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  by P.L. Chang
 June 9, 2013
 
			from
			
			EnergyFanatics Website 
			  
			  
			  
			  
			
			 
			  
			  
			  
			The Human Genome Project (HGP) was one 
			of the most sophisticated projects ever done in modern human 
			history.    
			The HGP main focus was to sequence all 3 
			billion chemical base pairs of the double helix human DNA. This 
			project was done by the US Department of Energy, the National 
			Institutes of Health and international partners. It took 13 years to 
			finish.   
			As described at
			
			Explorable.com. 
				
				The
				
				Human Genome Project (HGP) was a collaborative scientific 
				research program on international scale conducted to discover 
				all the chemical base pairs which make up human DNA for further 
				biological studies.    
				Specifically, its primary goal was 
				to map and identify both physically and functionally, the 
				approximately 20,000–25,000 genes of the human genome. 
				   
				The HGP was going to offer different 
				research perspectives by revealing the genetic factors in human 
				diseases, to help establish new strategies for their diagnosis, 
				cure and prevention. 
			The data collected from the HGP was 
			enormous and had a lot of great healing potential.    
			However, the people who are in control 
			of this project actually want to use it to further their dark 
			agendas. They are also trying to
			
			patent genes for their own selfish gains.   
			The data collected form the HGP will 
			help scientists to understand the roles of genes and how they affect 
			the body. However, due to greed, companies are trying to patent 
			certain genes so they can make large profits. Below is a list of 
			questions that we should think about when dealing with the action of 
			corporatizing genes.   
			From 
			
			KnowledGene.com 
				
					
					
					Who should have access to your 
					genetic information? Your doctor? Your insurance company? 
					Your employer? Your Congressman? The police department? Who 
					owns this information? How should patent laws apply?  
					
					How will people fare when they 
					are stigmatized and prejudged by others for their otherwise 
					invisible genetic characteristics? (e.g. a disposition to 
					abuse drugs, a low intelligence, a genetic disposition 
					toward homosexuality, etc…)  
					
					How should this information be 
					used during reproduction? Should couples test their unborn 
					baby for non-disease traits (such as intelligence) and make 
					reproductive decisions based on those tests?  
					
					Who will standardize genetic 
					tests and ensure their reliability?  
					
					Will people who desire to be 
					tested make accurate decisions while considering the 
					possible disease complications linked to gene-environment 
					interactions? (e.g. heart disease, type 2 diabetes, various 
					cancers)  
					
					Can people overcome their 
					genetically chosen behaviors? How much does free-will affect 
					behavior, and how many of our actions are genetically 
					predetermined? How should courts weigh these factors?  
					
					Who owns the genes and gene 
					sequences? (In terms of genetically altered foods and other 
					products)  
					
					How will we keep this knowledge 
					from being used by the "wrong hands?"       
			Genetically 
			modifying and cloning humans have been going on for decades   
			Most people have a hard time believing 
			that we already have the technology to clone humans and modify their 
			genes using genetic engineering techniques.    
			Certain government agencies that deal 
			with black projects have been tinkering with human genes and cloning 
			humans for decades. The way these agencies are modifying human genes 
			does not flow well with the laws of nature.    
			As a result, serious side effects, new 
			diseases and unforeseen consequences will arise from these genetic 
			experiments.   
			Scientists who work for public or 
			private biotechnology companies do not have enough knowledge and 
			wisdom to play god by artificially tinkering and combining genes of 
			species. As a result, their genetic experiments will usually have 
			negative results.    
			The proof that scientists do not have 
			enough knowledge to create species that are as good as the originals 
			can be found in the negative effects of
			
			genetically modified food (GM food) and cloned animals.  
			  
			GM food 
			has been linked to, 
				
			 
			If you have a hard time believing that 
			certain government agencies are modifying human genes and cloning 
			humans, read the excerpt below. 
				
				(DailyMail.co.uk)
				 
				The world’s first genetically 
				modified humans have been created, it was revealed last night.   
				The disclosure that 30 healthy 
				babies were born after a series of experiments in the United 
				States provoked another furious debate about ethics. 
				So far, two of the babies have been 
				tested and have been found to contain genes from three 
				‘parents’.   
				Fifteen of the children were born in 
				the past three years as a result of one experimental program at 
				the Institute for Reproductive Medicine and Science of St 
				Barnabas in New Jersey.   
				The babies were born to women who 
				had problems conceiving. Extra genes from a female donor were 
				inserted into their eggs before they were fertilized in an 
				attempt to enable them to conceive.   
				Genetic fingerprint tests on two 
				one-year-old children confirm that they have inherited DNA from 
				three adults - two women and one man.   
				The fact that the children have 
				inherited the extra genes and incorporated them into their 
				‘germline’ means that they will, in turn, be able to pass them 
				on to their own offspring.       
			The consequence 
			of exploiting nature   
			Nature works in mysterious ways and it 
			is very intelligent.    
			The way nature creates things is very 
			simple at the fundamental levels, but yet it is very complex at the 
			material levels. Nature always incorporates the Law of Balance into 
			its creation. Unlike nature, the techniques scientists used to 
			create their creatures do a poor job of incorporating the Law of 
			Balance.    
			As a result, their creations will 
			usually have serious side effects and they do not live really long. 
			  
			For example, salmons that were genetically altered with a growth 
			hormone gene not only grew too fast but also turned green. The 
			scientific term for these unforeseen side effects is known as pleiotropic effects.   
			If cloned and
			
			genetically modified humans are allowed to live with normal 
			humans in large numbers, they could contaminate the human DNA, 
			leading to unforeseen consequences.    
			The irresponsible actions of ignorant 
			scientists who think they are above the laws of the Universe are 
			some of the biggest threats to the survival of the human race. 
				
				(PakalertPress.com) 
				 
				But is this
				genetic manipulation of the human genome safe and ethical?
				   
				The answer to this, just like to all 
				genetically-modified organisms (GMOs), is a resounding no, as 
				nobody knows for sure what the long-term effects of vandalizing 
				human genes really are until after the irreversible process has 
				been set into motion.    
				And yet this has not stopped OHSU 
				researchers nor their British predecessors who conducted similar 
				experiments back in 2008 from engaging in the abominable 
				practice under the guise of supposedly preventing incurable 
				diseases.   
				According to reports, the OHSU team 
				that worked on the study, which was published in the journal 
				Nature, is currently trying to gain federal approval to 
				test the development of its
				GMO babies in actual women rather than in petri dishes, 
				which will take such experiments to a whole new level of 
				reality.    
				It will presumably not be long 
				after, should these "Frankenscientists" receive such approval, 
				before GMO
				babies are normalized throughout society, and eventually 
				perceived as genetically superior to normal babies with genetic 
				"defects." 
			  
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