by Shane Trejo at Big League Politics
Powerful tech corporations are putting billions of dollars into startups that intend to harvest the blood of children for the purposes of rejuvenation and anti-aging.
Newsweek published a profile on the growing industry, which includes injecting stem cells taken from dead mutilated fetuses into people, of humans playing God with disastrous consequences.
Stanford University neurologist Tony Wyss-Coray found years ago, with help from Saul Villeda, in 2011 and 2014 that injecting the blood of young mice into older mice had tremendously positive effects on their brain chemistry. His company Alkahest has done additional research in subsequent years.
Spanish firm Grifols has purchased Alkahest for $146 million, which may open up Pandora’s Box with regards to harvesting the blood of children. They hope to find a synthetic fountain of youth from researching the plasma of their young volunteers. This work is changing the field of geroscience forever, for better or worse.
Until these recent breakthroughs, “people working on diseases did not think that aging was modifiable,” says Felipe Sierra, who was formerly director of the Division of Aging Biology under the National Institutes of Health (NIH).
“That is actually what many medical books say: The main risk factor for cardiovascular disease is aging, but we cannot change aging so let’s talk about cholesterol and obesity. For Alzheimer’s, aging is the main risk factor—but let’s talk about the buildup in the brain of beta-amyloid proteins. Now that is beginning to change,” he added.
Before the COVID-19 pandemic hit, billions were pouring into this new industry. Some firms want to create infusions to change blood chemistry in the elderly. Others want to alter stem cells by introducing certain proteins into the bloodstream. The NIA is getting in on the action now, planning to spend $100 million over five years to understand “cellular senescence.”
Scientists are already coming up with quaint-sounding justifications to commit atrocities.
“If you put this work in an evolutionary perspective, we were not supposed to live that long,” says Gerard Karsenty, who is chair of the Department of Genetics and Development at the Columbia University Medical Center.
“Aging is an invention of mankind. No animal species has successfully cheated its own body—cheated nature—except mankind. Elephants may live for 100 years but they lived for 100 years a million years ago. Humans have outsmarted their own body,” he added.
Once this idea kicks off and becomes mainstream, a lucrative market will develop for children’s blood as a depraved and vainglorious society becomes dependent on their blood to maintain their vitality.
Big League Politics has reported on how fetal parts are being sold at a premium, with firms like…
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