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Transhumanism | AntiCorruption Society

Posted: October 27, 2015 at 5:42 pm

June 11, 2011

AND THE DESTRUCTION OF NATURAL EARTH

As the Global Elite Scum of the Earth (GESE) use their ill gotten gains (through their central banking scams) to re-tool life on planet Earth, it is CRITICAL that we wake folks up to this agenda and use our Collective Wisdom to disrupt and reverse their efforts. This page is dedicated to those goals.

The First Global Revolution called for in 1991 by the GESEs Club of Rome is essentially an Anti-Human movement. In their report they even stated: . . . the real enemy then is humanity itself. They are working to create their New World Order that is essentially a Pseudo World owned and operated by them.

This page was established to Expose, Oppose, and Combat this agenda.

Highly recommended web site of Aaron Franz: The Age of Transitions

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Biotechnology and The Corporations race to own nature

ON JUNE 16, 1980, ANANDA CHAKRABARTYS SUPREME COURT CASE LAUNCHED TRANSHUMANISM AND THE POST-HUMAN ERA AKA THE AGE OF TRANSITIONS!

Without any discussion, corporations now can own the blueprints of life. The ownership of DNA issue is very significant because in 2007 a law was passed granting the government the power to collect, catalog and store the DNA of every child born in the U.S. There is now a great race by biotech companies to patent each gene they discover human and other.

Full article

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In Defense of Humans

WHY HUMANITY IS AMAZING, WONDROUS, DEAR AND CANNOT BE REPLACED BY THE CORPORATIONS ROBOT (MACHINES) OR ANY OTHER BIZARRE PSEUDO-FORM OF POST-HUMAN

Only the dimwitted or severely damaged cannot recognize that the attributes, qualities and capabilities of homo sapiens with Free Will cannot be replaced or duplicated by machines (robots). If the global-controllers (war mongers) would get out of the way and cease with their social engineering, Psywars and exploitation can you imagine how fabulous and peaceful our world would be?

Details

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Microchip Implants, Mind Control and Cybernetics by Rauni-Leena Luukanen-Kilde, MD, former Chief Medical Officer of Finland

In 1948 Norbert Weiner published a book, CYBERNETICS, defined as a neurological communication and control theory already in use in small circles at that time. Yoneji Masuda, Father of Information Society, stated his concern in 1980 that our liberty is threatened Orwellian-style by cybernetic technology totally unknown to most people. This technology links the brains of people via implanted microchips to satellites controlled by ground-based super-computers.

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Post-Humans lets not go there

Dr. Strangeloves have been around for a long time. Are we certain that the story of Frankensteins monster was fictitious? The mad scientists never seem to disappear and continually manage to convince their funders that exploring new ways to create life-in-the-lab is justified because a) we can or b) it is an important step in the evolution of the human species. (GAG ME WITH A SPOON).

Now that profiteering corporations have control of our media, the general public rarely hears the objections of the bioethicists but are instead exposed to a relentless barrage of spin to justify whatever insane projects/programs Business, Inc and their partner Government, Inc. choose to engage in. Full article

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Gene therapy – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Posted: October 27, 2015 at 5:40 pm

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Genetic Medicine : Division Home | Department of Medicine

Posted: October 27, 2015 at 6:43 am

Advances in molecular biology and human genetics, coupled with the completion of the Human Genome Project and the increasing power of quantitative genetics to identify disease susceptibility genes, are contributing to a revolution in the practice of medicine. In the 21st century, practicing physicians will focus more on defining genetically determined disease susceptibility in individual patients. This strategy will be used to prevent, modify, and treat a wide array of common disorders that have unique heritable risk factors such as hypertension, obesity, diabetes, arthrosclerosis, and cancer.

The Division of Genetic Medicine provides an academic environment enabling researchers to explore new relationships between disease susceptibility and human genetics. The Division of Genetic Medicine was established to host both research and clinical research programs focused on the genetic basis of health and disease. Equipped with state-of-the-art research tools and facilities, our faculty members are advancing knowledge of the common genetic determinants of cancer, congenital neuropathies, and heart disease. The Division faculty work jointly with the Vanderbilt-Ingram Cancer Center to support the Hereditary Cancer Clinic for treating patients and families who have an inherited predisposition to various malignancies.

