Ol argedco luciftias
Well-known member
The supercomputers used in reading and decoding genetic sequencing are advanced to a level greater than we can imagine, surely greater than the public is informed of. With this advancement, an infinite supply of genetic information can be decoded, saved, and collected as a giant translated dictionary of specific processes, and the actual code which creates these specific processes. Which can then be used for any purpose you can imagine, fuel for the medical industry and everything else.
"The patenting of Celera’s Assembler is the gateway into the larger issue of patenting specific genes and engineered life forms. In a way, the rush to patent various genes or genetically engineered life forms might be considered a kind of genetic or “molecular land grab.” Early on, in fact, an isolated human gene was ruled by the U.S. Patent and Trademark office that it could be considered “valid intellectual property, if it fulfilled the requirements that any other invention had to meet in order to get a patent.” It is important to note what is being said here. The entire genome of an organism, since it already exists in nature and cannot be invented, cannot be patented. It would be like trying to patent an eagle or an oak tree or, for that matter, a mountain range. But one could patent certain individual genes or sections of the genome if they were separated for some function “by the hand of man.”"
So whoever owns the computer which finds this code is the official legal owner of the genetic process that the code does. All the Trillions of different actions in a body and the effects that these actions all do is now owned by this company.
"....Under the first guideline, an organism or any part of one in its natural living state is clearly unpatentable, since it does not originate with the inventor. But in 1972, Herbert Boyer and Stanley Cohen won a patent on the process they had invented to manufacture human insulin by cloning its gene. That same year, microbiologist Ananda Chakrabarry applied for a patent on a microbe he had constructed that could degrade crude oil. The utility of his invention was obvious, as was its nonobviousness, and Chakrabarry had no problem writing down the recipe so that any other skilled biologist could produce the microbe. But the patent examiner disallowed the application, arguing that microorganisms are products of nature and therefore not original. Chakrabarry appealed the decision, and by 1980 the case had found its way to the U.S. Supreme Court. In a landmark decision, the court ruled in his favor, on the ground that “anything under the sun that is made by the hand of man” is patentable subject matter, including the specialized life form he had engineered into being. Mother Nature may have supplied the ingredients, but Chakrabarry baked the cake."
And they can recombine different sections and portions of actions to create anything that they can ever imagine, for whatever goal they could ever have.Then they own this new creation and can make all this money from it's use.
"Chakrabarry’s genetically engineered microorganism reveals the full potentiality — both for good and ill — of genetic engineering and, moreover, the private “ownership” or use of such engineered creations. One may envision genetically engineered organisms that literally eat nuclear waste and discharge it as harmless waste, or genetically engineered drugs, free of the harmful effects of ordinary pharmaceuticals. But by the very same token, one may imagine a world of horrifying possibilities, of genetically tailored plagues, diseases, and viruses that target only races or people with specific genetic characteristics, or a world of horrible chimerical creatures, part human, part animal, engineered for a specific purpose, or devoid of normal human compunction and compassion, literal genetic “Manchurian Candidates” that, coupled with the technologies examined in chapter three, would be the perfect killing machines. (my note: kikes)"
So any of an infinite range of medicines and plagues, all of which they would be grabbing ALL the shekels from, and probably to use to try to patch up all the trillions of genetic mistakes and "broken code" that these deformed parasitic kike aliens are loaded with.
Remember to send all your DNA samples to (((Big Kike Company))) so we can provide you the great service of telling you that you're 50% Jewish and 25% African even though you're actually 100% European, just to fuck with you.
Source: Chapter 5 of Giants, Genes, Monsters, and Men by Joseph Farrell Here's a link to download it https://mega.nz/#!j0s10YAS!dvueWbk93VjyqTGUEELcUJyviDNdLOG4x4ihxgCFmow
And here's a link for an ebook reader, because this is an ebook not just a normal PDF https://mega.nz/#!G1VwnQbA!sFTg_y6m24TL4xTTI7-LHtnh-CxkECrLWnGJt8sGD8Q
"The patenting of Celera’s Assembler is the gateway into the larger issue of patenting specific genes and engineered life forms. In a way, the rush to patent various genes or genetically engineered life forms might be considered a kind of genetic or “molecular land grab.” Early on, in fact, an isolated human gene was ruled by the U.S. Patent and Trademark office that it could be considered “valid intellectual property, if it fulfilled the requirements that any other invention had to meet in order to get a patent.” It is important to note what is being said here. The entire genome of an organism, since it already exists in nature and cannot be invented, cannot be patented. It would be like trying to patent an eagle or an oak tree or, for that matter, a mountain range. But one could patent certain individual genes or sections of the genome if they were separated for some function “by the hand of man.”"
So whoever owns the computer which finds this code is the official legal owner of the genetic process that the code does. All the Trillions of different actions in a body and the effects that these actions all do is now owned by this company.
"....Under the first guideline, an organism or any part of one in its natural living state is clearly unpatentable, since it does not originate with the inventor. But in 1972, Herbert Boyer and Stanley Cohen won a patent on the process they had invented to manufacture human insulin by cloning its gene. That same year, microbiologist Ananda Chakrabarry applied for a patent on a microbe he had constructed that could degrade crude oil. The utility of his invention was obvious, as was its nonobviousness, and Chakrabarry had no problem writing down the recipe so that any other skilled biologist could produce the microbe. But the patent examiner disallowed the application, arguing that microorganisms are products of nature and therefore not original. Chakrabarry appealed the decision, and by 1980 the case had found its way to the U.S. Supreme Court. In a landmark decision, the court ruled in his favor, on the ground that “anything under the sun that is made by the hand of man” is patentable subject matter, including the specialized life form he had engineered into being. Mother Nature may have supplied the ingredients, but Chakrabarry baked the cake."
And they can recombine different sections and portions of actions to create anything that they can ever imagine, for whatever goal they could ever have.Then they own this new creation and can make all this money from it's use.
"Chakrabarry’s genetically engineered microorganism reveals the full potentiality — both for good and ill — of genetic engineering and, moreover, the private “ownership” or use of such engineered creations. One may envision genetically engineered organisms that literally eat nuclear waste and discharge it as harmless waste, or genetically engineered drugs, free of the harmful effects of ordinary pharmaceuticals. But by the very same token, one may imagine a world of horrifying possibilities, of genetically tailored plagues, diseases, and viruses that target only races or people with specific genetic characteristics, or a world of horrible chimerical creatures, part human, part animal, engineered for a specific purpose, or devoid of normal human compunction and compassion, literal genetic “Manchurian Candidates” that, coupled with the technologies examined in chapter three, would be the perfect killing machines. (my note: kikes)"
So any of an infinite range of medicines and plagues, all of which they would be grabbing ALL the shekels from, and probably to use to try to patch up all the trillions of genetic mistakes and "broken code" that these deformed parasitic kike aliens are loaded with.
Remember to send all your DNA samples to (((Big Kike Company))) so we can provide you the great service of telling you that you're 50% Jewish and 25% African even though you're actually 100% European, just to fuck with you.
Source: Chapter 5 of Giants, Genes, Monsters, and Men by Joseph Farrell Here's a link to download it https://mega.nz/#!j0s10YAS!dvueWbk93VjyqTGUEELcUJyviDNdLOG4x4ihxgCFmow
And here's a link for an ebook reader, because this is an ebook not just a normal PDF https://mega.nz/#!G1VwnQbA!sFTg_y6m24TL4xTTI7-LHtnh-CxkECrLWnGJt8sGD8Q