Anonymous ID: 4efde4 Aug. 2, 2019, 2:29 a.m. No.7307382   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7998

NATIONAL NEWSReport: Epstein Wanted to Spread His DNA By Impregnating Women at New Mexico Ranch

 

Published 8 mins ago on 08/02/2019

 

It appears that the case of accused pedophile Jeffrey Epstein is getting more bizarre as each day passes. According to a July 31st report in the New York Times, Epstein who has been charged with the crime of sex trafficking underage girls, had wanted to impregnate as many girls as possible on his New Mexico ranch in order to disseminate his DNA throughout the human race.

 

The Times reported that over the years Epstein had confided to scientists and others about his scheme, according to four people familiar with his thinking, although there is no evidence that it ever came to fruition.

 

Epstein’s vision reflected his longstanding fascination with what has become known as transhumanism: the science of improving the human population through technologies like genetic engineering and artificial intelligence, according to the Times report. Critics have likened transhumanism to a modern-day version of eugenics, the discredited field of improving the human race through controlled breeding.

 

US District Judge Richard Berman doesn’t want that information to leak out in the Epstein case and issued a protective order, Bloomberg reported a few days ago.

 

The so-called protective order, standard in criminal cases, strictly limits how Epstein’s legal team can handle the information, and bars Epstein from reviewing the evidence outside the presence of his lawyers. It also prohibits anyone involved in the case, including the government, from causing any of the material to be posted online or on social media, Crain’s explained.

 

http://thejewishvoice.com/2019/08/02/report-epstein-wanted-to-spread-his-dna-by-impregnating-women-at-new-mexico-ranch/

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transhumanism

 

Transhumanism (abbreviated as H+ or h+) is an international philosophical movement that advocates for the transformation of the human condition by developing and making widely available sophisticated technologies to greatly enhance human intellect and physiology.[1][2]

 

Transhumanist thinkers study the potential benefits and dangers of emerging technologies that could overcome fundamental human limitations as well as the ethical[3] limitations of using such technologies.[4] The most common transhumanist thesis is that human beings may eventually be able to transform themselves into different beings with abilities so greatly expanded from the current condition as to merit the label of posthuman beings.[2]

 

The contemporary meaning of the term "transhumanism" was foreshadowed by one of the first professors of futurology, FM-2030, who taught "new concepts of the human" at The New School in the 1960s, when he began to identify people who adopt technologies, lifestyles and worldviews "transitional" to posthumanity as "transhuman".[5] The assertion would lay the intellectual groundwork for the British philosopher Max More to begin articulating the principles of transhumanism as a futurist philosophy in 1990, and organizing in California an intelligentsia that has since grown into the worldwide transhumanist movement.[5][6][7]

 

Influenced by seminal works of science fiction, the transhumanist vision of a transformed future humanity has attracted many supporters and detractors from a wide range of perspectives, including philosophy and religion.[5]