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Covid-19 Injections – A Gateway to Transhumanism By Dr. Carrie Madej Oct. 23, 2021
Dr. Carrie Madej's in-depth lecture at "The Truth About Cancer (Live) conference on the Transhumanism Agenda, what Transhumanists are doing/what they want to a accomplish and what she has found under the microscope with the Covid vaccines.
Home Health & Medicine Diseases
Longevity gene that makes the Hydra immortal identified
The Hydra is a tiny animal that can be found in just about any freshwater pond, just a few millimeters long, that has attracted the attention of scientists for years now due to its extraordinary regenerative abilities. The Hydra is consider to be biological immortal – it does not die from old age – although a scientific consensus has yet to be reached. Scientists studying the polyp Hydra claim they now know how the creature escapes senescence after they found a key gene. This gene is also believed to be linked with aging in humans.
Read Rest of Article on ZME Science Webpage
https://dev.zmescience.com/medicine/genetic/foxo-gene-longevity-immortal-hydra-research-042343/
Hydra, a hydrozoan cnidarian that takes its name from the eponymous creature in Greek mythology due to its remarkable capacity for regeneration, can be thought of as one of the very first ‘model organisms’, with its unique properties first described and studied by Anton van Leeuwenhoek and Abraham Tremblay in the early 1700s.
Hydra has a morphologically simple body plan – a thin tubular and radially symmetrical body whose body wall is comprised of two layers of cells (the endoderm and ectoderm). The free end of the organism is characterized by a ring of tentacles that contain cnidocytes, the specialized stinging cells used to paralyze capture prey that are a common characteristic of all cnidarian species. Hydra possesses a basal disk at the opposite end of its body, with the basal disk secreting an adhesive fluid that allows it to secure itself to surfaces. While Hydra does not possess a brain, it does possess a nerve net that confers the ability to sense and respond to environmental stimuli and, while normally sessile, Hydra are capable of locomotion by creeping, as well as through distinctive looping and somersaulting maneuvers. Hydra is also capable of morphallaxis, a remarkable regenerative process where, after sustaining an injury, the organism is able to essentially reorganize its body, producing a smaller yet complete version of itself.
Read The Rest of the Article on Their Webpage:
https://research.nhgri.nih.gov/hydra/
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