• A waning crescent Moon danced in the sky with the planet Venus and the quadruple star-system Regulus in the constellation Leo this morning, the spectacle shining brightly in the eastern twilight before dawn. #Moon #Venus #Regulus #AlphaLeonis #Twilight #UnderneathTheStars #NightSky #Astronomy

    https://earthsky.org/astronomy-essentials/visible-planets-tonight-mars-jupiter-venus-saturn-mercury/
    A waning crescent Moon danced in the sky with the planet Venus and the quadruple star-system Regulus in the constellation Leo this morning, the spectacle shining brightly in the eastern twilight before dawn. #Moon #Venus #Regulus #AlphaLeonis #Twilight #UnderneathTheStars #NightSky #Astronomy https://earthsky.org/astronomy-essentials/visible-planets-tonight-mars-jupiter-venus-saturn-mercury/
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  • Tour Overview
    The Golden Triangle Packages are ideal for creating unforgettable experiences. It will enable you to get ancient beauty of the historic splendor that combines the Mughal and Maharaja worlds. The three most stunning cities—New Delhi, the nation's capital, Agra, and Jaipur—are connected by this travel route. Udaipur, the city of lakes, is visited as part of the Golden Triangle Tour from Delhi, enabling you to take in the breathtaking scenery like never before. Choose this package to ensure that your trip to India is the greatest you've ever had.
    https://bookgoldentriangletour.com/golden-triangle-tour-4-days.html


    Itinerary
    Day 01 : Explore Delhi

    At 9:00 a.m., our driver will come to your hotel and take you away! Explore the historic sites in Old Delhi and uncover stories of earlier times. The magnificent Red Fort would be your first destination, and then you would go to the well-known Chandni Chowk. Here, enjoy the rickshaw ride. You will visit Jama Masjid after perusing the market, and you will conclude your time in Old Delhi with a delicious lunch at a restaurant. Later, begin your exploration of New Delhi, beginning at the 73-meter-tall Qutub Minar. Continue to the Humayun's Tomb, India Gate, Lotus Temple in the shape of a flower, and the Presidential Buildings to round up your tour of Delhi. Return to the hotel and unwind there before the night.

    Day 02 : Proceed Delhi to Agra and explore Agra

    After breakfast, depart around 9:00 AM in the morning for Agra. We will provide you with a nice AC car for the 3-hour drive from Delhi NCR to Agra. When you arrive, check into your hotel and then unwind. Take in the beautiful view of Itimad-Ud-Daulah and Mehtab Bagh in the twilight. Enjoy the Taj Mahal's backside when viewing it from a distance after dusk.

    Day 03 : Explore Sunrise Taj Mahal and proceed to Jaipur - Enroute Fatehpur Sikri Your tour guide and chauffeur will transport you to the Taj Mahal early in the morning, about 5:30 AM, so you may see the monument's breathtaking grandeur at dawn. After taking some unforgettable pictures, head back to the hotel for breakfast. After breakfast you will proceed to giant Agra Fort and enjoy the magestic view. After that, proceed to Jaipur. Take a break to explore Fatehpur Sikri. Next, keep moving in the direction of Jaipur. Once you've arrived, check into the hotel and relax.

    Day 04 : Explore Jaipur and Drive Back to Delhi

    After breakfast, check out and proceed to the magnificent Amber Fort, where you can take an elephant ride to the fort's entrance and have a taste of royalty. Continue your exploration of the Patrika Gate, the enticing City Palace, Jal Mahal, Hawa Mahal, and Jantar Mantar. After enjoying a delicious meal at a restaurant and some sightseeing, return to Delhi by car. You will return to Delhi at 8 or 9 o'clock at night. Arrival at the Delhi airport or hotel.


    Tour Overview The Golden Triangle Packages are ideal for creating unforgettable experiences. It will enable you to get ancient beauty of the historic splendor that combines the Mughal and Maharaja worlds. The three most stunning cities—New Delhi, the nation's capital, Agra, and Jaipur—are connected by this travel route. Udaipur, the city of lakes, is visited as part of the Golden Triangle Tour from Delhi, enabling you to take in the breathtaking scenery like never before. Choose this package to ensure that your trip to India is the greatest you've ever had. https://bookgoldentriangletour.com/golden-triangle-tour-4-days.html Itinerary Day 01 : Explore Delhi At 9:00 a.m., our driver will come to your hotel and take you away! Explore the historic sites in Old Delhi and uncover stories of earlier times. The magnificent Red Fort would be your first destination, and then you would go to the well-known Chandni Chowk. Here, enjoy the rickshaw ride. You will visit Jama Masjid after perusing the market, and you will conclude your time in Old Delhi with a delicious lunch at a restaurant. Later, begin your exploration of New Delhi, beginning at the 73-meter-tall Qutub Minar. Continue to the Humayun's Tomb, India Gate, Lotus Temple in the shape of a flower, and the Presidential Buildings to round up your tour of Delhi. Return to the hotel and unwind there before the night. Day 02 : Proceed Delhi to Agra and explore Agra After breakfast, depart around 9:00 AM in the morning for Agra. We will provide you with a nice AC car for the 3-hour drive from Delhi NCR to Agra. When you arrive, check into your hotel and then unwind. Take in the beautiful view of Itimad-Ud-Daulah and Mehtab Bagh in the twilight. Enjoy the Taj Mahal's backside when viewing it from a distance after dusk. Day 03 : Explore Sunrise Taj Mahal and proceed to Jaipur - Enroute Fatehpur Sikri Your tour guide and chauffeur will transport you to the Taj Mahal early in the morning, about 5:30 AM, so you may see the monument's breathtaking grandeur at dawn. After taking some unforgettable pictures, head back to the hotel for breakfast. After breakfast you will proceed to giant Agra Fort and enjoy the magestic view. After that, proceed to Jaipur. Take a break to explore Fatehpur Sikri. Next, keep moving in the direction of Jaipur. Once you've arrived, check into the hotel and relax. Day 04 : Explore Jaipur and Drive Back to Delhi After breakfast, check out and proceed to the magnificent Amber Fort, where you can take an elephant ride to the fort's entrance and have a taste of royalty. Continue your exploration of the Patrika Gate, the enticing City Palace, Jal Mahal, Hawa Mahal, and Jantar Mantar. After enjoying a delicious meal at a restaurant and some sightseeing, return to Delhi by car. You will return to Delhi at 8 or 9 o'clock at night. Arrival at the Delhi airport or hotel.
    4 Days Golden Triangle Tour, 3 Nights Delhi Agra Jaipur Tour
    If You are Travelling India First Time, 4 Days Golden Triangle Tour is Best Option. Get Quote of 3 Nights 4 Days Delhi Agra Jaipur Tour From Our Tour Expert.
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  • Fitness and alternative health .


    Beyond Muscles: The Psychedelic Evolution of Fitness

    In the twilight hour, they lift. Not dumbbells, but dreams.

    Fitness is mutating. In underground circles and experimental communities, the new conversation isn't about reps or personal bests — it's about altered states, deep healing, and a psychedelic approach to human performance.

    What if the gym was a dream? What if recovery happened in the spirit world? Welcome to the wild edge of fitness innovation.

    Lucid Dream Training: Repping Reality and Beyond

    In radical circles, lucid dreaming is no longer just a hobby — it’s a tool for motor learning.

    Some experimental athletes are now inducing lucid dreams to rehearse complex athletic skills. The idea? The brain does not distinguish vividly imagined practice from real-world repetitions. Olympic skiers have long visualized their runs — but lucid dreamers feel every muscle fiber engage mid-dream.

    Experimental Protocol:

    30 minutes of pre-sleep motor imagery (specific movements, eg. pistol squats, muscle-ups).

    Lucid dream induction via MILD technique (Mnemonic Induction of Lucid Dreams).

    Dream log: record dream reps and clarity.

    Compare progress over 30 days to standard visualization-only controls.


    Early reports suggest skill acquisition doubles when dream practice is added — and injuries decrease, because the brain rehearses perfect form.

    Sound Healing as Anabolic Recovery

    Imagine a gym where no one grunts — only crystal bowls hum.

    Athletes are now experimenting with 528 Hz frequency sound baths post-training. It’s believed that this frequency promotes cellular repair and DNA activation (a claim still under scientific review). Instead of static stretching or protein shakes alone, lifters lie under vibrating gongs and sound matrices, intending to accelerate recovery by entraining their brainwaves into deep delta states.

