Genetic Engineering ~ Toying with Neurons

Published September 4, 2025 by tindertender

They mess with the brain while people sleep, they like toying with neurons.

https://www.facebook.com/share/v/1EN9uEozm9/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Metagenomics is the study of the collective genetic material from a diverse, uncultured microbial community directly from its natural environment, allowing for the analysis of microbial diversity and function that was previously impossible with traditional lab cultivation methods. It uses DNA sequencing to uncover the species present (composition) and their functional capabilities (metabolic potential), providing a comprehensive view of complex ecosystems like the human gut or ocean water. 
 

Key Concepts

  • Uncultured Microorganisms:The primary goal of metagenomics is to study microorganisms that cannot be grown in a laboratory setting, which constitute the vast majority of microbes on Earth. 
  • Community-Level Study:Instead of focusing on individual microbes, metagenomics examines the entire genetic makeup of a microbial community, or metagenome. 
  • Functional Potential:By analyzing the genes within a metagenome, researchers can infer the collective metabolic capabilities and functions of the entire microbial community. 

Methods

  • Shotgun Metagenomics:Involves randomly fragmenting all DNA in a sample and sequencing the fragments to get a comprehensive overview of all genetic material in the community. 
  • Metabarcoding:A targeted approach that involves amplifying and sequencing specific marker genes, such as the 16S rRNA gene for bacteria, to characterize the community’s composition. 

Applications

  • Microbial Ecology:Understanding the structure and function of microbial communities in various environments, such as soil, water, and the human body. 
  • Human Health:Studying the human microbiome (microorganisms in and on the body) to understand its role in health and disease. 
  • Biotechnology:Discovering new enzymes and metabolic pathways from uncultivable microbes for industrial applications. 
  • Environmental Science:Monitoring and managing microbial communities in response to environmental changes. 

SO THEY SAY:

The term 

nanolabotomy is not a real medical procedure. It is a fabricated term associated with online conspiracy theories about a proposed program by the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA). 

The misinformation originates from a misinterpretation of a DARPA program and combines two different ideas:

  • DARPA’s Next-Generation Nonsurgical Neurotechnology (N3) program: This legitimate program, announced in 2018, aims to develop a high-resolution, bidirectional brain-machine interface that does not require surgery. The goal is to create a headset or other portable device that could allow soldiers to interface with machines.
  • Lobotomy: An outdated and discredited psychosurgical procedure that involved severing nerve pathways in the brain’s frontal lobe. It is not performed today due to severe side effects and the development of modern psychiatric medication. 

Conspiracy theorists have falsely combined these two concepts, claiming that DARPA is secretly funding “nanolabotomies” to manipulate and control the brains of citizens through genetic engineering and nano-sensors. 

In summary, the term “nanolabotomy” is used to describe a fictional procedure that has no basis in scientific or medical fact.

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC6759331/

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC10397308/

An “engineered eugenetic system” would involve using advanced biotechnology, particularly genetic engineering, to guide human evolution toward desired traits.

The historical atrocities committed under the name of eugenics, combined with modern scientific capabilities like CRISPR, mean that this concept is now at the center of intense scientific and ethical debate. 

Historical context: Coercive eugenics

The concept of eugenics first gained traction in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, but these movements were based on flawed science and social prejudice. 

  • A discredited “science”: Proponents, such as Francis Galton and Charles Davenport, claimed that complex human behaviors like poverty and criminality were based on simple Mendelian inheritance. They ignored environmental factors and used this pseudoscience to justify systemic discrimination.
  • Systemic abuse: This ideology fueled policies in many countries, including the U.S. and Nazi Germany, that led to horrific human rights abuses, including involuntary sterilization, racial segregation, and genocide.
  • Key historical distinction: This “old eugenics” was defined by its coercive nature, its flawed scientific basis, and its goal of population-wide “improvement” by forcing specific groups to be sterilized or killed. 

Modern context: Genetic engineering and the “new eugenics”

With the advent of powerful and precise gene-editing tools like CRISPR, the discussion around eugenics has reemerged. Modern genetic technologies offer two main pathways for genetic alteration: 

  • Somatic gene editing: This modifies genes in an individual’s body cells (e.g., to cure a genetic disease like sickle-cell anemia), but these changes are not passed on to offspring.
  • Heritable (germline) gene editing: This modifies genes in eggs, sperm, or embryos, meaning the changes are passed down to all future generations. 

It is the potential to use heritable gene editing for enhancement, rather than just therapy, that is often referred to as the “new eugenics”. 

Ethical concerns of an engineered eugenetic system

Experts and international bodies, including the World Health Organization, have raised serious concerns about the development of an engineered eugenetic system. 

  • Medical versus enhancement: The distinction between correcting a genetic defect (therapy) and improving a normal human trait (enhancement) is not always clear and is central to the ethical debate.
  • Equality and access: The high cost of genetic technologies could create a society with a genetically privileged upper class and an unenhanced lower class, exacerbating existing socioeconomic inequality.
  • Arbitrary perfection: The creation of arbitrary standards for what is considered a “desirable” trait could lead to a less diverse and resilient human population and increase social stigma against those who are different.
  • Long-term consequences: The effects of heritable genetic modifications could have unforeseen and irreversible consequences for future generations.
  • Loss of diversity: A reduction in human genetic diversity could have unforeseen negative impacts on the long-term health and adaptability of the human species.
  • The slippery slope: There is a concern that using germline editing, even for therapeutic purposes, could put humanity on a “slippery slope” toward non-therapeutic applications and a new, market-based form of eugenics. 

https://www.genome.gov/about-genomics/fact-sheets/Eugenics-and-Scientific-Racism

https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9635610/

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.