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Integrative medicine – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Posted: October 26, 2015 at 2:46 am

Integrative medicine, which is also called integrated medicine and integrative health in the United Kingdom,[1] combines alternative medicine with evidence-based medicine. Proponents claim that it treats the "whole person," focuses on wellness and health rather than on treating disease, and emphasizes the patient-physician relationship.[1][2][3][4]

Integrative medicine has been criticized for compromising the effectiveness of mainstream medicine through inclusion of ineffective alternative remedies,[5] and for claiming it is distinctive in taking a rounded view of a person's health.[6]

The Academic Consortium for Integrative Medicine and Health has developed the following definition: "Integrative medicine and health reaffirms the importance of the relationship between practitioner and patient, focuses on the whole person, is informed by evidence, and makes use of all appropriate therapeutic and lifestyle approaches, healthcare and disciplines to achieve optimal health and healing.".[7] Proponents say integrative medicine is not the same as complementary and alternative medicine (CAM)[1][8] nor is it simply the combination of conventional medicine with complementary and alternative medicine.[2] They say instead that it "emphasizes wellness and healing of the entire person (bio-psycho-socio-spiritual dimensions) as primary goals, drawing on both conventional and CAM approaches in the context of a supportive and effective physician-patient relationship".[2]

Critics of integrative medicine see it as being synonymous with complementary medicine, or as "woo".[9]David Gorski has written that the term "integrative medicine" has become the currently preferred term for non-science based medicine.[10]

In the 1990s, physicians in the United States became increasingly interested in integrating alternative approaches into their medical practice, as shown by a 1995 survey in which 80% of family practice physicians expressed an interest in receiving training in acupuncture, hypnotherapy, and massage therapy.[11] In the mid-1990s hospitals in the United States began opening integrative medicine clinics, which numbered 27 by 2001.[11] The Consortium of Academic Health Centers for Integrative Medicine was founded in 1999 and by 2015 included 60 members, such as Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, Georgetown University School of Medicine, and Mayo Clinic. In 2015 it was renamed Academic Consortium for Integrative Medicine and Health. The goal of the Consortium is to advance the practice of integrative medicine by bringing together medical colleges that include integrative medicine in their medical education.[1][12][13] The American Board of Physician Specialties, which awards board certification to medical doctors in the U.S., announced in June 2013 that in 2014 it would begin accrediting doctors in integrative medicine.[14]

Medical professor John McLachlan has written in the BMJ that the reason for the creation of integrative medicine was as a rebranding exercise, and that the term is a replacement for the increasingly discredited one of "complementary and alternative medicine".[6] McLachlan writes that it is an "insult" that integrative medical practitioners claim unto themselves the unique distinction of taking into account "their patients' individuality, autonomy, and views", since these are intrinsic aspects of mainstream practice.[6]

Proponents of integrative medicine say that the impetus for the adoption of integrative medicine stems in part from the fact that an increasing percentage of the population is consulting complementary medicine practitioners. Some medical professionals feel a need to learn more about complementary medicine so they can better advise their patients which treatments may be useful and which are "ridiculous".[8] In addition, they say that some doctors and patients are unsatisfied with what they perceive as a focus on using pharmaceuticals to treat or suppress a specific disease rather than on helping a patient to become healthy. They take the view that it is important to go beyond the specific complaint and draw upon a combination of conventional and alternative approaches to help create a state of health that is more than the absence of disease.[2] Proponents further suggest that physicians have become so specialized that their traditional role of comprehensive caregiver who focuses on healing and wellness has been neglected.[1] In addition, some patients may seek help from outside the medical mainstream for difficult-to-treat clinical conditions, such as fibromyalgia and irritable bowel syndrome.[1]