    Experimental Protocol:

    1-hour heavy resistance workout.

    30-minute immersion in 528 Hz sound bath.

    Monitor cortisol levels, creatine kinase (muscle damage marker), and subjective soreness over 72 hours.


    Pilot studies suggest a faster return to baseline performance — though skeptics argue the real magic is in parasympathetic nervous system activation, not mystical frequencies.

    Plant Medicine Microdosing: Strength from the Spirit

    Perhaps the most radical evolution: psychedelic fitness.

    Across rogue communities, athletes microdose psilocybin (magic mushrooms) or LSD to enhance focus, reduce fear, and unlock "flow states" during their workouts. Some claim enhanced mind-muscle connection, others describe a meditative fluidity — a workout that feels less like effort and more like art.

    Experimental Protocol:

    Microdose (approx. 10 micrograms LSD or 0.1g psilocybin) pre-workout.

    Low-intensity strength and mobility work (to prevent reckless overexertion).

    Journaling emotional state, coordination, and perceived effort.


    The ethics and legality are complicated. But the frontier is undeniable: athletes are exploring psychedelics not for escape, but for optimization.


    ---

    Fitness as a Ceremony

    The emerging movement treats training not as punishment or competition, but as ceremony:

    Breath is sacred.

    Sweat is a prayer.

    Dreams are reps.

    Sound is anabolic.

    Plants are allies.


    In this new paradigm, the strongest athlete isn't the one with the biggest bench press — but the one who can lift their own consciousness into dimensions still largely unexplored.

    The gym of tomorrow might not look like a temple of iron. It might look like a lucid dream, a soundscape, a mist of sacred plant scents.

    Fitness isn’t just physical anymore.
    It’s becoming spiritual.
    #dreaming #life #stresses
    #style #health #healthcare
    ##experimental #athletic
    Fitness and alternative health . Beyond Muscles: The Psychedelic Evolution of Fitness In the twilight hour, they lift. Not dumbbells, but dreams. Fitness is mutating. In underground circles and experimental communities, the new conversation isn't about reps or personal bests — it's about altered states, deep healing, and a psychedelic approach to human performance. What if the gym was a dream? What if recovery happened in the spirit world? Welcome to the wild edge of fitness innovation. Lucid Dream Training: Repping Reality and Beyond In radical circles, lucid dreaming is no longer just a hobby — it’s a tool for motor learning. Some experimental athletes are now inducing lucid dreams to rehearse complex athletic skills. The idea? The brain does not distinguish vividly imagined practice from real-world repetitions. Olympic skiers have long visualized their runs — but lucid dreamers feel every muscle fiber engage mid-dream. Experimental Protocol: 30 minutes of pre-sleep motor imagery (specific movements, eg. pistol squats, muscle-ups). Lucid dream induction via MILD technique (Mnemonic Induction of Lucid Dreams). Dream log: record dream reps and clarity. Compare progress over 30 days to standard visualization-only controls. Early reports suggest skill acquisition doubles when dream practice is added — and injuries decrease, because the brain rehearses perfect form. Sound Healing as Anabolic Recovery Imagine a gym where no one grunts — only crystal bowls hum. Athletes are now experimenting with 528 Hz frequency sound baths post-training. It’s believed that this frequency promotes cellular repair and DNA activation (a claim still under scientific review). Instead of static stretching or protein shakes alone, lifters lie under vibrating gongs and sound matrices, intending to accelerate recovery by entraining their brainwaves into deep delta states. Experimental Protocol: 1-hour heavy resistance workout. 30-minute immersion in 528 Hz sound bath. Monitor cortisol levels, creatine kinase (muscle damage marker), and subjective soreness over 72 hours. Pilot studies suggest a faster return to baseline performance — though skeptics argue the real magic is in parasympathetic nervous system activation, not mystical frequencies. Plant Medicine Microdosing: Strength from the Spirit Perhaps the most radical evolution: psychedelic fitness. Across rogue communities, athletes microdose psilocybin (magic mushrooms) or LSD to enhance focus, reduce fear, and unlock "flow states" during their workouts. Some claim enhanced mind-muscle connection, others describe a meditative fluidity — a workout that feels less like effort and more like art. Experimental Protocol: Microdose (approx. 10 micrograms LSD or 0.1g psilocybin) pre-workout. Low-intensity strength and mobility work (to prevent reckless overexertion). Journaling emotional state, coordination, and perceived effort. The ethics and legality are complicated. But the frontier is undeniable: athletes are exploring psychedelics not for escape, but for optimization. --- Fitness as a Ceremony The emerging movement treats training not as punishment or competition, but as ceremony: Breath is sacred. Sweat is a prayer. Dreams are reps. Sound is anabolic. Plants are allies. In this new paradigm, the strongest athlete isn't the one with the biggest bench press — but the one who can lift their own consciousness into dimensions still largely unexplored. The gym of tomorrow might not look like a temple of iron. It might look like a lucid dream, a soundscape, a mist of sacred plant scents. Fitness isn’t just physical anymore. It’s becoming spiritual. #dreaming #life #stresses #style #health #healthcare ##experimental #athletic
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  • Black Swan, White Swan
    Julie Ponesse
    All things truly wicked start from innocence.

    —Ernest Hemingway, A Moveable Feast

    It takes one second for a raindrop to fall 32 feet and 3-6 seconds to take a breath. My daughter was born into the world in a moment and the viral video that set my life on a new path was 4:53 minutes long. Our lives are made up of moments, some more meaningful, or at least more memorable, than others. Some slip into oblivion as soon as they happen while others punctuate our existence, reframing or redirecting our lives.

    On March 11, 2020 everything changed. The eerie pandemic future that became our reality shifted our lives in what felt like a moment. Car consoles littered with dirty masks, downtowns deserted in the middle of the day. Covid-19 dropped us into a twilight zone of unquestionable science, the plaything of our era’s spin doctors, and the realization of Sartre’s theatric line: “Hell is other people.”

    In that moment, something light and innocent was lost. Covid-19 became a shared cultural flashpoint akin to 9/11, or the assassinations of John F. Kennedy or Martin Luther King, changing us almost instantaneously. We saw things about the world that we can never unsee. The dream of personal freedom died or, worse, maybe it had never been alive.

    But unlike the bullet that kills only its victim, Covid slowly assassinated our way of life. In a moment we went from feeling stable to unsafe, oblivious to suspicious, and unable to escape the foreboding question, “What’s next?” We underwent what ethicist Susan Brison calls a “radical undoing of the self,” a disruption of what we remember and who we are, and a jarring separation of past from present. We became a tribe of barbarians seemingly overnight, but a tribe barely able to know who we are or to imagine that what we do means anything.

    How did things shift so radically in one moment? Were we really that innocent before and, if so, what have we lost (and gained) in losing our innocence?

    Black Swan, White Swan

    Though it may have felt like it, Covid didn’t, all on its own, turn a previously liberal society into a cult of compliance; it merely exposed a war that has long been waging against personal liberty. As the pseudonymous blogger Sue Dunham wrote, “Since 9/11, every threat to come down the mainstream news cycle seemed to huddle us around the same consensus, that some fresh element of our liberty was making the world hurt—and that we were selfish to hold on to it.” Time has been slowly evicting us from the idea that our personal rights, including our right to be, and be seen, as individuals, are inviolable.

    If we want to understand how our innocence was shattered, then we need first to understand how we came to feel so safe and so trusting in the first place.

    The downside to innocence is that it creates a certain opacity, shielding us from information that we might be better off to have. One reason ‘fact-checking’ became so popular, I think, is that it creates a normal distribution, or bell curve, of the information we receive from the world. It imposes some order on a messy world, allowing us to sweep away the complicated parts of life so we can move on less encumbered. Or, at least, it legitimizes ignoring the world’s messiness. But this ignorance allows us to be caught off guard by events that we don’t expect. And, when those events do occur, we interpret them as anomalies, disasters (if they are bad), or even black swan events (if they are extreme).

    ‘Black swan’ is a term coined by the statistician and risk analyst Nicholas Taleb to describe a high-impact event that is deemed improbable and yet has massive consequences. Though ‘black swans’ feel unpredictable at the time, in retrospect they are often rationalized as having been avoidable. Black swans can be negative (e.g. 9/11 or Black Monday 1987), positive (the fall of the Berlin Wall) or neutral (e.g. the exponential growth of the internet).

