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Pentagon DARPA to genetically engineer soldiers DNA,deliver brain zaps,fight 24/7 for days

the U.S. government, just like the Iranian Ayatollah said, is Satanic.
MONSTERS INC


Date Published: 22/1/03
Author: Chris Floyd

It sounds like the plot of an Arnold Schwarzenegger film. The Pentagon is developing a breed of 'super-soldiers', artificially altered into ruthless killing machines.


Pentagon dark lord Donald Rumsfeld is shovelling billions of tax dollars into the research furnaces of federal laboratories and private universities across the US in a wide-ranging bid to spawn 'super soldiers'. Fired by drugs and electromagnetic 'brain zaps', the super soldiers will fight without ceasing for days on end. The work is being directed by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) - yes, the same outfit now labouring under convicted terrorist-conspirator John Poindexter to build the 'Total Information Awareness' network that will allow Washington to monitor the electronic records and communications of every US citizens.

The DARPA 'war fighter enhancement' programme - an acceleration of bi-partisan bio-tinkering that's been going on for years - will involve injecting young men and women with hormonal, neurological and genetic concoctions; implanting microchips and electrodes in their bodies to control their internal organs and brain functions; and plying them with drugs that deaden some of their normal human tendencies - the need for sleep, the fear of death, the reluctance to kill their fellow human beings.

The research is 'very aggressive and wide open', says Admiral Stephen Baker of the Center for Defense Information. Indeed, the US Special Operations Command envisions the creation of 'iron-bodied and iron-willed personnel', who can 'resist the mental and physiological effects of sleep deprivation' while relying on 'ergogenic substances' to 'manage' the 'environmental and mentally induced stress' of the battlefield. Their bodies juiced, their brains swaddled in a Prozacian haze, the enhanced fighters can churn relentlessly, remorselessly towards dominion.

And the term 'creation' is not just fanciful rhetoric. Some of the research now underway involves actually altering the genetic code of soldiers, modifying bits of DNA to fashion a new type of human specimen - one that functions like a machine, killing tirelessly for days and nights on end. These mutations will 'revolutionise the contemporary order of battle' and guarantee 'operational dominance across the whole range of potential US military employments', the DARPA wizards enthuse.

Of course, the Pentagon is not waiting on sci-fi technology to enhance the physical abilities of its soldiers. Old-fashioned off-the-shelf 'additives' have long been shoved down soldiers' throats. For example, the use of amphetamines for pilots has been widespread for decades: during the first Bush-Saddam War, whole squadrons were cranked up on the stuff. Not only is the gobbling of speed officially sanctioned, it's actively encouraged, even implicitly mandated - careers can be derailed for pilots who refuse to drug themselves.

The results of this dope-peddling were clearly seen on the new imperial frontier of Afghanistan last spring, when two US pilots - hopped up on speed - killed four of their Canadian allies in a 'friendly fire' bombing raid. The pilots, now facing legal charges, say US Air Force brass pressured them into taking the mind-altering drug before the fatal flight.

But such glitches are inevitable in any grand scientific undertaking, and DARPA remains undeterred in its bold quest to 'push the limits of human input/ output', advance the 'symbiotic relationship between man and machine', and customise 'pharmaceutical technology' to 'embolden the war-fighter and his superiors', as military scientists declared at a Pentagon-sponsored conference on 'future warfare'.

What happens to the burnt-out husks of these 'iron' soldiers after their minds and bodies have been eaten away by relentless modification and ceaseless toil is, of course, of no concern to the Bush regime. Even now, the White House is cutting back on health benefits to military veterans - even going so far as to order veterans' hospitals not to advertise their services, lest broken soldiers actually seek to claim the promise of support their government once gave them. For men like Bush - protected scions of privilege who sit out wars in safety in booze-addled luxury - such promises are just cynical sucker ploys, aimed at coaxing decent soldiers into acting as the hitmen of empire before they're discarded when they're no longer needed.

How very strange it is. Those who want to turn US soldiers into mindless, drug-addled mutants and send them off to kill and die in far-flung wars of imperial conquest are seen as patriots, noble leaders, doing the will of God. Those who would rather see these good men and women called home, treated with honour and respect - their talents and dedication applied solely to the defence of their own great country, not pressed into the service of a greedy, rapacious elite - are denounced as 'traitors', 'anti-American agitators', 'allies of terrorism'.

