Anonymous ID: 04734e Feb. 3, 2020, 11:07 p.m. No.8019213   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9253 >>9401 >>9451 >>9582 >>9649 >>9699

>>8018872

I left much of the liberal bias in this article…but much of the info is relevant/scope of the unethical, Some China scientists already working with HIV viruses in unethical manner…

 

China’s Biotech Boom Could Transform Lives—or Destroy Them

Washington and Beijing have a shared interest in making sure new technology stays within limits.~~November 8, 2019

 

Several Chinese researchers have shown a willingness to ignore ethical and regulatory constraints on genetic research. In 2018, He Jiankui became a poster child for scientific irresponsibility when he announced he had edited the genes of two twins in utero without following basic safety protocols…to ensure that the babies, born to HIV+ mothers, enjoyed protection against the virus.

 

Earlier this year, Chinese researchers recorded another mind-bending milestone when they implanted human genes linked to intelligence into monkey embryos—

 

Communist China…Chinese government policies often blur the line between eugenics and education, lumped together as improving the “quality” (suzhi) of the population…

 

In just the past few years, the development of inexpensive gene-editing techniques has democratized biomedical research, producing a biotech bonanza in places such as China and creating a whole new category of security threats in the process, from the use of genetic information to persecute dissidents and minority groups to the development of sophisticated bioweapons.

 

China’s starring role in preventing the 21st century’s biotech perils stems from its skyrocketing investment in biomedical research. Historically, Western countries, and especially the United States, have been the epicenter of research in the life sciences. The United States alone accounted for some 45 percent of biotech and medical patents filed in the 14-year period ending in 2013. But now, thanks to heavy state-backed investment, China is catching up. Economic plans instituted in 2015 call for the biotechnology sector to account for more than 4 percent of China’s total GDP by 2020, and estimates suggest that as of 2018, central, provincial, and local governments had already invested over $100 billion in the life sciences. Chinese venture capital and private equity investment in the life sciences, meanwhile, totaled some $45 billion just from 2015 to 2017.

 

China’s growing role in biomedical research is raising plenty of concern. Several Chinese researchers have shown a willingness to ignore ethical and regulatory constraints on genetic research. In 2018, He Jiankui became a poster child for scientific irresponsibility when he announced he had edited the genes of two twins in utero without following basic safety protocols…to ensure that the babies, born to HIV+ mothers, enjoyed protection against the virus.

 

Earlier this year, Chinese researchers recorded another mind-bending milestone when they implanted human genes linked to intelligence into monkey embryos—and then said that the monkeys performed better on memory tests.

 

Communist China…Chinese government policies often blur the line between eugenics and education, lumped together as improving the “quality” (suzhi) of the population…

 

the United States. U.S. officials have been warning universities and research institutions that the biotech sector is a focal point for Chinese industrial espionage activities in the United States. And this past August, a senior Defense Department official warned Congress that China’s growing role in pharmaceutical manufacturing could allow it to disrupt deliveries of critical battlefield medicines, or potentially even alter them to harm U.S. forces

 

A critical feature of modern biotech, in contrast to technology like nuclear weapons, is that it’s cheap and easy to develop. A technique known as CRISPR, which the Chinese researcher He used in his illicit gene-editing work, makes it practical for just about anyone to manipulate the genomes of just about any organism they can lay their hands on.

 

CRISPR makes it much simpler to skirt ethical restrictions and terrifyingly straightforward for terrorist groups to develop fearsome biological weapons.

 

…There’s also a thriving and entirely unregulated black market—much of it based in China.

 

All of this means that biosecurity standards in places like China matter more than ever. After all, if a major bioweapon were to be unleashed, it’s unlikely that any major, globally integrated country could escape unharmed.

 

And get the WHO, Bill & Linda Gates, Big Pharma Vaccine companies, CDC, EU and The United Nations Out of it….Too corrupt for any country to trust!!! MY ADDED NOTE since Liberals are dangerously promoting all of these globalist organizations.**

 

https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/11/08/cloning-crispr-he-jiankui-china-biotech-boom-could-transform-lives-destroy-them/https://foreignpolicy.com/2019/11/08/cloning-crispr-he-jiankui-china-biotech-boom-could-transform-lives-destroy-them/

Anonymous ID: 04734e Feb. 4, 2020, 12:06 a.m. No.8019451   🗄️.is 🔗kun

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Funding:

The Lancet Global Health Commission on High Quality Health Systems in the SDG Era is supported by funding from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

 

The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation.

 

https://www.hqsscommission.org/funding/

 

 

Funding The Lancet

 

For our hybrid open access journals (The Lancet, The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, The Lancet Gastroenterology & Hepatology, The Lancet Haematology, The Lancet HIV, The Lancet Infectious Diseases, The Lancet Neurology, The Lancet Oncology, The Lancet Psychiatry, and The Lancet Respiratory Medicine, The Lancet Rheumatology), we offer either a “gold” open access choice or a “green” open access solution for submissions of research articles:

 

from April 1, 2013, funded by Versus Arthritis, Austrian Science Fund, British Heart Foundation, Cancer Research UK, UK Chief Scientist Office, UK Department of Health UK, UK Department of International Development (DFID), Dunhill Medical Trust, Motor Neuron Disease Association, Parkinson’s UK, one of the UK Research Councils, Telethon Italy, or Wellcome Trust;

from Jan 1, 2016, funded by WHO (including International Agency for Research on Cancer [IARC]);

from April 1, 2016, funded by Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation;

from May 1, 2016, funded by Breast Cancer Now or Bloodwise;

from July 1, 2016, funded by Worldwide Cancer Research;

and for submissions from Jan 1, 2018, funded by the European Centre for Disease Control.

 

https://www.thelancet.com/open-access