    Covid-19 has been called the black swan event of our time. The Guardian’s Larry Elliott, for example, titled a January 2021 article ‘The ‘black swan’ Covid catastrophe shows us just how fragile our world is.’ And reasonably so. Covid had an extreme impact on every sphere of life. It shut down governments and the economy, changed professional practice and, almost overnight, turned us into a draconian society of broken souls so dependent on government direction that we sacrificed ourselves and our loved ones for the sake of getting along and getting by.

    But all is not quite as it seems. Taleb told Bloomberg Television in March 2020 that Covid was actually a ‘white swan’ if ever there was one. A ‘black swan,’ he reminded the interviewer, is a “rare, catastrophic event,” not “a cliché for any bad thing that surprises us.” Taleb coauthored a paper in January 2020 in which he claimed that several factors made the spread of Covid quite predictable: increased global connectivity, asymptomatic carriers, and a fatalistic public health response. For a risk analyst, that a pathogen should spiral out of control is hardly surprising.

    Whether or not Covid was a true black swan event is not my focus here. Biology aside, I’m interested in Taleb’s more general epistemological point that what catches us off guard would not have done so if we had a different perspective of the world. I’m interested in what we knew (and didn’t know) going into 2020, where our focus was and wasn’t, and how this created the experience of being caught off guard.

    Author

    Dr. Julie Ponesse, 2023 Brownstone Fellow, is a professor of ethics who has taught at Ontario’s Huron University College for 20 years. She was placed on leave and banned from accessing her campus due to the vaccine mandate. She presented at the The Faith and Democracy Series on 22, 2021. Dr. Ponesse has now taken on a new role with The Democracy Fund, a registered Canadian charity aimed at advancing civil liberties, where she serves as the pandemic ethics scholar.

    View all posts

    https://brownstone.org/articles/black-swan-white-swan/

    https://donshafi911iamthefaceoftruth.blogspot.com/2024/10/black-swan-white-swan-julie-ponesse-all_26.html
    Black Swan, White Swan Julie Ponesse All things truly wicked start from innocence. —Ernest Hemingway, A Moveable Feast It takes one second for a raindrop to fall 32 feet and 3-6 seconds to take a breath. My daughter was born into the world in a moment and the viral video that set my life on a new path was 4:53 minutes long. Our lives are made up of moments, some more meaningful, or at least more memorable, than others. Some slip into oblivion as soon as they happen while others punctuate our existence, reframing or redirecting our lives. On March 11, 2020 everything changed. The eerie pandemic future that became our reality shifted our lives in what felt like a moment. Car consoles littered with dirty masks, downtowns deserted in the middle of the day. Covid-19 dropped us into a twilight zone of unquestionable science, the plaything of our era’s spin doctors, and the realization of Sartre’s theatric line: “Hell is other people.” In that moment, something light and innocent was lost. Covid-19 became a shared cultural flashpoint akin to 9/11, or the assassinations of John F. Kennedy or Martin Luther King, changing us almost instantaneously. We saw things about the world that we can never unsee. The dream of personal freedom died or, worse, maybe it had never been alive. But unlike the bullet that kills only its victim, Covid slowly assassinated our way of life. In a moment we went from feeling stable to unsafe, oblivious to suspicious, and unable to escape the foreboding question, “What’s next?” We underwent what ethicist Susan Brison calls a “radical undoing of the self,” a disruption of what we remember and who we are, and a jarring separation of past from present. We became a tribe of barbarians seemingly overnight, but a tribe barely able to know who we are or to imagine that what we do means anything. How did things shift so radically in one moment? Were we really that innocent before and, if so, what have we lost (and gained) in losing our innocence? Black Swan, White Swan Though it may have felt like it, Covid didn’t, all on its own, turn a previously liberal society into a cult of compliance; it merely exposed a war that has long been waging against personal liberty. As the pseudonymous blogger Sue Dunham wrote, “Since 9/11, every threat to come down the mainstream news cycle seemed to huddle us around the same consensus, that some fresh element of our liberty was making the world hurt—and that we were selfish to hold on to it.” Time has been slowly evicting us from the idea that our personal rights, including our right to be, and be seen, as individuals, are inviolable. If we want to understand how our innocence was shattered, then we need first to understand how we came to feel so safe and so trusting in the first place. The downside to innocence is that it creates a certain opacity, shielding us from information that we might be better off to have. One reason ‘fact-checking’ became so popular, I think, is that it creates a normal distribution, or bell curve, of the information we receive from the world. It imposes some order on a messy world, allowing us to sweep away the complicated parts of life so we can move on less encumbered. Or, at least, it legitimizes ignoring the world’s messiness. But this ignorance allows us to be caught off guard by events that we don’t expect. And, when those events do occur, we interpret them as anomalies, disasters (if they are bad), or even black swan events (if they are extreme). ‘Black swan’ is a term coined by the statistician and risk analyst Nicholas Taleb to describe a high-impact event that is deemed improbable and yet has massive consequences. Though ‘black swans’ feel unpredictable at the time, in retrospect they are often rationalized as having been avoidable. Black swans can be negative (e.g. 9/11 or Black Monday 1987), positive (the fall of the Berlin Wall) or neutral (e.g. the exponential growth of the internet). Covid-19 has been called the black swan event of our time. The Guardian’s Larry Elliott, for example, titled a January 2021 article ‘The ‘black swan’ Covid catastrophe shows us just how fragile our world is.’ And reasonably so. Covid had an extreme impact on every sphere of life. It shut down governments and the economy, changed professional practice and, almost overnight, turned us into a draconian society of broken souls so dependent on government direction that we sacrificed ourselves and our loved ones for the sake of getting along and getting by. But all is not quite as it seems. Taleb told Bloomberg Television in March 2020 that Covid was actually a ‘white swan’ if ever there was one. A ‘black swan,’ he reminded the interviewer, is a “rare, catastrophic event,” not “a cliché for any bad thing that surprises us.” Taleb coauthored a paper in January 2020 in which he claimed that several factors made the spread of Covid quite predictable: increased global connectivity, asymptomatic carriers, and a fatalistic public health response. For a risk analyst, that a pathogen should spiral out of control is hardly surprising. Whether or not Covid was a true black swan event is not my focus here. Biology aside, I’m interested in Taleb’s more general epistemological point that what catches us off guard would not have done so if we had a different perspective of the world. I’m interested in what we knew (and didn’t know) going into 2020, where our focus was and wasn’t, and how this created the experience of being caught off guard. Author Dr. Julie Ponesse, 2023 Brownstone Fellow, is a professor of ethics who has taught at Ontario’s Huron University College for 20 years. She was placed on leave and banned from accessing her campus due to the vaccine mandate. She presented at the The Faith and Democracy Series on 22, 2021. Dr. Ponesse has now taken on a new role with The Democracy Fund, a registered Canadian charity aimed at advancing civil liberties, where she serves as the pandemic ethics scholar. View all posts https://brownstone.org/articles/black-swan-white-swan/ https://donshafi911iamthefaceoftruth.blogspot.com/2024/10/black-swan-white-swan-julie-ponesse-all_26.html
    BROWNSTONE.ORG
    Black Swan, White Swan ⋆ Brownstone Institute
    Whether Covid was a black swan event is not my focus here. I'm interested in Taleb’s epistemological point that what catches us off guard.
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  • The emergence of nanobot society
    OUTRAGED HUMAN













    So, they injected it into the military, police, emergency services.... Now everyone is injected with a device with a "real IP ADDRESS"....






    0:00

    Thank you very much. So one word of notice before we begin,

    0:03

    all the technologies that you are going to see here now are real.

    0:06

    And with that said

    0:07

    I'd like to first tell you the story about

    0:10

    this uh... little girl named Dana

    0:12

    she's very special for me because she's my daugther

    0:14

    and Dana was born with a leg condition requiring frequent surgeries like this one

    0:19

    uh... she had when we were in Boston

    0:21

    and um... I remember taking her to that particular surgery

    0:25

    and uh...

    0:26

    I rembember her being admitted and she was excited at first

    0:31

    and then just before they got into her the OR

    0:33

    I looked at her and she was... afraid, she was little worried and

    0:38

    who wouldn't be? Because surgeries today are complicated

    0:41

    and they're often very risky.

    0:42

    Now let's imagine a few years into the future, into the near future hopefully,

    0:47

    Dana will arrive to hospital for her ??? surgery

    0:50

    and instead of being prepped for anesthesia for the OR

    0:54

    the surgeon will just take a syringe and inside the syringe

    0:58

    there are millions of tiny robots, of tiny machines

    1:02

    that will be injected into Dana's bloodstream.

