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by Mark O'Connell April 24, 2026 from NYTimes Website
Article also
HERE
pouring Fortunes into 'Eternal Life'.
some of the most powerful people in the world now want something more:
eternal
life...
As they walked, their steps cushioned by an embroidered carpet of red and gold, their retinues followed along behind in cheerful deference. Both 'emperor's were 72 years old, about the age at which the people they ruled over typically died.
Though neither spoke the other's language, they
talked contentedly through their interpreters, of the possibility of
cheating death.
At this, the Russian 'emperor' became more animated.
Then the exchange stops abruptly, like one of the fractured clay tablets on which the ancient Mesopotamian Epic of Gilgamesh is etched, ending the narrative.
This fragmentary form only adds to the strange
intensity of the moment, the sense of being party to a scene we were
not supposed to glimpse, in which some secret about the nature of
power is hinted at.
For VIDEO click above image Video also HERE
The moment, though brief, felt lavishly overdetermined, rich in a kind of mythic political symbolism.
Xi and Putin were walking toward Tiananmen Square, the ceremonial center of the world's emerging superpower and a place synonymous with the government's brutal suppression of dissent.
Over the past decade or so, democracy has been retreating against a rising tide of illiberalism and plutocracy.
Power, in much of the world, is becoming more and more concentrated in the hands of a few authoritarian leaders and a small number of expansively ambitious tech billionaires.
As average life expectancy has increased,
inequality - in income and in access to health care - has widened.
And amid all of this, the world's wealthiest and most powerful have
developed a persistent hope, and perhaps even generated some small
possibility, that death might be eradicated entirely, or pushed back
so far that its existential force is diminished.
Say what you like about historical dynasties, but even the worst of hereditary sovereigns couldn't rule from the grave.
Blunt instruments though they may have been, morbid obesity and syphilis played their roles as agents of change.
If even the greatest tyrants must eventually die,
there is always some hope for a better world, or at least a
different one.
Such a prospect is, to say the least, still scientifically remote...
But that these leaders seem to want it in the
first place, and seem to believe that science might facilitate it,
suggests something important about our political era - and hints at
the shape of the era to come.
Illustration by Tim Enthoven
Among the most potent archetypes of our time is the elite who seeks eternal youth, whose power is drawn from the blood of lower mortals.
The man perhaps most associated with this desire is Peter Thiel, who once outlined his interest in blood plasma transfusions from the young as a means of extending life.
But more practically, and less vampirically, he has also invested many millions of venture capital dollars in various biotech concerns, seed-funding a flourishing Silicon Valley longevity ecosystem.
The OpenAI chief executive Sam Altman has invested $180 million of his own fortune in Retro Biosciences, a Bay Area biotech concern aimed at stalling and potentially reversing human aging.
Jeff Bezos is reportedly among the major funders of Altos Labs, a company that hopes to find stem cell therapies to extend human life spans.
The treatments pursued by such initiatives exist somewhere on the spectrum of plausibility; you could even imagine a scenario in which some of them eventually become accessible to ordinary people.
Yet it also seems obvious that the tech moguls' obsession with longevity most specifically applies to their own.
The goal of this enterprise, of Johnson's sacramental observances in a monotheism of the self, is to slow and eventually reverse the processes of aging, and to thereby become (and remain) biologically indistinguishable from an 18-year-old.
Johnson's motto, and the tagline of his proprietary longevity regimen, Project Blueprint, is "Don't die."
In its reduction of multiple disparate imperatives - of the pharmaceutical industry, of the Christian faith, of American individualism - to a single command, it must be admitted that this formulation has about it the simple-minded genius of a classic advertising slogan.
Don't die is the precise message audible in your heart's every finite beat, encoded in your troubled dreams and futile anxieties.
They have, for one thing, arrived - through
ruthlessness and ingenuity, through the obsessive pursuit of power
and personal enrichment - at an Olympian distance from the mortals
from whom their profit and power derive.
Is it not right that such a man should buy his
way out of death, that he should break this last tie that binds him
to the fate of his fellow humans?
Illustration by Tim Enthoven
The futurist and entrepreneur Peter Diamandis is convinced that A.I. can facilitate huge increases in human life span.
In 2023, he unveiled XPrize Healthspan, a seven-year competition for longevity research whose goal is to award $101 million to a team that,
The prize is backed by the Hevolution Foundation, a longevity-focused nonprofit with a $1 billion annual budget largely funded by the kingdom of Saudi Arabia, as part of its plan to make the country into a global hub of longevity research and innovation.
As with the likes of Altos Labs and Retro Biosciences, Hevolution employs an egalitarian language in its public communications.
And yet it's hard to imagine that the Bangladeshi
and Pakistani migrant workers who account for much of the Saudi work
force - many of whom are essentially indentured laborers - are
likely to have the same access to new life-span-extending
technologies that their employers (or their employers' employers)
do.
In a recent interview with The Financial Times, the fund's founder, Boyang Wang, revealed that one of the companies in his portfolio is working on "brainless clones."
The aim, he said, is to deliberately induce hydranencephaly, a disease in which infants are born without cerebral hemispheres but in which the basic functions of the body are in working order.
As an actual scientific possibility, this is distant or even outright fantastical, but it is worth thinking about on just those terms.
What is revealed by this particular vision of the
future, by this fantasy of literally mindless humans who would serve
as repositories of spare parts to extend the lives of their wealthy
owners?
Illustration by Tim Enthoven
Over the past four years, Putin has sent hundreds of thousands of Russians to Ukraine, in a war that has also killed more than 100,000 Ukrainians.
He has said that his decision to invade was rooted primarily in geopolitical considerations - that it was a response, first and foremost, to the threat of an eastward expansion of NATO.
But the deeper motivation seems imperial:
His accidentally public musings about the prospect of immortality through science seem to emerge out of the same grand narcissistic fantasy as his project of imperial restoration.
As with so many futurist dreams, the project of radical life extension reveals something important about our present.
It appeals to
the superwealthy, and to
leaders like Putin, not merely because it
allows them to deny the certain prospect of their own deaths but
also because of the reactionary energies it channels.
Watching that hot-mic clip (far above video), it's easy to imagine that he was really just indulging the eccentric preoccupations of his Russian counterpart, if for no other reason than it was something to talk about while they walked to the podium.
But in 2018, Xi rescinded a two-term limit on the
presidency that had been in place for decades, removing any legal
barrier to his serving as leader for life.
China's seemingly inexorable rise, under Xi's leadership, to global hegemony secures him a kind of figurative deathlessness.
The obsession with bodily immortality has a long pedigree in Chinese history.
The symbolic connection between gold and immortality transcends cultures and historical periods.
For the ancient Egyptians, gold was associated with the life-giving power of the eternal sun, and for the alchemists of medieval and early modern Europe it was both a symbol and a potential source of eternal life.
Because of its comparative rarity, and because it is a metal that does not tarnish or corrode with time, gold became the universal substance of wealth, something that could be passed on to descendants, as kings handed on power to their heirs.
A person could live on in his money, as he lived on in the structures it built:
These lines of magical thinking have now been rewoven in a more technologically sophisticated form.
In his 2023 "Techno-Optimist Manifesto," the billionaire venture-capitalist Marc Andreessen made the following assertion:
This was something of a tell, this invocation of the Philosophers' Stone:
This is the promise of technology, that it will
intercede between us and our deaths. This is the promise of money
itself...
And so will you, and so will I, and so will all those now living and yet unborn...!
Not a one of us will be saved:
None of these things will intervene between even the richest and most powerful of us and our common animal end.
The great and terrible democracy of death
abides...!
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