Integrative medicine is sometimes lumped together with alternative medicine, which has received criticism and has been called "snake oil."[9][15] A primary issue is whether alternative practices have been objectively tested. In a 1998 article in The New Republic, Arnold S. Relman, a former editor of The New England Journal of Medicine stated that "There are not two kinds of medicine, one conventional and the other unconventional, that can be practiced jointly in a new kind of 'integrative medicine.' Nor, as Andrew Weil and his friends also would have us believe, are there two kinds of thinking, or two ways to find out which treatments work and which do not. In the best kind of medical practice, all proposed treatments must be tested objectively. In the end, there will only be treatments that pass that test and those that do not, those that are proven worthwhile and those that are not".[5]

In order to objectively test alternative medicine treatments, in 1991 the U.S. government established the Office of Alternative Medicine, which in 1998 was re-established as the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (NCCAM) as one of the National Institutes of Health. In 2015, NCCAM was re-established as the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health (NCCIH). The mission of NCCIH is "to define, through rigorous scientific investigation, the usefulness and safety of complementary and integrative interventions and to provide the public with research-based information to guide health-care decision making."[16] However, skeptic Steven Novella, a neurologist at Yale School of Medicine, said that NCCIH's activities are "used to lend an appearance of legitimacy to treatments that are not legitimate".[9] The NCCIH website states that there is "emerging evidence that some of the perceived benefits are real or meaningful". NCCIH also says that "the scientific evidence is limited" and "In many instances, a lack of reliable data makes it difficult for people to make informed decisions about using integrative health care".[17]

A 2001 editorial in BMJ said that integrative medicine was less recognized in the UK than in the United States.[8] The universities of Buckingham and Westminster had offered courses in integrative medicine, for which they were criticized.[18][19][20] In the UK organizations such as The Prince's Foundation for Integrated Health, The College of Medicine[21] and The Sunflower Jam[22] advocate or raise money for integrative medicine.

In 2003 Michael H. Cohen argued that integrative medicine creates a liability paradox, in that the greater the cross-disciplinary integration among providers, the greater the risk of shared liability among them; thus, information sharing may expand liability but ultimately reduce risk to the patient; yet maintaining sharp boundaries between providers may decrease risk of shared liability but ultimately increase risk to the patient.[23]

Steven Salzberg has criticiz
ed the teaching of integrative medicine in medical schools, especially the inclusion of pseudoscientific subjects such as homeopathy.[24] In Salzberg's view in offering an integrative medicine course, the University of Maryland Medical School was "mis-training medical students".[24]

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Cell Therapy Ltd

Posted: October 26, 2015 at 2:46 am

Founded in 2009 by Nobel prize winner Professor Sir Martin Evans and Ajan Reginald, former Global Head of Emerging Technologies at Roche, CTL develops life-saving and life altering regenerative medicines. CTLs team of scientists, physicians, and experienced management have discovered and developed a pipeline of world-class regenerative medicines.

Sir Martin Evans' unique expertise in discovering rare stem cells led to CTLs innovative drug discovery engine that can uniquely isolate very rare and potent tissue specific stem cells. This exceptional class of cells is then engineered into unique disease-specific cellular regenerative medicines. Each medicine is disease specific and forms part of CTLs world-class portfolio of four off the shelf blockbuster medicines all scheduled for launch before 2020.

The products in late stage clinical trials include Heartcel which regenerates the damaged heart of adults with coronary artery malformations and children with Kawasaki Disease and Bland White Garland Syndrome. In 2014, Heartcel reported unprecedented heart regeneration clinical trial results and is scheduled to launch in 2018 to treat ~400,000 patients worldwide. Myocardion is in Phase II/III trials and treats mild-moderate heart failure affecting 10 million patients worldwide. Tendoncel is the worlds first topical regenerative medicine, for early intervention of severe tendon injuries, and has completed Phase II trials. It is designed to treat the >1 million severe tendon injuries each year in the US and Europe. Skincel is for skin regeneration, and is due to complete Phase II trials in 2015. It is designed to address ulceration and wrinkles.

CTL combines world-class science and management expertise to bring life-saving regenerative medicines to market.

