For World Health

Saturday, March 31, 2007

Human 2.0

What would I want from human 2.0? 3.0?

I enjoy the polyfactor of cell reproduction. That should eliminate cancers. I want a greater e- field effect of immunity. The body as a macrosystem can afford to affect its own field in favor of not dying of disease. This method is far greater in quality than antibodies, although antibodies are a good active chemical filter.

I would also appreciate greater digestive and chemical functions, reduced blood requirements possible from more efficient cell function, advanced muscular techniques and musculature as well as anti-osteoperotic bone operation. Better clotting. Faster healing.

Growing organs from stem cells in a framework, growing humans in synthetic uteri. Hmm. There is no need to engineer a baby. You can engineer yourself at age 14. Cosmetic physiology? "Plasticity surgery?"

These primary biological functions are the most basic form of change given to a human. A painless effective existance modded by technologies is standard. What happens after that is the true judgement.

CO2, toxicity and urban environments

Global warming may be linked to urbanization. Urban environments affect weather patterns with the heat they dispense from buildings and power plants, engines, and other machinery. Temperatures measured in urban environments may be slightly higher due to this urbanization.

Ocean temperatures rising could not be accounted for by this urbanization, nor ice cap meltation.

Furthermore, environmental displacement, conventional toxicity, and waste radiation accumulation are enormous environmental problems. CO2 accumulation in the environment to the measure of billions of tons has indisputable chemical and meteorological effects.

Urban environments increase the frequency and strength of earthquakes by their millions of tons of weight on tectonic plates.

Friday, March 30, 2007

Babies

so she's not babymatic.

i want babies. but i also want her. i can have both. within 24 months, i want to be able to produce babies from non-functional wombs.

so, humans do it already. we have artificial dialysis machines, we can produce artificial wombs, and the sacredness of the human living fire/breath of God can be passed on using our natural 'fluids'.

we may not even need functional sex cells, since cracking an ovary is so painful and surgically difficult. let's turn human cells into stem cells using hz and chemical triggers coupled with natural mitosis. then we'll take the stem cell and turn it into m/f sex cells, and begin them together.

from there, we should place it in a womblike structure, possibly one made from human cells, and soak it in its materials. the sex cells should then do their business to fruition. we'll probably need to grow a new uterus that thinks it's in a body, probably of the same cells as the original donor[s].

it may be important to 'select' the sex cells for optimal business. perhaps 'groom' the dna. or get the cell to do it itself. that is probably for the best. pass it through a mini-natural selection process.

Monday, March 12, 2007

Corn Starch Science

Pharmacos provide medications which often use plastic products as ingestibles. IT IS NEVER OKAY TO EAT PLASTIC. Plastic, a toxin made from oil and chemicals, will always leach toxins into the things around it, and some into the air.

Instead of ingesting plastic, it is possible to coat capsule pills and pill bottles with plasticine corn starch, made from corn. There is no need to expose workers and ill patients to toxins on this level when we can make more use of plentiful agricultural space. Furthermore, the extrusion of vinyl and other plastic products can be replaced by agricultural solutions and reduce the populace's exposure to toxic materials, especially those whom are already ill.

Saturday, March 03, 2007

Reurbanization

Cleaner cities will make denser and more social environmentally friendly urban space possible. Free energy transportation can allow goods and services to be brought to the urban environment without pollution, and can expand the functional economic radius of a city.

Free energy transportation will reduce the expense of a commute. A worker can effectively travel farther and still be making money at a job, although time constraints cannot be relieved except by a change in highway speed and safety. This will entice more people to travel to a city and the costs of this commute will be lowered.

Providing adequate electrical power to a city without the associated pollution will benefit city environments as well. Still further we can use special cement coatings to reduce waste already present in cities. Some urban environments are still dealing with pollutants that are many decades old.

Reducing these negative effects is the first step to reurbanization and more efficient urban planning.