    1:04

    They will autonomously locate the place they need to be in,

    1:08

    they will excite out the injured tissue,

    1:11

    then will remove dead cells,

    1:13

    then they will...

    1:14

    stimulate and guide the regrowth of healthy cells across those tissue gaps,

    1:18

    they will release drugs that relief pain and reduce inflammation

    1:23

    and all the while Dana will be sitting on the chair

    1:25

    eating a sandwich, reading a book, might be the next

    1:28

    twilight saga book which she'll be able to read because she will be 16 by then

    1:32

    And...(giggles)

    1:33

    uh... when these robots

    1:35

    have completed their job they'll simply disintegrate

    1:39

    and disappear from her bloodstream the next day.

    1:42

    So these nanobots have been envisioned in the past 30 years

    1:45

    by people like Eric Drexler, Robert Freitas and Ray Kuzweil.

    1:49

    Today I'm going to show you that these robots exist

    1:51

    here in Israel.

    1:54

    I'll show you this syringe

    1:56

    which I've brought from my lab.

    1:58

    So this syringe has inside it a thousand billion robots.

    2:03

    So these robots are each fifty nanometers

    2:06

    long as you can see in this slide under the microscope.

    2:11

    Fifty nanometers is about 2000 times thinner than the thickness of your hair

    2:16

    OK? And... umm... These robots were born actually 3 years ago

    2:20

    in a research I did with Shawn Douglas, now a UCSF Professor.

    2:24

    But over the past year and a half

    2:25

    in my group at Bar-Ilan University

    2:27

    We've been developing and testing robots for a variety of

    2:31

    medical and therapeutic tasks.

    2:33

    We've invented ways of making them safe for use

    2:37

    and non-inmunogenic

    2:38

    and we learned how to tune their stability in our bloodstream

    2:41

    to fit either short-term or long-term

    2:44

    even days long medical procedures.

    2:47

    So to carry out medical and therapeutic procedures in our body

    2:50

    with the upmost precision,

    2:51

    we need to be able to control molecules

    2:53

    Controlling molecules is a very simple challenge

    2:56

    in modern scientific knowledge.

    2:58

    OK? Let's speak for example about the class of molecules we know as drugs

    3:02

    So despite...

    3:04

    amazing progress made in the past four decades

    3:06

    the way we think about drugs and we the way we use drugs

    3:09

    has been essentially unchanged

    3:11

    and it's similar as two hundred years ago

    3:14

    right? You hear about about big pharmaceutical companies

    3:17

    spending huge amounts of money

    3:19

    searching for better, safer drugs.

    3:22

    Attempts that usually fail.

    3:24

    OK? but,

    3:25

    searching for let's say a safer cancer drug,

    3:28

    half it is a concept that has a flaw in it.

    3:30

    Because searching for a safer cancer drug

    3:32

    is basically like searching for a gun that kills only bad people

    3:36

    We don't search for such guns,

    3:37

    what we do is training soldiers to use that gun properly

    3:42

    Of course in drugs we can't do this because it seems very hard

    3:45

    But there are things we can do with drugs

    3:47

    for example, we can put the drugs

    3:49

    in particles from which they difuse slowly.

    3:51

    We can attach a drug to a carrier

    3:54

    which takes someplace but, this is not real control.

    3:57

    When we were thinking about control we're thinking about

    4:00

    processes is the real world around us

    4:02

    and what happens when we want to control a process

    4:06

    that's beyond our capabilities as humans

    4:08

    we just connect this process to a computer

    4:10

    and let the computer control this process for us.

    4:13

    OK? So that's what we do.

    4:15

    But obviously this cannot be done with drugs because

    4:19

    the drugs are so much smaller than the computers as we know them

    4:23

    The computer is in fact so much bigger

    4:25

    it's about a hundred million times bigger that any drug molecule.

    4:28

    Our nanobots which were in the syringe

    4:31

    solve this problem because they are in fact

    4:34

    computers the size of molecules.

    4:36

    and they can interact with molecules

    4:38

    and they can control molecules directly,

    4:40

    so just think about all those

    4:42

    drugs that have been withdrawn from the market

    4:45

    for excessive toxicity

    4:46

    right?

    4:47

    It doesn't mean that they are not effective,

    4:49

    they were amazingly effective,

    4:51

    they were just guns shooting in all directions

    4:53

    but in the hands of a well-trained soldier

    4:56

    or a well-programed nanobot

    4:58

    using all the existing drugs

    5:01

    we could hypothetically kill almost any disease.

    5:05

    So we might not need even new drugs.

    5:07

    We have amazing drugs already,

    5:09

    we just don't know how to control them, this is the problem

    5:11

    and our nanobots...

    5:13

    hopefully solve this problem and I'll show you how.

    5:15

    So there is an interesting question "how do we build

    5:19

    a robot or a machine the size of a molecule?"

    5:21

    so the simple answer would be: we can use molecules

    5:25

    to build this machine.

    5:26

    So we're using molecules, but we're not using just any molecule.

    5:30

    We're using the perfect, most beautiful molecule on earth, at least in my opinion,

    5:34

    which is DNA.

    5:36

    And in fact every part of the robot,

    5:38

    every part of out nanorobots:

    5:40

    Moving parts, axis, locks, chasis, software,

    5:44

    everything is made from DNA molecules.

    5:46

    And the techonology that enables us to do this

    5:49

    originated thirty years ago when the pioneering works of Nadrian Seeman,

    5:52

    culminating 7 years ago in the works of Paul Rothemund from Caltech,

    5:56

    which was also featured in TED,

    5:58

    and it's called DNA origami.

    5:59

    Now in DNA origami we do not use a piece of paper,

    6:02

    we use a single long strand of DNA

    6:05

    and we fold it into virtually any shape we want.

    6:08

    For example these shapes, so these are actual microscopic images

    6:12

    of shapes the size of molecules that were folded from DNA.

    6:16

    so the smiley you see here in the center of the screen for example

    6:19

    are a hundred nanometers in size

    6:21

    and we make billions of them in few... in a single reaction.

    6:24

    Now since 2006 several researchers, really talented ones,

    6:28

    have been expanding the limits of the technically feasible in DNA origami

    6:32

    and now we have an astonishig array of shapes and objects which we can build

    6:35

    using this technique.

    6:36

    And these researchers also gave us computer-aided design tools

    6:41

    that enable everyone

    6:43

    very very simply to design objects from DNA

    6:46

    So these CAD tools amazingly

    6:49

    enable us to focus o n the shape we want

    6:52

    forgetting the fact that these structures are in fact assemblies of molecules.

    6:57

    so this is for example a shape the computer can actually turn into DNA molecules.

    7:02

    and the output of this CAD software, as you can see,

    7:05

    is a spreadsheet with fragments of DNA

    7:08

    which you can attach to a message and send to a company

    7:11

    one of two dozen companies that make DNA by order and you'll get those DNA's

    7:16

    several days later to your doorstep

    7:18

    and when you get them all you need to do is just mix them in a certain way

    7:23

    and these molecular bricks will self-assemble into

    7:26

    millions of copies of the very structure that you designed using that CAD software

    7:30

    which is free by the way, you can download it for free.

    7:34

    So, let's have a look at our nanorobots.

    7:38

    So, this is how the nanorobots look like, it's built from DNA as you can see

    7:42

    And it resembles a clam shell in which you can put cargo

    7:45

    You can load anything you want starting from small molecules, drugs,

    7:49

    proteines, enzymes, even nano-particles. Virtually any function

    7:54

    that molecules can carry out, can be loaded into the nanobot

    7:57

    and the nanobot can be programmed to turn on and off

    8:01

    these functions at certain places and at certain times

    8:05

    this is how we control those molecules

    8:07

    and so this particular nanorobot is in an off state, it's closed,it's securely

    8:12

    sequestres anything, any payload you put inside

    8:16

    so it's not accessible to the outside of the robot,

    8:18

    for example, it cannot engage target cells or target tissues

    8:22

    But we can program the nanobot to switch to an on state

    8:26

    based on molecular cues it finds from the environment

    8:30

    so programming the robot is virtually like assemblying a combination lock

    8:34

    using disks that recognize digits,

    8:37

    but of course instead of digits we are assemblying disks that recognize molecules.