European Society of Gene and Cell Therapy Congress, 17-20 September 2015, Helsinki,Finland (ESGCT 2015)

4th International Conference and Exhibition on Cell & Gene Therapy, August 10-12, 2015, London (CGT 2015)

The International Society for Stem Cell Research Annual Meeting, 24th-27th June 2015, Stockholm, Sweden (ISSCR 2015)

British Society for Gene and Cell Therapy Annual Conference, 9th-11th June 2015, Strathclyde, Glasgow (BSGCT 2015)

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Hormone Replacement Therapy – WebMD

Posted: October 25, 2015 at 5:48 am

1. Should I stop taking hormone replacement therapy (HRT)?

It depends on how long youve been taking it and why. Here are some facts to help you decide:

You may be taking HRT to relieve menopause symptoms. At one time, doctors also used to prescribe HRT to manage diseases like osteoporosis and heart disease in women past menopause. But in 2002, a Womens Health Initiative study found that women who took the most common form of HRT, a combined estrogen and progesterone pill, had a higher risk of heart disease, stroke, and blood clots.

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HRT and Menopause Symptoms: Research shows that a small dose of HRT is still the best way to reduce uncomfortable symptoms in early menopause. Women younger than 60 have the lowest risks, especially if they use the estrogen-only formula for a short time, applying it to their skin instead of taking by mouth.

Several years of treatment is usually enough to relieve symptoms. So if youve been on HRT for more than 5 years, talk with your doctor about tapering off.

HRT and Heart Disease: Doctors no longer prescribe hormones to manage heart disease or other chronic conditions like osteoporosis. If youre taking HRT to reduce the risk of heart disease, ask your doctor about gradually stopping it.

Before the WHI study, doctors prescribed HRT for heart problems. Some earlier studies showed that women who took hormones had lower rates of heart disease and other chronic diseases. The women may have just been healthier and had better access to medical care.

The WHI study and follow-ups confirmed that HRT didnt reduce the risk of heart disease; it increased it in healthy, postmenopausal women.

HRT and Osteoporosis: As with heart disease, you should weigh the benefits of using hormones with other risks. To reduce osteoporosis, doctors often suggest lifestyle changes such as regular weight-bearing exercise. You can also try medicine like Fosamax and Evista, or calcium and vitamin Dsupplements.

Or you may look at other choices, such as statins, which reduce cholesterol in the blood, but also treat osteoporosis and heart disease.

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Epigenetics: How Environment Shapes Our Genes

Posted: October 25, 2015 at 5:47 am

There is definitely a market for a good popular science book about epigenetics, and I eagerly awaited this one. But it fell short of my expectations. It simply is too short, and too lacking in depth. For the epigenetics of inheritance and evolution, there already is an excellent book out there: Evolution in Four Dimensions: Genetic, Epigenetic, Behavioral, and Symbolic Variation in the History of Life (Life and Mind: Philosophical Issues in Biology and Psychology) . However, the book by Jablonka & Lamb is getting a little old (in this field, things sure develop rapidly), and it lacks the issues that I was most interested in - the effects of epigenetic change on health. However, I'll restate, for the evolutionary side, the Jablonka & Lamb book is great.

Back to the book by Francis, 160 pages is just too short. I will acknowledge the great many notes and large bibliography included, but the first 160 pages are so superficial, I doubt the author finds the right audience for the notes/bibliography.

The author's writing style and explanations are fine, so if you want a quick overview on a topic of which you have zero knowledge before, this book will serve you well. However, for many of us, we must wait for a book with more depth, or a vastly expanded second edition.

For an example of excellent and in depth popular science writing, try Power, Sex, Suicide: Mitochondria and the Meaning of Life.

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Gene therapy – PBS

Posted: October 25, 2015 at 3:43 am

A treatment for Cystic Fibrosis. A cure for AIDS. The end of cancer. That's what the newspapers promised us in the early 1990's. Gene therapy was the answer to what ailed us. Scientists had at last learned how to insert healthy genes into unhealthy people. And those healthy genes would either replace the bad genes causing diseases like CF, sickle-cell anemia and hemophilia or stimulate the body's own immune system to rid itself of HIV and some forms of cancer. A decade later, none of these treatments have come to fruition and research into gene therapy has become politically unpopular, making clinical trials hard to approve and research dollars hard to come by. But some researchers who are taking a different approach to gene therapy could be on the road to more success than ever before. - - - - - - - - - - - -

Early Promise

Almost as soon as Watson and Crick unwound the double helix in the 1950's, researchers began considering the possibility- and ethics- of gene therapy. The goals were lofty- to fix inherited genetic diseases such as Cystic Fibrosis and hemophilia forever.

