TOM: This train has already left the building. So it’s astonishing, uh, what some of these guys have admitted. Okay, now I have to go a whole lot faster than that if I’m going to get this done in whatever time I got. But if you’re sitting here tonight and, uh, if, uh, you find that you’re feeling a little bit envious of your Ohio brethren and “sisteren,” yes I did say “sisteren,” feeling like maybe they’re getting the leg up on you a little bit here in North Carolina, no fear, North Carolina is one of the top locations in the world for the creation of genetically modified organisms, genetically modified animals, genetically modified crops. And in fact some of the test beds and forests that are being raised here most other states rejected, uh, saying it was far too dangerous. Uh, but because I knew that I would be speaking here I grabbed a couple of ‘em. Here, oh this thing don’t point on your thing? Okay. Here is the “should North Carolina wildlife refuges grow genetically modified crops?” Down here the, uh, North Carolina State University, and they’re talking about transgenic trees. A transgenic creation is when you take the genetic material from one living specie and you genetically engineer it into the genetic material of another living specie. Something that cannot hap—happen naturally.
Now I don’t know about the transgenic forests that they’re evidently raising here in North Carolina, but I do know that some transgenic trees have been created that have human enzymes in them. Furthermore we are raising rice crops in the United States right now that you’re going to wind up eating that have human genetic material in them. So that’s how far that train also has left the building. Uh, here’s also the North Carolina Biotechnology Center and on their website they’re celebrating right now how this is a 60 billion dollar a year part of the annual economy. North Carolina wants its part of it. Uh, that’s in Durham. Where’s that, about 2 hours from here? Uh, here also in Durham is one of the transgenic, uh, laboratories, uh, and, that page right there is talking about the transgenic mouse, uh, part of their laboratory so if you need to get a mouse that is part human or some other part pig or whatever you might happen to need for your experimental purposes this is one of the laboratories in the United States, uh, where you would be able to go. I’m not picking on North Carolina, I’m not picking on Ohio.
The state that I come from, Missouri, we are raising humanized pigs at the University of, uh, Missouri, pigs that are part human, and we are doing that for xenotransplantation purposes which is just something I can’t get bogged down in but it has to do with the hope of being able to transplant organs and make them more readily acceptable to our, uh, body systems. But in any case this is happening in every nation around the world, in every state in the United States of America. Now you might be thinking, surely Tom, these have just got to be isolated news stories, right? I mean when you knew you was going to be presenting here tonight you, you went out and you looked real hard and you found two or three stories to try to prop up your thesis to make it sound like this is more expedient. Folks, to answer my own rhetorical question, I could stand before you tonight, I’m not kidding, for 10 solid hours and still would barely scratch the surface on the peer reviewed medical journal reports, peer reviewed science journal reports, line items in budgets like this year’s DARPA’s [Defense Advanced Projects Research Agency] budget that not only, last year’s budget not only had millions of dollars for creating the blueprint to edit our solder’s DNA, but it had millions of dollars for bio-design which is the creation of a new synthetic form of life that will be militarized and it will be immortal according to DARPA’s own budget.
Tags: It's Supernatural, Sid Roth
Tags: It's Supernatural, Sid Roth