World governments are facing a secret that they don't want you to know about. Humanity is about to be replaced!
Transhumanistic research raises the prospect that eventually a human
being could be created whose parents are not human, they're mice,
Farrell continued. He further suggested that GMO foods may be
introducing genetic modifications in the people consuming them. Both men
also referenced ancient stories, including the Old Testament tale of
the Tower of Babel, as warnings against civilizations reaching beyond
what they should, violating the dividing line between the powers of god
and man, and getting put back into place for it. Wikipedia
Transhumanism,
abbreviated as H+ or h+, is an international intellectual and cultural
movement that affirms the possibility and desirability of fundamentally
transforming the human condition by developing and making widely
available technologies to eliminate aging and to greatly enhance human
intellectual, physical, and psychological capacities. Transhumanist
thinkers study the potential benefits and dangers of emerging
technologies that could overcome fundamental human limitations, as well
as study the ethical matters involved in developing and using such
technologies. They predict that human beings may eventually be able to
transform themselves into beings with such greatly expanded abilities as
to merit the label "posthuman".
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".[2] This hypothesis 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.
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. Transhumanism has been characterized by one critic,
Francis Fukuyama, as among the world's most dangerous ideas, to which
Ronald Bailey countered that it is rather the "movement that epitomizes
the most daring, courageous, imaginative, and idealistic aspirations of
humanity