Gene therapists planned to isolate the relevant gene in question, prepare good copies of that gene, then deliver them to patients' cells. The hope was that the treated cells would give rise to new generations of healthy cells for the rest of the patient's life. The concept was elegant, but would require decades of research to locate the genes that cause illnesses.

By 1990, it was working in the lab. By inserting healthy genes into cells from CF patients, scientists were able to transmogrify the sick cells as if by magic into healthy cells.

That same year, four-year-old Ashanti DeSilva became the first person in history to receive gene therapy. Dr. W. French Anderson of the National Heart, Lung and Blood Institute and Dr. Michael Blaese and Dr. Kenneth Culver, both of the National Cancer Institute, performed the historic and controversial experiment.

DeSilva suffered from a rare immune disorder known as ADA deficiency that made her vulnerable to even the mildest infections. A single genetic defect- like a typo in a novel- left DeSilva unable to produce an important enzyme. Without that enzyme, DeSilva was likely to die a premature death.

Anderson, Blaese and Culver drew the girl's blood and treated her defective white blood cells with the gene she lacked. The altered cells were then injected back into the girl, where- the scientists hoped- they would produce the enzyme she needed as well as produce future generations of normal cells.

Though the treatment proved safe, its efficacy is still in question. The treated cells did produce the enzyme, but failed to give rise to healthy new cells. DeSilva, who is today relatively healthy, still receives periodic gene therapy to maintain the necessary levels of the enzyme in her blood. She also takes doses of the enzyme itself, in the form of a drug called PEG-ADA, which makes it difficult to tell how well the gene therapy would have worked alone.

"It was a very logical approach," says Dr. Jeffrey Isner, Chief of Vascular Medicine and Cardiovascular Research at St. Elizabeth's Medical Center in Boston as well as Professor of Medicine at Tufts University School of Medicine. "But in most cases the strategy failed, because the vectors we have today are not ready for prime time." - - - - - - - - - - - - 4 pages: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 |

Photo: Dr. W. French Anderson

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Wisconsin Diabetes Prevention and Control Program | Wisconsin …

Posted: October 25, 2015 at 3:42 am

Take the Diabetes Risk Test

Diabetes is a costly, complex, and devastating chronic illness that poses a major public health problem. Diabetes affects over 475,000 adults and 4,500 children and adolescents in Wisconsin. It is the seventh leading cause of death in Wisconsin, costing an estimated annual $6.15 billion in health care costs and lost productivity. Each year, more than 1,100 Wisconsin residents die from diabetes and many more suffer disabling complications, such as heart disease, kidney disease, blindness, and amputations. This burden is higher among minority populations. Much of the health and economic burden of diabetes can be averted through known prevention measures.

The Wisconsin Diabetes Prevention and Control Program (DPCP) is dedicated to improving the health of people at risk for or with diabetes. We rely on our strong partnerships in the development, distribution, and implementation of resources. Please use the links to the left as well as those below to access these resources.

Popular Links

Wisconsin Diabetes Surveillance Report 2012 P-43084 (PDF, 8.6 MB)

2011 Burden of Diabetes in Wisconsin P-00284 (PDF, 2.2 MB)

Diabetes Care Guidelines

Students with Diabetes: A Resource Guide for Wisconsin Schools and Families

Diabetes Self-Care Booklet - English, P-43081 (PDF, 1.2 MB), Spanish P-43081s(PDF, 1.2 MB)

Personal Diabetes Care Record English, P-49357 (PDF, 197 KB)

Blood Sugar Log Booklet English, P-00246 (PDF, 1.3 MB)

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Wisconsin Diabetes Prevention and Control Program | Wisconsin ...

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Becoming More Than Human: Technology and the Post-Human …

Posted: October 24, 2015 at 2:44 pm

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