    8:42

    So these robots can turn from off to on and when they do

    8:47

    any cargo inside is now accessible,

    8:49

    it can attack target cells or target tissues

    8:52

    or other robots which you'll see later on.

    8:54

    And so we have robots that can switch from off to on

    8:58

    and off again, we can control their kinetics of transition.

    9:02

    We can control which payload becomes accessible at which time point

    9:05

    Let's see an example how these robots for example control a cancer drug

    9:12

    So what you can do is you can take nanobots,

    9:14

    you can put the nastiest cancer drug you may find

    9:17

    into the robots, even a cancer drug

    9:19

    that's been withdrawn because of excessive toxicity

    9:23

    Ok? When the robot is locked

    9:25

    and you put them in your mixture of healthy cells and tumor cells

    9:29

    nothing happens, no cell is affected, because the robot

    9:32

    safely sequesters those drugs inside.

    9:35

    When we unlock the robots

    9:37

    all cells die because the cargo inside the [robot] attacks anything on sight.

    9:42

    So all cells eventually die. In this case this is a fluorescent molecule

    9:46

    to help us see better the output.

    9:48

    But when we program the nanobots to search for tumor cells particulary,

    9:53

    so only the tumor cells

    9:56

    uh... only the tumor cells die because

    9:59

    the robot doesn't care about the bystander cells, about the healthy cells.

    10:04

    So it does not harm them at all.

    10:06

    And we have nanorobots in our lab that can target

    10:09

    about ten types of cancer already and other cell targets

    10:12

    and my team keeps expanding this range monthly.

    10:17

    So these are nanorobots and to another topic

    10:22

    organisms in nature, like bacteria and animals

    10:26

    have learned very early in evolution that working in a coordinated group

    10:29

    conveys advantage

    10:31

    and capabilities beyond those of the individual

    10:34

    and since we are interested in

    10:36

    very complex medical procedures, very complex therapeutic settings,

    10:40

    we're wondering what we could do

    10:42

    if we could engineer artificial swarm behaviors

    10:46

    into our nanobots as well so we could have extraordinarily large groups of nanobots

    10:51

    Can we teach them to behave like animals, like insects

    10:55

    and how do you do this? So the question is interesting.

    10:58

    So you could think one way to do it would be

    11:01

    to look at a natural swarm like this one of fish

    11:04

    and simulate the dynamics of the entire swarm and then try to write the codes

    11:09

    in molecules of course

    11:10

    that mimic the same behaviour

    11:12

    this is virtually impossible, it's impractical

    11:15

    what we do is we take the single fish or a single nanobot in our case

    11:20

    and you design a very basic set of interaction rules

    11:23

    and then you take this one, this nanobot, you make a billion copies of it

    11:27

    and you let the behaviours emerge from that group

    11:31

    let me show you some examples of the things we can already do

    11:35

    for example, just as ants

    11:38

    can shake hands and form physical bridges between two trees

    11:42

    or two remote parts of the same tree,

    11:44

    we already have nanorobots that can reach out for each other

    11:47

    touch each other and shake hands in such a way

    11:49

    they form physical bridges.

    11:51

    Then you can imagine these robots

    11:53

    extending, making bridges extending from one-half

    11:56

    to the other half of an injured tissue,

    11:58

    an injured spinal cord for example

    12:00

    or an injured leg in the case of Dana, my daughter

    12:03

    and once they stretched over that tissue gap

    12:06

    they can apply growth factors, as payloads, and those growth factors

    12:10

    stimulate the re-growth and guide re-growth of cells across the gap.

    12:14

    So we already did that and...

    12:17

    we have robots that can cross regulate each other just like animals do in groups

    12:21

    and this is amazing because as you can see here

    12:24

    you can have two types of robots, Type-A and Type-B

    12:28

    they can cross regulate each other, such that "A" is active

    12:32

    while "B" is not and viceversa.

    12:34

    So this is good for combination therapy

    12:36

    with combination therapy we take multiple drugs, right?

    12:39

    and sometimes two or more of these drugs

    12:41

    can collide and generate side effects,

    12:43

    but here you can put one drug here, one drug here

    12:46

    and the robots will time the activities so that

    12:49

    one drug is active, the other is not and then they can switch

    12:52

    and so two or more drugs can operate at the same time without actually colliding.

    12:57

    Another example that we did is the quorum sensing.

    13:00

    Now quorum sensing is great, it's a bacterial inspired behaviour

    13:05

    It means nanorobots can count themselves

    13:08

    and they can switch to "on" only when reaching a certain population size

    13:12

    this is a mechanism invented by bacteria in evolution

    13:15

    and they regulate amazing behaviours based on just their population density

    13:18

    for example, bioluminescence, this one of the well-studied examples

    13:23

    so our robots can count themselves and switch to on

    13:26

    only when reaching a certain population size which we can program.

    13:29

    This is great because this is a mechanism of programming a drug

    13:33

    to become active only when reaching a certain dose

    13:36

    around the target, regardless of its inherent dose-response curve.

    13:41

    One last I'm gonna show to you is computing,

    13:43

    so this nanobots can do computing.

    13:45

    How's so? If you think about your computer at home,

    13:48

    the processor of the computer is in fact a gigantic swarm of transistors

    13:53

    In an i7 core for example you have 800 million transistors approximately

    13:58

    and they're set to interact in certain ways to produce logic gates

    14:02

    and these logic gates are set to interact to produce computations

    14:05

    so we can also produce computation by setting interactions between nanorobots

    14:10

    to emulate logic gates like you see here

    14:13

    and they form chains and they form pairs

    14:15

    and my team in Bar-Ilan University [has] already developed several architectures

    14:19

    of computing based on interacting nanorobots

    14:22

    and to prototype these

    14:24

    we are using animals, very interesting animals

    14:27

    these are cockroaches,

    14:28

    they are very easy to work with, the're very sweet,

    14:30

    they're actually from South America

    14:32

    and I'm a Soutamerican myself so I fell kinda related

    14:35

    [Laughter]

    14:36

    And hum... so what we do is we inject those robots into the cockroach

    14:40

    and to do that we of course had to put the cockroaches to sleep

    14:43

    have you ever tried putting cockroach to sleep?

    14:46

    We put in the freezer for seven minutes

    14:48

    in they fall asleep

    14:49

    and we can inject these nanorobots inside

    14:52

    and after 20 minutes they start running around, they're happy.

    14:55

    And those robots

    14:57

    while they're doing this, the robots read molecules

    14:59

    from the cockroaches' inputs

    15:01

    and they write their outputs in the form of drugs

    15:04

    activated on those cockroaches' cells

    15:06

    so we can do, we can see that and we already have, as you can see,

    15:09

    architectures of interecting nanorobots that can emulate logical operators

    15:14

    and you can use these as modular parts to build any type universal computer you want

    15:19

    [....]

    15:21

    that can control multiple drugs simultaneously

    15:25

    as a result of biocomputing, this is real universal computing in a living animal.

    15:30

    Now we already have systems that have [the] computing capacity

    15:33

    of an 8-bit computer like Commodore 64.

    15:36

    To make sure we don't lose control over the nanobots after they're injected

    15:40

    my team [has] developed nanorobots that carry antennae

    15:44

    these antennae are made from metal nano-particles.

    15:47

    Now, the antennae enable the nanobots

    15:49

    to respond to externally applied electromagnetic fields

    15:52

    so these nanorobots, this version of nanobots

    15:55

    can actually be activated with a press of a button on a joystick

    15:58

    or for example using a controller

    16:01

    such as the Xbox or Wii if you ever had the chance of playing with those

    16:05

    and you can see one of my students in the lab configuring an Xbox app

    16:09

    to control nanobots.

    16:11

    For example you can imagine nanorobots being injected

    16:14

    to Dana, my daughter for example,

    16:16

    and the doctor can guide those robots

    16:19

    into the site, into the leg and just activate them with a hand gesture.

    16:23

    And you can already see an example where we actually took

    16:26

    cancer cells and loaded robots with cancer drugs

    16:29

    and activated the drug by a hand gesture.

    16:31

    and we can actually kill cancer cells just by doing this,

    16:34

    as you can see here.

    16:36

    And the interesting thing is that

    16:39

    because the controller like the Xbox is connected to the internet,

    16:44

    the controller actually links those nanobots to the network

    16:47

    so they have an actual IP address

    16:49

    and they can be accessed from a remote device sitting on the same network,

    16:53

    for example, my doctor's smartphone

    16:55

    So, OK?, just like controlling a controller, this can be done.

