Quote:
Originally Posted by UndercoverElephant
That is not true. DNA is the driver of all of the biochemical processes going on in our bodies until the day we die. It's not just a template for producing a human body from a single cell. It is also the template for the production of all of the enzymes which actually keep our biochemisty going. It's like the conductor of an orchestra.
Eh? The human genome project is finished because its job was finished. We know the complete human genome. It wasn't a "bust." It provided an enormous wealth of information which will take decades to properly understand.
|
Wrong and wrong... DNA is a template.. it's a place where all the codes are stored...it's where the cell goes to read information when it's needing to
create proteins... I'm telling you, you're needing to listen to Bruce.. he's saying that all this is now known by the inner-circle of researcher's, only it
hasn't been broadly publicized.
And the genome project failed for this very reason... they thought they would discover some 180,000 separate genes... the people who invested in
the project (corporate, and the use of public money) where hoping to then use the info to create as many as 180,000 drugs... only it didn't turn out
that way... they only found roughly 24,000 genes... some of the simplistic organisms out there has as many as 25,000 genes, mice around 23,000 and
so on...
If it took one gene to make one protein then the 180,000 target was a likely possibility... turns out that each gene holds the template for
numerous proteins, and the cell only draws on the needed information when a particular protein is needed. DNA is inert... DNA actively does
nothing... it's only there to provide information for specific reproduction and that's at the request of specific need...
So it's the proteins that exist in large numbers.. only the proteins are created based on customized need, and is subject to a highly complex
real-time set of variables, and is specific to the moment it's called on...
The Genome project addresses none of this... they now have to go after the proteins.. only, in order to do so effectively they need to know what
each cell needs, in real-time, and then adjust those variables accordingly... the triggers to do so is not a chemical process... it's based on energy
communications and harmonics... it's based a great deal on the environmental challenges... and is heavily influenced by what we're
individually feeding into it...
He connects a clear set of dots between "what we believe" and how our body responds at a cellular level... if you don't listen to the workshop that
I posted you're robbing yourself of some pretty solid insight... Bruce comes in under the radar with info that's simply not getting "out there"... :^)