Info Wars is making the creation of another species sound like its - TopicsExpress



          

Info Wars is making the creation of another species sound like its bad idea. does that mean WE were a bad idea? if they share OUR DNA, why cant they have the rights in percentage of how human they are and how they do the following?: Behave Communicate Respond ___________________________________________________________________ Info wars says that those questions should never be asked. My reponse is simple: Would you expect any different treatment from a outer-space race or empire towards YOU? or do YOU want to treat another LIFEFORM that is SENTIENT Equal to YOU? thats easy to ask, you say no to either, and your possibly a huge jerk. enough said. here is literally a bit from an InfoWars website: On a farm about six miles outside this gambling town, Jason Chamberlain looks over a flock of about 50 smelly sheep, many of them possessing partially human livers, hearts, brains and other organs. The University of Nevada-Reno researcher talks matter-of-factly about his plans to euthanize one of the pregnant sheep in a nearby lab. He can’t wait to examine the effects of the human cells he had injected into the fetus’ brain about two months ago. “It’s mice on a large scale,” Chamberlain says with a shrug. When this article came across my desk recently, I noted that it was almost ten years old. Over the past decade, things have gotten much, much stranger. For example, scientists have now created mice that have artificial humanchromosomes “in every cell in their bodies“… Scientists have created genetically-engineered mice with artificial human chromosomes in every cell of their bodies, as part of a series of studies showing that it may be possible to treat genetic diseases with a radically new form of gene therapy. In one of the unpublished studies, researchers made a human artificial chromosome in the laboratory from chemical building blocks rather than chipping away at an existing human chromosome, indicating the increasingly powerful technology behind the new field of synthetic biology. And researchers at the University of Wisconsin figured out a way to transfer cells from human embryos into the brains of mice. When those cells from the human embryos began to grow and develop, they actually made the mice substantially smarter… Yet experiments like these are going forward just the same. In just the past few months, scientists at the University of Wisconsin and the University of Rochester have published data on their human-animal neural chimeras. For the Wisconsin study, researchers injected mice with an immunotoxin to destroy a part of their brains–the hippocampus–that’s associated with learning, memory, and spatial reasoning. Then the researchers replaced those damaged cells with cells derived from human embryos. The cells proliferated and the lab chimeras recovered their ability to navigate a water maze. For the Rochester study, researchers implanted newborn mice with nascent human glial cells, which help support and nourish neurons in the brain. Six months later, the human parts had elbowed out the mouse equivalents, and the animals had enhanced ability to solve a simple maze and learn conditioned cues. These protocols might run afoul of the anti-hybrid laws, and perhaps they should arouse some questions. These chimeric mice may not be human, or even really human, but they’re certainly one step further down the path to Algernon. It may not be so long before we’re faced with some hairy bioethics: What rights should we assign to mice with human brains? Originally appeared at The American Dream. made by MICHAEL SNYDER | MAY 20, 2014
Posted on: Thu, 02 Oct 2014 18:17:46 +0000

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