    17:00

    The last thing I'm gonna show is, if you look at our body

    17:04

    you'll see that every cell type, every organ, every tissue

    17:08

    has their own unique molecular signature

    17:11

    and this is equivalent to a physical IP address made of molecules

    17:15

    and if you know these molecules

    17:17

    you can use those nanobots to browse the Organism Wide Web, as we call it

    17:21

    and you can program them to look for bits,

    17:23

    this could be for example signally molecules between cells,

    17:26

    and either fetch them for diagnostics

    17:28

    or carry them to different addresses.

    17:30

    And we already have robots that can hijack

    17:33

    signals between cells

    17:34

    and manipulate an entire network of communications between cells

    17:37

    and this is great for controlling very complex diseases in which many cell types

    17:43

    communicate and orchestrate to perpetuate a disease.

    17:46

    So before I finish I'd just like to thank

    17:50

    my amazing team at Bar-Ilan University

    17:52

    and all the colleagues that took part in this extraordinary journey,

    17:55

    starting from the George Chuch's Lab in Harvard

    17:57

    and ending today in Bar-Ilan University in the new Faculty of Life Sciences,

    18:01

    and I really hope that

    18:03

    anywhere between a year and five years from now

    18:06

    we'll be able to use this in humans

    18:08

    and finally witness the emergence of nanobot society.

    18:11

    Thank you very much.


    https://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/nanobots-live-cockroach-thought-control/





    https://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/nanobots-live-cockroach-thought-control/

    https://www.timesofisrael.com/israeli-scientists-use-nanobots-and-thoughts-to-administer-drugs/


    Israeli scientists say they have come up with a way for brain power to control when drugs are released into the body, by using tiny robots made out of DNA to deliver the medication internally.

    Researchers at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya and Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan have built the nanobots to which medication is attached and then are injected into the body. The nanobots have a “gate” that opens or closes — thereby controlling drug release — depending on brain activity.

    In order to achieve this, the New Scientist magazine said, the researchers developed a computer algorithm that could tell whether a person’s brain was resting or carrying out some form of mental activity, such as math problems. A fluorescent-tinted drug was then added to the nanobots, which were injected into a cockroach placed inside an electromagnetic coil.

    Israeli scientists say they have come up with a way for brain power to control when drugs are released into the body, by using tiny robots made out of DNA to deliver the medication internally.

    This coil was then connected to an EEG cap worn by a person asked to perform mental calculations. The computer recognized increased brain activity by the cap wearer, which triggered the “gate” on the nanobots inside the cockroach, releasing the fluorescent drug that was visible as it spread through the insect’s body.

    The idea is to use the delivery system for people with mental health issues, which are sometimes triggered before sufferers are aware they need medication.

    By monitoring brain activity, the nanobots could deliver the required preventative drugs automatically,

    for example before a violent episode of schizophrenia.

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/2102463-mind-controlled-nanobots-could-release-drugs-inside-your-brain/


    The group has built nanorobots out of DNA, forming shell-like shapes that drugs can be tethered to. The bots also have a gate, which has a lock made from iron oxide nanoparticles. The lock opens when heated using electromagnetic energy, exposing the drug to the environment. Because the drug remains tethered to the DNA parcel, a body’s exposure to the drug can be controlled by closing and opening the gate.

    By examining when fluorescence appeared inside different cockroaches, the team confirmed that this worked.

    The idea would be to automatically trigger the release of a drug when it is needed. For example, some people don’t always know when they need medication – before a violent episode of schizophrenia, for instance. If an EEG could detect it was coming, it could stimulate the release of a preventative drug.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BxJPceCV51g Nanobots Successfully Used on Living Animal for the First Time - IGN News

    0:38

    to treat human ailments or weaponized

    0:40

    hijacked by a snake themed terrorist

    0:42

    organization and then used to destroy

    0:43

    Paris but I suppose it's only a matter

    0:45

    of time


    “This syringe has inside it a thousand billion robots.”

    https://outraged.substack.com/p/the-emergence-of-nanobot-society?utm_source=cross-post&publication_id=1087020&post_id=143145132&utm_campaign=956088&isFreemail=true&r=1sq9d8&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email