But such is the inversion of values - the wisdom gone astray and turned to fell practice - that now permeates Bush's Washington and the Pentagon's fiery crucibles of war.



 http://www.theecologist.org/archive_article.html?article=372
:( 23.Aug.2004 23:57

hey u

the iranian ayatollah is garbage

The Quest for "Captain America" 24.Aug.2004 05:39

Bucky Barnes

Socal and moral issues aside, they're just too many to count, why treat a soldier's body like some tricked out SUV? The whole scenario above is flawed except for use as propaganda. It always has been.

Implanted electronics can be ruined by an EMP surge not unlike older pacemakers and microwave ovens , enhancement drugs can have severe allergic even lethal side effects that would be strategically disasterous on the battlefield. Any body augmentation from is prone to rejection/infection. Ask anyone who has had a body piercing so sour. These all require high maintenance support, and when that support base is compromised or destroyed, your troops are screwed.

But as propaganda, this "ubermensch" comic book fantasy works very well and is economically cost effective. There were the Nazi Aryans, the Soviet killing machines and now comes the American "warborg". Only someone who has no clue to current events would propose such a thing.

really 24.Aug.2004 07:38

video game nerd

Actually Darpa is the creation of Metal Gear Solid, a game for the sony play station. perhaps its time the author moved out of his parents basement and actually interacted with people

you are the one with no clue! 24.Aug.2004 13:14

give up troll

[Time for the troll retirement home I think, his one-track mind is addled, and he's getting rather old.]


The Olympic Mutant: Genetic Modification Could Be New Wave
Of Illegal Performance Enhancement
By Anne McIlroy
The Globe and Mail
8-24-4

Even as a newborn, he had bulging muscles that attracted the attention of curious doctors. By the time he was 4, he could lift almost seven pounds with each hand, with his arms fully extended -- something adults can find difficult.

There was something so innocent in the baby Popeye pictures published this summer in the New England Journal of Medicine, along with details about the genetic mutation that explains the German boy's extraordinary strength. (It has nothing to do with spinach.)

But there was nothing innocent in the buzz his strong arms and legs created in the athletic world. It had little to do with the fact that the baby, whose mother is a former professional sprinter, has the potential to be a future champion.

The ugly truth is that the German super baby may offer a genetic template for cheaters of the future. By the time he is 20, Olympic athletes may be genetically modified to grow muscles like his.

Forget about the next generation of steroids or growth hormones. Researchers say the future of cheating is athletes who have been genetically altered so that their bodies produce performance-enhancing substances on their own.

Many experts believe that the first genetically modified athletes could be competing at next Summer Olympics.

"I would think the Beijing Olympics may be the time to pick it up on a widespread basis," says Geoffrey Goldspink, an expert in muscle regeneration at the University College Medical School in London. He is already working on a test to detect genetic cheaters for the U.S. anti-doping agency.

The technology for gene therapy already exists. It involves using viruses to deliver new genetic instructions that become incorporated into muscle or other tissue and change the way they work. It has already been used in several labs around the world to create super-muscular rodents, dubbed mighty mice or Schwarzenegger mice. In many cases, the new genes often don't work all the time -- only when researchers deliberately turn them on by a simple action such as rubbing a leg muscle.

Some, including Dr. Goldspink, suspect that the practice -- dubbed gene doping -- is already being used in thoroughbred horse racing.

In humans, experts say, the only issue is safety. This means that there is a good chance that in a private lab somewhere in the world, researchers are getting ready to make a performance-enhancing addition to an athlete's DNA.

The World Anti-Doping Agency, led by Canadian Dick Pound, has pronounced that gene doping is cheating and has added it to the list of banned substances and methods for Olympic athletes.

Still, many athletes and their coaches are avidly following the latest scientific developments, which have been made by doctors hoping to find cures for muscle-wasting diseases such as muscular dystrophy or for blood disorders such as anemia.

When H. Lee Sweeney, a professor of physiology and medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, first used gene therapy to create super-muscular mice in 1998, he was swamped by e-mail messages from athletes and coaches wanting to use his discovery to improve athletic performance. One request came from a high-school football player who wanted to inject all the kids on his team.

They were excited by the news that Dr. Sweeney had found a way to inject a gene into rats and mice that instructs their bodies to make a hormone called insulin-like growth factor. The mice also take part in an exercise program, and after two months, they can lift 30 per cent more weight and have a third more muscle mass than normal mice.

