2014 July Breaking News Labs Mixing Human DNA Animal DNA 1 of 5 - Last days news prophecy
2014 July
Breaking News Labs Mixing Human DNA with
Animal DNA 1 of 5
Last days final hour news prophecy update
2 of 4
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Csxy2CAg_jE
3 of 4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M3JAp2XdnRU
4 of 4 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BEMIh1i2ia0
5 of 5 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=amAXfL8LTUs
National Geographic article to describe an experiment in
2003, during which
Chinese scientists at the
Shanghai Second Medical University successfully fused human cells with rabbit eggs http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human-animal_hybrid
animal-human mixtures schb.org.uk
2013 BREAKING
NEWS WARNING TO HUMAN
RACE human-animal genetic hybrid or chimera
Human dog thousands of labs worldwide with animal human experiments this is sick and funded by the world Governments.
The UN is now and in preparation through 2025 worldwide.
Gods Judgement will happen
World war 3.
We are in the end times last days the medical field is playing god DANGEREOUS times we are living.
Part Human part animal genetic hybrids A parahuman is a human-animal
Genetic engineering hybrid or chimera hybrid.
For
Years Scientists have done extensive research into the mixing of genes or cells from different species, e.g. adding human (and other animal) genes to bacteria and farm animals to mass-produce insulin and spider silk proteins, and introducing human cells into mouse embryos.
Para humans have been referred to as "human-animal hybrids" in a vernacular sense that also encompasses human-animal chimeras. The term parahuman is not used in scientific publications.
The term is sometimes used to sensationalize research that involves mixing biological materials from humans and other species.
According to
Daily Mail, as of
2011, more than
150 human-animal hybrid embryos were created in
British laboratories since the
Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act 2008. DEVELOPMENTS IN THE CREATION OF ANIMAL-HUMAN MIXTURES: 5. Animal-Human Transgenesis 6. Animal-Human Gestation
6.1. Placing a human embryo into an animal 6.2. Placing human sperm into an animal
6.3. Placing an animal embryo into a human
6.4. Placing animal sperm into a woman
7. Animal-Human
Hybrid Embryos
7.1.
Embryo containing cells made up of both human and animal chromosomes 7.1.1. Non-human eggs into which human nuclei are inserted
Frog-Human Hybrid
Entities 7.1.2. Animal-Human chromosome transplant Mouse-Human
Hybrids 7.2. Non-human eggs stripped of their chromosomes into which human nuclei are inserted Gametal Cow-Human Hybrid Embryos Gametal Rabbit-Human Hybrid Embryos 7.3. Mixing of Animal and Human Gametes
Genetic Human-Hamster Hybrid Embryos 18/10/
2010 Ethics of animal-human mixtures
schb.org.uk/
.../report - animal-human ... 2/22 8. Animal-Human
Chimeras
8.1. Animal-Human Chimeras Created Through Xenotransplantation 8.2. Animal-Human
Embryonic and Fetal Chimeras 8.
2.1.
Incorporation of Human
Stem Cells into
Post-natal Animals 8.
2.2. Incorporation of (1) Human Stem Cells into Post-blastocyst
Stages of Non-human Embryos or (2) Non-human Stem Cells into Post-blatocyst stages of Human Embryos Genetic Human-Mouse Chimeric Fetuses Genetic Sheep-Human Chimeric Fetuses Genetic Monkey-Human Chimeric Fetuses
Genetic Pig-Human Chimeric Fetuses 8.2.3. Incorporation of (1) Human Pluripotent Stem Cells into a Non-Human Blastocyst or its Preliminary Embryonic Stages or
(2) Non-human Pluripotent Stem Cells into a Human Blastocyst or its Preliminary Embryonic Stages Genetic Human-Mouse Chimeric Embryos
Glossary
References
Nevertheless, mixtures between biological species are relatively rare in nature, and most such entities would be less 'fit' than their progenitors.
With respect to animal-human mixing, no evidence of any entities being born has ever been recorded but new developments in crossing the species barrier may no longer limit animal-human mixtures to the domain of mythology. Indeed, procedures have recently been developed by scientists which mix human and animal biological elements to such an extent that
it questions the very concept of being entirely human. For example, concern for animal-human mixtures was raised in
2001 by the UK
Animal Procedures Committee which indicated in its
Report on Biotechnology that though questions may exist as to the likely fate of such animal-human mixtures, there may be a deeper repugnance at the thought of their very existence. Indeed, The
Regulation of New Biotechnologies and published in 2004, that the crossing of the animal-human boundary was, in some respects, quite complex and subtle but that the mixing of human and animal tissues and materials was not by itself objectionable. In other words, in the context of therapy and preventive medicine, the
President's Council accepted that the transplantation of animal parts to replace defective human ones could be considered as ethical. Moreover, the
Council had no overriding objection to the insertion of animal-derived genes or cells into a human body - or even into human fetuses.