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    https://donshafi911.blogspot.com/2024/04/the-emergence-of-nanobot-society.html
    The emergence of nanobot society OUTRAGED HUMAN So, they injected it into the military, police, emergency services.... Now everyone is injected with a device with a "real IP ADDRESS".... 0:00 Thank you very much. So one word of notice before we begin, 0:03 all the technologies that you are going to see here now are real. 0:06 And with that said 0:07 I'd like to first tell you the story about 0:10 this uh... little girl named Dana 0:12 she's very special for me because she's my daugther 0:14 and Dana was born with a leg condition requiring frequent surgeries like this one 0:19 uh... she had when we were in Boston 0:21 and um... I remember taking her to that particular surgery 0:25 and uh... 0:26 I rembember her being admitted and she was excited at first 0:31 and then just before they got into her the OR 0:33 I looked at her and she was... afraid, she was little worried and 0:38 who wouldn't be? Because surgeries today are complicated 0:41 and they're often very risky. 0:42 Now let's imagine a few years into the future, into the near future hopefully, 0:47 Dana will arrive to hospital for her ??? surgery 0:50 and instead of being prepped for anesthesia for the OR 0:54 the surgeon will just take a syringe and inside the syringe 0:58 there are millions of tiny robots, of tiny machines 1:02 that will be injected into Dana's bloodstream. 1:04 They will autonomously locate the place they need to be in, 1:08 they will excite out the injured tissue, 1:11 then will remove dead cells, 1:13 then they will... 1:14 stimulate and guide the regrowth of healthy cells across those tissue gaps, 1:18 they will release drugs that relief pain and reduce inflammation 1:23 and all the while Dana will be sitting on the chair 1:25 eating a sandwich, reading a book, might be the next 1:28 twilight saga book which she'll be able to read because she will be 16 by then 1:32 And...(giggles) 1:33 uh... when these robots 1:35 have completed their job they'll simply disintegrate 1:39 and disappear from her bloodstream the next day. 1:42 So these nanobots have been envisioned in the past 30 years 1:45 by people like Eric Drexler, Robert Freitas and Ray Kuzweil. 1:49 Today I'm going to show you that these robots exist 1:51 here in Israel. 1:54 I'll show you this syringe 1:56 which I've brought from my lab. 1:58 So this syringe has inside it a thousand billion robots. 2:03 So these robots are each fifty nanometers 2:06 long as you can see in this slide under the microscope. 2:11 Fifty nanometers is about 2000 times thinner than the thickness of your hair 2:16 OK? And... umm... These robots were born actually 3 years ago 2:20 in a research I did with Shawn Douglas, now a UCSF Professor. 2:24 But over the past year and a half 2:25 in my group at Bar-Ilan University 2:27 We've been developing and testing robots for a variety of 2:31 medical and therapeutic tasks. 2:33 We've invented ways of making them safe for use 2:37 and non-inmunogenic 2:38 and we learned how to tune their stability in our bloodstream 2:41 to fit either short-term or long-term 2:44 even days long medical procedures. 2:47 So to carry out medical and therapeutic procedures in our body 2:50 with the upmost precision, 2:51 we need to be able to control molecules 2:53 Controlling molecules is a very simple challenge 2:56 in modern scientific knowledge. 2:58 OK? Let's speak for example about the class of molecules we know as drugs 3:02 So despite... 3:04 amazing progress made in the past four decades 3:06 the way we think about drugs and we the way we use drugs 3:09 has been essentially unchanged 3:11 and it's similar as two hundred years ago 3:14 right? You hear about about big pharmaceutical companies 3:17 spending huge amounts of money 3:19 searching for better, safer drugs. 3:22 Attempts that usually fail. 3:24 OK? but, 3:25 searching for let's say a safer cancer drug, 3:28 half it is a concept that has a flaw in it. 3:30 Because searching for a safer cancer drug 3:32 is basically like searching for a gun that kills only bad people 3:36 We don't search for such guns, 3:37 what we do is training soldiers to use that gun properly 3:42 Of course in drugs we can't do this because it seems very hard 3:45 But there are things we can do with drugs 3:47 for example, we can put the drugs 3:49 in particles from which they difuse slowly. 3:51 We can attach a drug to a carrier 3:54 which takes someplace but, this is not real control. 3:57 When we were thinking about control we're thinking about 4:00 processes is the real world around us 4:02 and what happens when we want to control a process 4:06 that's beyond our capabilities as humans 4:08 we just connect this process to a computer 4:10 and let the computer control this process for us. 4:13 OK? So that's what we do. 4:15 But obviously this cannot be done with drugs because 4:19 the drugs are so much smaller than the computers as we know them 4:23 The computer is in fact so much bigger 4:25 it's about a hundred million times bigger that any drug molecule. 4:28 Our nanobots which were in the syringe 4:31 solve this problem because they are in fact 4:34 computers the size of molecules. 4:36 and they can interact with molecules 4:38 and they can control molecules directly, 4:40 so just think about all those 4:42 drugs that have been withdrawn from the market 4:45 for excessive toxicity 4:46 right? 4:47 It doesn't mean that they are not effective, 4:49 they were amazingly effective, 4:51 they were just guns shooting in all directions 4:53 but in the hands of a well-trained soldier 4:56 or a well-programed nanobot 4:58 using all the existing drugs 5:01 we could hypothetically kill almost any disease. 5:05 So we might not need even new drugs. 5:07 We have amazing drugs already, 5:09 we just don't know how to control them, this is the problem 5:11 and our nanobots... 5:13 hopefully solve this problem and I'll show you how. 5:15 So there is an interesting question "how do we build 5:19 a robot or a machine the size of a molecule?" 5:21 so the simple answer would be: we can use molecules 5:25 to build this machine. 5:26 So we're using molecules, but we're not using just any molecule. 5:30 We're using the perfect, most beautiful molecule on earth, at least in my opinion, 5:34 which is DNA. 5:36 And in fact every part of the robot, 5:38 every part of out nanorobots: 5:40 Moving parts, axis, locks, chasis, software, 5:44 everything is made from DNA molecules. 5:46 And the techonology that enables us to do this 5:49 originated thirty years ago when the pioneering works of Nadrian Seeman, 5:52 culminating 7 years ago in the works of Paul Rothemund from Caltech, 5:56 which was also featured in TED, 5:58 and it's called DNA origami. 5:59 Now in DNA origami we do not use a piece of paper, 6:02 we use a single long strand of DNA 6:05 and we fold it into virtually any shape we want. 6:08 For example these shapes, so these are actual microscopic images 6:12 of shapes the size of molecules that were folded from DNA. 6:16 so the smiley you see here in the center of the screen for example 6:19 are a hundred nanometers in size 6:21 and we make billions of them in few... in a single reaction. 6:24 Now since 2006 several researchers, really talented ones, 6:28 have been expanding the limits of the technically feasible in DNA origami 6:32 and now we have an astonishig array of shapes and objects which we can build 6:35 using this technique. 6:36 And these researchers also gave us computer-aided design tools 6:41 that enable everyone 6:43 very very simply to design objects from DNA 6:46 So these CAD tools amazingly 6:49 enable us to focus o n the shape we want 6:52 forgetting the fact that these structures are in fact assemblies of molecules. 6:57 so this is for example a shape the computer can actually turn into DNA molecules. 7:02 and the output of this CAD software, as you can see, 7:05 is a spreadsheet with fragments of DNA 7:08 which you can attach to a message and send to a company 7:11 one of two dozen companies that make DNA by order and you'll get those DNA's 7:16 several days later to your doorstep 7:18 and when you get them all you need to do is just mix them in a certain way 7:23 and these molecular bricks will self-assemble into 7:26 millions of copies of the very structure that you designed using that CAD software 7:30 which is free by the way, you can download it for free. 7:34 So, let's have a look at our nanorobots. 7:38 So, this is how the nanorobots look like, it's built from DNA as you can see 7:42 And it resembles a clam shell in which you can put cargo 7:45 You can load anything you want starting from small molecules, drugs, 7:49 proteines, enzymes, even nano-particles. Virtually any function 7:54 that molecules can carry out, can be loaded into the nanobot 7:57 and the nanobot can be programmed to turn on and off 8:01 these functions at certain places and at certain times 8:05 this is how we control those molecules 8:07 and so this particular nanorobot is in an off state, it's closed,it's securely 8:12 sequestres anything, any payload you put inside 8:16 so it's not accessible to the outside of the robot, 8:18 for example, it cannot engage target cells or target tissues 8:22 But we can program the nanobot to switch to an on state 8:26 based on molecular cues it finds from the environment 8:30 so programming the robot is virtually like assemblying a combination lock 8:34 using disks that recognize digits, 8:37 but of course instead of digits we are assemblying disks that recognize molecules. 8:42 So these robots can turn from off to on and when they do 8:47 any cargo inside is now accessible, 8:49 it can attack target cells or target tissues 8:52 or other robots which you'll see later on. 8:54 And so we have robots that can switch from off to on 8:58 and off again, we can control their kinetics of transition. 9:02 We can control which payload becomes accessible at which time point 9:05 Let's see an example how these robots for example control a cancer drug 9:12 So what you can do is you can take nanobots, 9:14 you can put the nastiest cancer drug you may find 9:17 into the robots, even a cancer drug 9:19 that's been withdrawn because of excessive toxicity 9:23 Ok? When the robot is locked 9:25 and you put them in your mixture of healthy cells and tumor cells 9:29 nothing happens, no cell is affected, because the robot 9:32 safely sequesters those drugs inside. 9:35 When we unlock the robots 9:37 all cells die because the cargo inside the [robot] attacks anything on sight. 9:42 So all cells eventually die. In this case this is a fluorescent molecule 9:46 to help us see better the output. 9:48 But when we program the nanobots to search for tumor cells particulary, 9:53 so only the tumor cells 9:56 uh... only the tumor cells die because 9:59 the robot doesn't care about the bystander cells, about the healthy cells. 10:04 So it does not harm them at all. 10:06 And we have nanorobots in our lab that can target 10:09 about ten types of cancer already and other cell targets 10:12 and my team keeps expanding this range monthly. 10:17 So these are nanorobots and to another topic 10:22 organisms in nature, like bacteria and animals 10:26 have learned very early in evolution that working in a coordinated group 10:29 conveys advantage 10:31 and capabilities beyond those of the individual 10:34 and since we are interested in 10:36 very complex medical procedures, very complex therapeutic settings, 10:40 we're wondering what we could do 10:42 if we could engineer artificial swarm behaviors 10:46 into our nanobots as well so we could have extraordinarily large groups of nanobots 10:51 Can we teach them to behave like animals, like insects 10:55 and how do you do this? So the question is interesting. 