Anonymous ID: 08cfef Jan. 18, 2023, 6:39 a.m. No.18167662   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7682 >>7732 >>7763

Normalizing the unimaginable ahead of public disclosures?

 

"Remember when adrenochrome was a “conspiracy theory?” Now it’s conspiracy FACT in the form of “youth transplants”

 

Sunday, June 12, 2022 by: Ethan Huff

 

Tags: adrenochrome, anti-aging, badhealth, badmedicine, badscience, blood, blood harvesting, blood transfusions, children, conspiracy, evil, harvesting, life essence, longevity, organ harvesting, Twisted, youth transplants

 

(Natural News) For years, it was called a wild conspiracy theory. But the idea that “elitists” are siphoning the blood and life essence of young people in an effort to live forever has now been vindicated.

 

Ever since The Telegraph reported that so-called “youth transplants” can help reverse the aging process, the concept of blood-sucking parasites living among us suddenly became more real than ever.

 

They are branding it innocuously, of course, calling it an “anti-aging” process that taps into the “fountain of youth.” But the reality is that youth transplants are akin to the adrenochrome scandal that cropped up during the Trump years.

 

“‘Youth transplants’ is a euphemism for sucking out the vital fluids of baby / child ‘donors’ and injecting them into aging recipients,” writes Ben Bartee for The Daily Bell.

 

The Telegraph claims that “nobody is suggesting we siphon the bodily fluids of youngsters into our elderly.” But the reality is that this is exactly what is being proposed.

 

Biomedical entrepreneurs are already cashing in on teenage blood

 

Like they usually do, The Telegraph and other media outlets are pretending as though this is some new discovery that is still under investigation. The tone in which they are reporting on this suggests that it is some futuristic thing.

 

We saw a similar tone used when they finally unveiled chemtrails, also known as geoengineering, years after it was already taking place. Once they finally got around to spilling the beans, they pretended as though it had not been happening all along but was soon to come.

 

In both cases, the media presents these disturbing realities in glossed-over terms. Siphoning youth essence is “anti-aging” while geoengineering, we are told, will save the planet from global warming.

 

These evils are always presented to the masses as being a good thing that will fix some bad thing. This is how they sell the public on accepting things that most people would otherwise reject as evil.

 

Bartee explains that in 2019, a United States-based startup called Ambrosia – a name that is creepy in and of itself, considering the focus of its business – started selling teenage blood plasma to Silicon Valley billionaires for $8,000 a liter.

 

That company was later forced to shut down temporarily, and the question was never answered as to where Ambrosia obtained its teenage blood plasma.

 

Was it from the “wealthy children of DC elites, or some poor farmer’s daughter in a Guatemalan village, or the Compton streets, or some Appalachian township?” Bartee asks.

 

It turns out that the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) issued a warning to Ambrosia at the time about the safety of its product. The company remained closed for only a very short time because, according to its owner, “our patients really want the treatment.”

 

“The mega-rich can disrespect The Science© when they ‘really want’ to harvest the blood of the global poor, but you can’t if you’re skeptical of experimental COVID-19 mRNA ‘gene therapies’ marketed as vaccines,” Bartee further notes about the hypocrisy of the system.

 

Another Silicon Valley-based biomedical startup called Alkahest sells similar youth transplant products. Not surprising at all is the fact that billionaire eugenicist Bill Gates is involved with these various endeavors.

 

“Gates, the quintessential robber baron monopoly man in a non-threatening Mr. Rogers getup, loves nothing more than cornering the market on a valuable new biomedical commodity,” Bartee says.

 

So why now? Why is the corporate-controlled media suddenly telling the truth

about youth transplants?

 

Perhaps society has now reached the point of such degradation that these kinds of things will no longer shock the average person, who has been fully desensitized to every form of evil that pervades the West.

 

More related news can be found at OrganHarvesting.news."

 

https://citizens.news/627773.html

 

Anons, dig into "Ambrosia" ("2019 U.S.-based "startup" company, per above) and "Alkahest" ("another Silicon Valley-based biomedical startup").

Anonymous ID: 08cfef Jan. 18, 2023, 6:50 a.m. No.18167732   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7772

>>18167662

"MIT Technology Review"

 

BIOTECHNOLOGY

 

Questionable “Young Blood” Transfusions Offered in U.S. as Anti-Aging Remedy

 

A startup called Ambrosia will fill your veins with the blood of young people and empty your pockets of $8,000.

 

By Amy Maxmenarchive page

January 13, 2017

 

Just off a winding highway along the Pacific coast in Monterey, California, is a private clinic where people can pay $8,000 to have their veins pumped with blood plasma from teenagers and young adults.

 

Jesse Karmazin is the entrepreneur who made the practice possible, by launching a clinical trial on the potential of “young blood” through his startup Ambrosia. He says that within a month, most participants “see improvements” from the one-time infusion of a two-liter bagful of plasma, which is blood with the blood cells removed.

 

Several scientists and clinicians say Karmazin’s trial is so poorly designed it cannot hope to provide evidence about the effects of the transfusions. And some say the pay-to-participate study, with the potential to collect up to $4.8 million from as many as 600 participants, amounts to a scam.

 

What's certain is that it’s based on some intriguing if inconclusive science. Karmazin, a 32-year-old Princeton graduate and competitive rower, says he was inspired by studies on mice that researchers had sewn together, with their veins conjoined, in a procedure called parabiosis.

 

Over the last decade or so, such studies have offered provocative clues that certain hallmarks of aging can be reversed or accelerated when old mice get blood from young ones. Yet these studies have come to conflicting conclusions. An influential 2013 paper in Cell showed that a particular component in young blood, GDF11, increased muscle strength, for example, but other researchers could not replicate the finding.

 

Further, parabiosis experiments offer little insight into how Ambrosia’s one-time transfusions will affect people. “In our study, circulation between the young and old mouse was maintained for nearly four weeks,” says Amy Wagers, a professor of regenerative biology at Harvard University and an author on the Cell report."…..(moar)

 

https://www.technologyreview.com/2017/01/13/69219/questionable-young-blood-transfusions-offered-in-us-as-anti-aging-remedy/

Anonymous ID: 08cfef Jan. 18, 2023, 6:57 a.m. No.18167763   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>18167662

"Does teenage BLOOD hold the key to the fountain of youth? Plasma from human teens found to have anti-aging effects in old mice

Researchers injected old mice with blood from 18-year-old humans"

 

This was found to improve cognition and physical performance, they say

Technique could one day be used to develop anti-aging treatments

And trials have begun to test effectiveness in helping Alzheimer's patients

 

By CHEYENNE MACDONALD FOR DAILYMAIL.COM

 

PUBLISHED: 13:54 EST, 15 November 2016 | UPDATED: 17:09 EST, 15 November 2016

 

Life-extension advocates could be one step closer to the ‘biological fountain of youth’ – a treatment in which the blood of the young and healthy is used to reverse the effects of aging.

 

In a series of new trials, researchers have found that injecting the blood plasma of 18-year-old humans into old mice rejuvenates both the body and brain, improving cognition and allowing them to frolic about like their younger counterparts.

 

According to Alkahest, the company behind the experiments, blood plasma may hold the secrets to youth, and a similar technique could one day be used in procedures for humans."…..(moar)

 

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-3939242/Do-teenageers-hold-ey-fountain-youth-Blood-human-teens-anti-aging-effects-old-mice.html