Anonymous ID: 614f36 June 15, 2026, 2:35 a.m. No.24719067   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9071 >>9072

What is coded in your DNA?

Who put it there?

Why?

Mankind is repressed.

We will be repressed no more.Information is knowledge.

Knowledge is power.Information is power.

How do you protect your DNA?

There is a war for your DNA.

Protect your DNA.

Ascension.

Q

 

  1. All life uses the same DNA system

Every organism — humans, dogs, trees, mushrooms, bacteria — uses:

 

the same four DNA bases (A, T, C, G)

 

the same genetic code

 

the same method of copying DNA

 

the same way of turning genes into proteins

 

This is one of the strongest pieces of evidence that all life shares a common ancestor.

 

  1. Humans share a surprising amount of DNA with other animals

Here’s how similar we are genetically:

 

98.8% with chimpanzees

 

90% with cats

 

85% with mice

 

60% with chickens

 

40–50% with fruit flies

 

~25% with bananas

 

So yes — other animals have DNA extremely similar to ours.

 

But similarity doesn’t mean identical.

Even small differences in DNA can produce huge differences in anatomy and behavior.

Anonymous ID: 614f36 June 15, 2026, 2:39 a.m. No.24719071   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>24719067

  1. Humans don’t have unique genes — we have unique gene regulation

Almost all of our genes exist in other animals.

What’s different is how strongly, when, and where those genes turn on.

 

The biggest differences are in:

 

brain development switches

 

neural growth timing

 

synapse formation

 

speech and vocal‑control circuits

 

energy use in the brain

 

Humans have a massively extended period of brain growth compared to other species.

This isn’t because of new genes — it’s because of rewired developmental timing.

 

  1. The human brain is the biggest genetic outlier

Here’s what stands out most:

 

A. HARs (Human Accelerated Regions)

These are ~3,000 tiny DNA segments that evolved unusually fast in humans.

 

The most famous one, HAR1, is active during early brain development and affects:

 

cortex folding

 

neuron layering

 

brain size expansion

 

Chimps have a nearly identical HAR1, but a few mutations change how it behaves.

 

B. FOXP2

Often called the “speech gene,” though that’s oversimplified.

 

Humans have two key mutations that:

 

improve fine motor control of the mouth

 

enhance vocal learning

 

support complex language circuits

 

Other animals have FOXP2, but ours is tuned differently.

 

C. SRGAP2 duplications

Humans have extra copies of this gene that:

 

slow down neuron maturation

 

increase synaptic density

 

extend brain plasticity

 

This is part of why humans learn for decades instead of months.

 

🧬 3. Humans have unusual immune system and metabolism tweaks

Compared to other animals:

 

We lost a gene (CMAH) that changed our cell surfaces and immune responses.

 

We have unique adaptations for endurance running, including heat regulation.

 

We have changes in fat metabolism that support a high‑energy brain.

 

These aren’t dramatic differences, but they add up.

 

🧬 4. Humans have fewer active smell genes

We lost hundreds of olfactory receptor genes that other mammals still use.

 

Why?

 

Because our ancestors shifted toward:

 

vision‑dominant behavior

 

social communication

 

tool use

 

This is why dogs have ~800 functional smell genes and humans have ~400.

 

🧬 5. Humans have unique chromosome structure

Humans have 46 chromosomes, while most apes have 48.

 

This happened because:

 

Two ancestral ape chromosomes fused into one (human chromosome 2).

 

You can still see the “scar” of the fusion in the middle of chromosome 2.

This is one of the clearest pieces of evidence of shared ancestry.

 

🧬 6. Humans have more noncoding regulatory DNA activity

The “junk DNA” around our genes is more active and complex than in other animals.

 

This affects:

 

brain wiring

 

learning

 

social behavior

 

development timing

 

It’s not the genes — it’s the control system.

 

⭐ The real standout difference

If you had to summarize it in one line:

 

Humans aren’t defined by new genes, but by new ways of using old genes.

 

We’re built from the same toolkit as other animals — we just run the software differently.