Dr. Sweeney is still years away from testing his discovery in humans, but that didn't seem to matter to the would-be athletic guinea pigs who contacted him offering to volunteer.

Given the level of interest, and the millions of dollars at stake for those competing for Olympic gold in high-profile sports, the fact that gene therapy has so far proved risky for humans is probably not a deterrent for some athletes.

At the University of Pennsylvania, where Dr. Sweeney works, 18-year-old Jessie Gelsinger died in 1999 after receiving experimental therapy for an inherited liver disease that was treatable with drugs and diet.

For reasons researchers don't understand, the virus used to deliver the DNA they hoped would cure the young man caused his fever to run dangerously high. His major organs began to shut down, and his father made the decision to take him off life support.

Two "bubble boys" in France were successfully injected with genes to build their non-existent immune systems, but later developed leukemia.

Setting the safety issue aside for a moment, genetically altered athletes raise interesting ethical questions. In the years to come, gene therapy may not have the same Frankensteinian overtones it has now. It may turn out to be the best way to save the lives of patients with serious diseases, or even to help heal sports injuries such as torn muscles.

It is clear simply by looking at the bodies of many gold-medal Olympians that they have a natural genetic advantage.

In 1964, Finnish cross-country skier Eero Mantyranta was suspected of blood doping after winning two gold medals because he had so many red blood cells in his system. Three decades later, he was cleared when researchers found that he and many of his family members have a genetic mutation that increases their red-blood-cell count by 20 per cent.

Is it so wrong for athletes without this kind of extraordinary natural capacity to want to level the playing field?

It's cheating, says Mr. Pound, head of the World Anti-Doping Agency. At a recent meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, he suggested that regulators not approve clinical trials for gene-transfer therapy unless the scientists have developed a way to detect if the procedure has taken place. He urged researchers developing gene therapies that might have athletic applications to work on detection methods.

Dr. Goldspink is happy to help. He is developing a test to look for traces of the viruses scientists would use to deliver new DNA into an athlete's body. Those viruses have been altered so they don't cause disease, and so can be detected, he says. All that would be required would be a scraping of cells from inside an athlete's mouth. "We've got the techniques."

Others researcher, including Dr. Sweeney, argue that it won't be that easy to catch genetic cheats and may require invasive tests such as muscle biopsies, which wouldn't be practical at the Olympics.

Dr. Goldspink says it makes him feel better to try. After all, it bothers him to think that a lifetime of work designed to prevent muscle wasting in the sick or the elderly might help a sprinter gain an advantage over a competitor.

It is true, he says, that many elite athletes already have a natural genetic advantage over some of their competitors. For example, the ancestors of Kenyan long-distance runners needed to be able to cover a lot of ground at great speed to keep track of their cattle and stay out of the jaws of predators.

"Why can't other athletes do what evolution had done for the Kenyans over thousands of years, but speed it up by injections and genes?" Dr. Goldspink says. "I think, once you open that door, the whole thing becomes meaningless. It all comes down to who has access."

Others disagree.

Andy Miah, a lecturer at the University of Paisley in Scotland and author of the book Genetically Modified Athletes: Biomedical Ethics, Gene Doping and Sport, says it is wrong to ban gene doping without a broad, social debate.

"What is the rationale for banning genetic modification? If we are concerned about fair play, then actually gene doping might promote fairness. If we are concerned about health, then getting the technology right could actually be safer for athletes than current forms of doping," he says.

He argues that Mr. Pound and the World Anti-Doping Agency have acted precipitously in lumping genetic modifications in with taking steroids or growth hormones.

No question, there are going to be some blurry lines to define. What, for example, is the difference between an athlete who was selected as an embryo in a lab for genes that would make her a good sprinter and one who is modified as a teenager to have the same advantage?

Researchers are already studying the genetics of strong athletes. In the United States, scientists have recruited 900 subjects in a bid to find which genes predict who will have a muscular body and who is doomed to get sand kicked in their face at the beach.

Volunteers are asked to lift a weight with their weakest hand, and then to lift weights with that arm twice a week for three months. The researchers then look at the genes of the 10 per cent of subjects who bulked up after the training, and the 10 per cent who stayed pretty scrawny. So far, they've identified 25 different genetic differences between the two groups.