10:58 So you could think one way to do it would be 11:01 to look at a natural swarm like this one of fish 11:04 and simulate the dynamics of the entire swarm and then try to write the codes 11:09 in molecules of course 11:10 that mimic the same behaviour 11:12 this is virtually impossible, it's impractical 11:15 what we do is we take the single fish or a single nanobot in our case 11:20 and you design a very basic set of interaction rules 11:23 and then you take this one, this nanobot, you make a billion copies of it 11:27 and you let the behaviours emerge from that group 11:31 let me show you some examples of the things we can already do 11:35 for example, just as ants 11:38 can shake hands and form physical bridges between two trees 11:42 or two remote parts of the same tree, 11:44 we already have nanorobots that can reach out for each other 11:47 touch each other and shake hands in such a way 11:49 they form physical bridges. 11:51 Then you can imagine these robots 11:53 extending, making bridges extending from one-half 11:56 to the other half of an injured tissue, 11:58 an injured spinal cord for example 12:00 or an injured leg in the case of Dana, my daughter 12:03 and once they stretched over that tissue gap 12:06 they can apply growth factors, as payloads, and those growth factors 12:10 stimulate the re-growth and guide re-growth of cells across the gap. 12:14 So we already did that and... 12:17 we have robots that can cross regulate each other just like animals do in groups 12:21 and this is amazing because as you can see here 12:24 you can have two types of robots, Type-A and Type-B 12:28 they can cross regulate each other, such that "A" is active 12:32 while "B" is not and viceversa. 12:34 So this is good for combination therapy 12:36 with combination therapy we take multiple drugs, right? 12:39 and sometimes two or more of these drugs 12:41 can collide and generate side effects, 12:43 but here you can put one drug here, one drug here 12:46 and the robots will time the activities so that 12:49 one drug is active, the other is not and then they can switch 12:52 and so two or more drugs can operate at the same time without actually colliding. 12:57 Another example that we did is the quorum sensing. 13:00 Now quorum sensing is great, it's a bacterial inspired behaviour 13:05 It means nanorobots can count themselves 13:08 and they can switch to "on" only when reaching a certain population size 13:12 this is a mechanism invented by bacteria in evolution 13:15 and they regulate amazing behaviours based on just their population density 13:18 for example, bioluminescence, this one of the well-studied examples 13:23 so our robots can count themselves and switch to on 13:26 only when reaching a certain population size which we can program. 13:29 This is great because this is a mechanism of programming a drug 13:33 to become active only when reaching a certain dose 13:36 around the target, regardless of its inherent dose-response curve. 13:41 One last I'm gonna show to you is computing, 13:43 so this nanobots can do computing. 13:45 How's so? If you think about your computer at home, 13:48 the processor of the computer is in fact a gigantic swarm of transistors 13:53 In an i7 core for example you have 800 million transistors approximately 13:58 and they're set to interact in certain ways to produce logic gates 14:02 and these logic gates are set to interact to produce computations 14:05 so we can also produce computation by setting interactions between nanorobots 14:10 to emulate logic gates like you see here 14:13 and they form chains and they form pairs 14:15 and my team in Bar-Ilan University [has] already developed several architectures 14:19 of computing based on interacting nanorobots 14:22 and to prototype these 14:24 we are using animals, very interesting animals 14:27 these are cockroaches, 14:28 they are very easy to work with, the're very sweet, 14:30 they're actually from South America 14:32 and I'm a Soutamerican myself so I fell kinda related 14:35 [Laughter] 14:36 And hum... so what we do is we inject those robots into the cockroach 14:40 and to do that we of course had to put the cockroaches to sleep 14:43 have you ever tried putting cockroach to sleep? 14:46 We put in the freezer for seven minutes 14:48 in they fall asleep 14:49 and we can inject these nanorobots inside 14:52 and after 20 minutes they start running around, they're happy. 14:55 And those robots 14:57 while they're doing this, the robots read molecules 14:59 from the cockroaches' inputs 15:01 and they write their outputs in the form of drugs 15:04 activated on those cockroaches' cells 15:06 so we can do, we can see that and we already have, as you can see, 15:09 architectures of interecting nanorobots that can emulate logical operators 15:14 and you can use these as modular parts to build any type universal computer you want 15:19 [....] 15:21 that can control multiple drugs simultaneously 15:25 as a result of biocomputing, this is real universal computing in a living animal. 15:30 Now we already have systems that have [the] computing capacity 15:33 of an 8-bit computer like Commodore 64. 15:36 To make sure we don't lose control over the nanobots after they're injected 15:40 my team [has] developed nanorobots that carry antennae 15:44 these antennae are made from metal nano-particles. 15:47 Now, the antennae enable the nanobots 15:49 to respond to externally applied electromagnetic fields 15:52 so these nanorobots, this version of nanobots 15:55 can actually be activated with a press of a button on a joystick 15:58 or for example using a controller 16:01 such as the Xbox or Wii if you ever had the chance of playing with those 16:05 and you can see one of my students in the lab configuring an Xbox app 16:09 to control nanobots. 16:11 For example you can imagine nanorobots being injected 16:14 to Dana, my daughter for example, 16:16 and the doctor can guide those robots 16:19 into the site, into the leg and just activate them with a hand gesture. 16:23 And you can already see an example where we actually took 16:26 cancer cells and loaded robots with cancer drugs 16:29 and activated the drug by a hand gesture. 16:31 and we can actually kill cancer cells just by doing this, 16:34 as you can see here. 16:36 And the interesting thing is that 16:39 because the controller like the Xbox is connected to the internet, 16:44 the controller actually links those nanobots to the network 16:47 so they have an actual IP address 16:49 and they can be accessed from a remote device sitting on the same network, 16:53 for example, my doctor's smartphone 16:55 So, OK?, just like controlling a controller, this can be done. 17:00 The last thing I'm gonna show is, if you look at our body 17:04 you'll see that every cell type, every organ, every tissue 17:08 has their own unique molecular signature 17:11 and this is equivalent to a physical IP address made of molecules 17:15 and if you know these molecules 17:17 you can use those nanobots to browse the Organism Wide Web, as we call it 17:21 and you can program them to look for bits, 17:23 this could be for example signally molecules between cells, 17:26 and either fetch them for diagnostics 17:28 or carry them to different addresses. 17:30 And we already have robots that can hijack 17:33 signals between cells 17:34 and manipulate an entire network of communications between cells 17:37 and this is great for controlling very complex diseases in which many cell types 17:43 communicate and orchestrate to perpetuate a disease. 17:46 So before I finish I'd just like to thank 17:50 my amazing team at Bar-Ilan University 17:52 and all the colleagues that took part in this extraordinary journey, 17:55 starting from the George Chuch's Lab in Harvard 17:57 and ending today in Bar-Ilan University in the new Faculty of Life Sciences, 18:01 and I really hope that 18:03 anywhere between a year and five years from now 18:06 we'll be able to use this in humans 18:08 and finally witness the emergence of nanobot society. 18:11 Thank you very much. https://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/nanobots-live-cockroach-thought-control/ https://www.digitaltrends.com/cool-tech/nanobots-live-cockroach-thought-control/ https://www.timesofisrael.com/israeli-scientists-use-nanobots-and-thoughts-to-administer-drugs/ Israeli scientists say they have come up with a way for brain power to control when drugs are released into the body, by using tiny robots made out of DNA to deliver the medication internally. Researchers at the Interdisciplinary Center in Herzliya and Bar-Ilan University in Ramat Gan have built the nanobots to which medication is attached and then are injected into the body. The nanobots have a “gate” that opens or closes — thereby controlling drug release — depending on brain activity. In order to achieve this, the New Scientist magazine said, the researchers developed a computer algorithm that could tell whether a person’s brain was resting or carrying out some form of mental activity, such as math problems. A fluorescent-tinted drug was then added to the nanobots, which were injected into a cockroach placed inside an electromagnetic coil. Israeli scientists say they have come up with a way for brain power to control when drugs are released into the body, by using tiny robots made out of DNA to deliver the medication internally. This coil was then connected to an EEG cap worn by a person asked to perform mental calculations. The computer recognized increased brain activity by the cap wearer, which triggered the “gate” on the nanobots inside the cockroach, releasing the fluorescent drug that was visible as it spread through the insect’s body. The idea is to use the delivery system for people with mental health issues, which are sometimes triggered before sufferers are aware they need medication. By monitoring brain activity, the nanobots could deliver the required preventative drugs automatically, for example before a violent episode of schizophrenia. https://www.newscientist.com/article/2102463-mind-controlled-nanobots-could-release-drugs-inside-your-brain/ The group has built nanorobots out of DNA, forming shell-like shapes that drugs can be tethered to. The bots also have a gate, which has a lock made from iron oxide nanoparticles. The lock opens when heated using electromagnetic energy, exposing the drug to the environment. Because the drug remains tethered to the DNA parcel, a body’s exposure to the drug can be controlled by closing and opening the gate. By examining when fluorescence appeared inside different cockroaches, the team confirmed that this worked. The idea would be to automatically trigger the release of a drug when it is needed. For example, some people don’t always know when they need medication – before a violent episode of schizophrenia, for instance. If an EEG could detect it was coming, it could stimulate the release of a preventative drug. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BxJPceCV51g Nanobots Successfully Used on Living Animal for the First Time - IGN News 0:38 to treat human ailments or weaponized 0:40 hijacked by a snake themed terrorist 0:42 organization and then used to destroy 0:43 Paris but I suppose it's only a matter 0:45 of time “This syringe has inside it a thousand billion robots.” https://outraged.substack.com/p/the-emergence-of-nanobot-society?utm_source=cross-post&publication_id=1087020&post_id=143145132&utm_campaign=956088&isFreemail=true&r=1sq9d8&triedRedirect=true&utm_medium=email Follow @zeeemedia Website | X | Instagram | Rumble https://donshafi911.blogspot.com/2024/04/the-emergence-of-nanobot-society.html
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    The emergence of nanobot society
    So, they injected it into the military, police, emergency services.... Now everyone is injected with a device with a "real IP ADDRESS".... Thanks for reading OUTRAGED’s Newsletter! Subscribe for free to receive new posts and support my work. 0:00 Thank you very much. So one word of notice before we begin,
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