Well I just did a quick search for jobs in Wyoming and there are a couple of companies that do medical research etc. They have branches in Cheyenne, Laramie and Casper. So If you do a search you will see some that might work.
Unfortunately, there are probably more molecular biologists employed in the military-industrial complex than in all other field combined, with the possible exception of the pharmaceutical houses.
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Well I just did a quick search for jobs in Wyoming and there are a couple of companies that do medical research etc. They have branches in Cheyenne, Laramie and Casper. So If you do a search you will see some that might work.
Unfortunately, there are probably more molecular biologists employed in the military-industrial complex than in all other field combined, with the possible exception of the pharmaceutical houses.
Iffy, crop genetics is insanely hot now, as well as chemical modifications to grain to produce all sorts of
odds and ends. ADM might have something in the wyoming area, dunno offhand.
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There's always NH. Dartmouth has jobs for molecular biologists, as do Millipore and many biotech companies in southern NH. NH also has the advantages of far lower tax rates, fewer gun laws, and a lot of settled-in Free Staters (including a couple of state reps, check out nhliberty.org).
In Grafton NH (where I live), even the local newspaper is run by Free Staters (and we're hoping the September issue will actually be debugged Roll Eyes)
www.graftongazette.com
But you do have to put up with lots of forests and kayaking rivers in NH... if you want total desolation, you've got to stick with Wyoming Grin
PS this isn't to say you should move to NH if you really have a good plan to find a job in Wyoming... there's plenty of room for 50 Free State projects Wink But if your career or lifestyle requires more "division of labor, comparative advantage. etc.", NH is always here.
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whoa, is there an edit function, or I am forever to bear the same of having posted without looking for it?
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whoa, is there an edit function, or I am forever to bear the same of having posted without looking for it?
Members get to edit after a certain number of posts. Don't worry about it.
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So join us, rather than coming here and cutting us ,and Wyoming, down.
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Ha! Typical geeky putdown. Libertarian types like that will always make their projects a niche movement.
Who wants to pile into a movement full of elitist fruitloops like that ? Probably a whole other bunch of elitist fruitloops. >:D They'll spawn a state full of people that will keep the late Freddie Blassie spinning in his grave. ::)
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Problem:
She's getting her PhD in Molecular Biology
Now, I know next to nothing abount molecular biology, except that she messes around with DNA, genetics, chemicals, and radioactive stuff.
Since I lack the background in the field, I can't put forth an argument to convince her to consider Wyoming unless there is some *non-academic* industry in Wyoming that will have a need for a Molecular Biologist in about 5 years.
(the current specializations in the biology departments of the universities in Wyoming are not compatible)
Like I said, I'm clueless about Molecular Biology, so I have no idea what to look for....
Find out what she knows about Fischer-Tropsch Synthesis and biomass gasification. I suspect that there's a CONSIDERABLE possibility of a biochemist/ molecular biologist finding work either in Wyoming or neighboring Montana,
The market is um, growing....
Background: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fischer-Tropsch_process
Fischer-Tropsch Archive [including Bureau of Mines and DOE]: http://www.fischer-tropsch.org/
Montana Governor Schweitzer and the Montana Symposium:
http://www.free-eco.org/articleDisplay.php?id=475
http://www.montanariveraction.org/coal-synfuels.html
http://governor.mt.gov/hottopics/faqsynthetic.asp
Casper Star-Trib article, Oct 1991: http://www.casperstartribune.net/articles/2005/06/22/news/casper/a2e0ab59d0ef19c0872570270020fd84.txt
Governor Brian D. Schweitzer
Office of the Governor
Montana State Capitol Bldg.
P.O. Box 200801
Helena MT 59620-0801
(406) 444-3111, FAX (406) 444-5529
Lieutenant Governor John Bohlinger
Office of the Lt. Governor
Montana State Capitol Bldg.
PO Box 200801
Helena, MT 59620-1901
(406) 444-3111, FAX (406) 444-4648
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Fischer-Tropsch Synthesis is industrial petrochemistry. What some refer to as "bucket chemistry". A very crude comparison would be a cosmetic reconstruction process, compared to rendering fat off of pigs and processing it to extract cholesterol for cosmetics or synthesis into hormones.
Her specialty would be to on a super basic level, to say, take the instructions to make insulin, and insert it into e-coli to make insulin, and then work on a process to extract and assay the results of a given process.
Repeat times 20x under different modifications, do a cost benefit analysis, and work up the basic outlines for an industrial line to produce insulin. And of course, work along with twenty other people or more, and make your work stand out enough that your performance reviews won't look like hell even if they choose someone else's work over yours.
"Welcome to the machine" as they say. And her husband wonders why she doesn't talk about it much. >:D
And of course, replace insulin(a high school level project these days) with todays hot organic chemical wonder.