It is not hard to imagine the day when genes for athletic prowess can be screened for, either in sperm, eggs, embryos or children.

Mr. Pound, for now, is focusing on athletes who choose to become genetically modified. He has warned that if the practice becomes widespread, and goes undetected, it will be the end of sports as we know it.

"I want human beings," he told the American Association for the Advancement of science. "Not mutants."

How to do it

Scientists willing to overlook serious safety concerns could inject new genes into muscle or other tissue in an athlete's body. Viruses would be used as the delivery vehicle, a way to get the new genes into cells.

This is a localized approach to genetic engineering. Egg or sperm cells would not be altered, which means that the changes would not be passed on to any offspring produced by a genetically altered athlete.

Here are a few of the possibilities for using gene therapy, also known as gene doping, to build a winning athlete:

Boosting red-blood-cell production. In our bodies, a protein called erythropoietin, or epo, regulates the production of red blood cells, which carry oxygen to our muscles. The more epo you have, the more red blood cells you make. Cheaters are already using a synthetic version of epo designed to treat anemia. Researchers are working on injecting a gene that would allow the body to make far more epo than normal, without thickening the blood with too many red blood cells. This would help patients with blood disorders, as well as cyclists, runners and other long-distance athletes.

Encouraging muscle repair and growth. Insulin-like growth factor, also known as IGF-1, is produced by our bodies and repairs the everyday damage caused to muscle fibres when they are used. Cheaters are now orally taking versions of IGF-1. Researchers in the United States have turned normal mice into super rodents by injecting the gene for IGF-I directly into their muscles. Other researchers are working on other even more effective growth factors, including one called mechano growth factor. Their work could help people with muscular dystrophy and other muscle-wasting diseases, as well as sprinters and weightlifters.

Removing the natural check on muscle growth. Myostatin is a protein that regulates muscle growth in normal humans. The New England Journal of Medicine recently reported that a German baby born with bulging muscles had a mutation that blocked the production of myostatin. Researchers may be able to do the same thing for athletes through gene therapy. This could help sprinters, weightlifters and football players.

- Anne McIlroy is The Globe and Mail's science reporter


 http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20
040821.wxcheat21/BNStory/specialScienceandHealth/

The Addled Troll will be assimilated to enhance the quality of life. 25.Aug.2004 05:36

As will you. Your cooperation is irrelevant.

While I was attempting to offer my opinion about the logistical disadvantages of invasive electronic augmnentation for combatants in a less that First World battle environment, like any "pixel tiger" (last century it would have been 'paper tiger') you wave "legitimate" news stories supporting your narrow reactionary position, and damnned are those who disagree! In fact, you waste no effort in thinking at all. Someone else has done it for you.

I wish to thank you for finally confirming what I have been noticing on this site for some time now. There is essentially no difference between posting here or on some "right wing"Fox News site. Although there is simple role reversal on relevant news items of the day, the attitude is basically the same. Intolerant. Adversarial. Quarrelsome within your own ranks as to nullify any real sociopolitical action over time.

Yes my ageist thug. As far as your concerned I will "retire". I realize there is more to life than posting here. This site is irrelevant. It already shows symptoms of being assimilated into an addled body politic that requires more invasive augmentation. As have you.

Welcome to the Hive.

The Ultimate Activist 25.Aug.2004 06:23

for Give Up Troll

Before I check on assisted living facilities, have you even considered the potential of the utilization of these technologies for the benefit of your own cause(s)?

This Ultimate Activist (UA) would be impervious to pain from batons, pepper spray, sonic pacification devices, tasers, and even bullets. They would require minimal sleep, protest 24/7, and have no fear of any official reprial against the collective. Implanted motiviational algorithms would render any propaganda countertactics by the other side useless.

With wireless technology, the UA could go anywhere, encryptically transmit and receive tactical information in real time from others of the collective. They could intercept official communications from law enforcement and/or military units and plan strategies based on intelligence received. This is done today on a fundamental level with virtual mobs.

The UAs could be fitted with a satellite uplink system to jam radio/TV/data transmissions and upload the message of the collective to the corporate airwaves. The propaganda of the collective would be psychologically fabricated for maximum effect and presented in a sophisticated "MTV format" to entice the middle class youth to incorporate the ideologies of the collective into their own subculture.

Technology. Love it or Be it.