I guess some cant read or understand no matter how many times it been said, there is no test,not one that will give any reliable results...

oke:
You're right - there isn't a test at the moment.
But what if there was? What if there was a genetic test that could be taken that would say definatively "your snake is carrying the stargazer gene" or your snake is not carrying the stargazer gene"? What would be people's stance be then?
I ask for 2 reasons.
1) Most of the negative stances or anti-test opinions revolve around the only current method of testing, which is of course by breeding with all it's potential complications and inaccuracy, plus the need to euthanase the babies. I understand why people don't like it. (While choosing personally to disagree with them).
2) Ive forgotten the other reason! Darn it - it's early here and clearly the caffeine hasn't kicked in! It was however, rest assured, a really good point....:bird:
I think the other reason may have been that although a genetic test at the moment sounds like a work of SciFi, it may be closer than you think.
Procorns (that is myself and my husband Adam) have for nearly the last year been trying to work towards the goal of a PCR test done on shed skin, that in it's ultimate extreme example could test for, well, any known het. We don't know If it happen, and if it does WHEN this might be, but we have to try!
At the moment we are helping a group at the University of Bangor by basically sending them shed skins from all our single homozygous gene animals to aid in their project to map the corn snake genome. This is phase one and is currently a PhD project underway. They also requested sheds from our homozygous stargazer animals. We haven't heard a lot from them recently but I guess we are getting into the exam/summer vacation time and so they are probably somewhat distracted.
However one of the last conversations that was had revolved around their desire to try and produce a PCR for stargazer and maybe one other gene as an end point to their project, but it required funding to achieve. Now they were banding around figures of roughly £30,000, and we did offer to help fundraise when the time comes. Personally I don't think that 30 grand is a lot of money to do this. Ok, it IS a lot of money, but surely as a worldwide community of corn snake lovers we could find 3,000 people that would donate £10 each to the cause? (This is an international forum - so £10 = 12.36 euros = $15.45). If we can get to this goal, (and please god we will), then to donate £10 to produce a test that could then be commercialised so we could know one way or the other would be truly an amazing thing to be part of.
So think about guys - if we could have this test, would you? If you would not I would really like to hear your reasoning. (please don't bring cost into this, we don't have a cost but assume it is going to fall into the "pricey but affordable" category).