counterpunch | The Democratic Party is doing incalculable damage to itself by
shapeshifting into the party of baseless conspiracy theories, groundless
accusations, and sour grapes. Hillary Clinton was already the most
distrusted presidential candidate in party history. Now she’s become the
de facto flag-bearer for the nutso-clique of aspiring propagandists at
the CIA, the New York Times and Bezo’s Military Digest. How is that
going to improve the party’s prospects for the long term?
It won’t, because the vast majority of Americans do not want to align
themselves with a party of buck-passing juveniles that have no vision
for the future but want to devote all their energy to kooky witch-hunts
that further prove they are unfit for high office.
The reason Hillary Clinton lost the election is because she is a
polarizing, untrustworthy warmonger. Period. Putin had nothing to do
with it.
And the same rule applies to the major media that has attached itself
leech-like to this pathetic fairytale. Here’s a clip from the Times
headline story connecting FSB-agent Trump with the evil Kremlin:
“American intelligence agencies have told the White House
they have “high confidence” that the Russian government was behind the theft of emails and documents from the Democratic National Committee. …
The attack on the congressional committee’s system appears to have
come from an entity known as “Fancy Bear,” which is connected to the
G.R.U., the Russian military intelligence service, according to an
official involved in the forensic investigation…
Clinton campaign officials have suggested that President Vladimir V.
Putin of Russia could be trying to tilt the election to Mr. Trump, who
has expressed admiration for the Russian leader.” (Computer Systems Used by Clinton Campaign Are Said to Be Hacked, Apparently by Russians, New York Times)
If there was a Pulitzer Prize for fearmongering innuendo or spurious
accusations, the Times would win it hands-down. As it happens, readers
have to delve much deeper into the article to find this shocking
disclaimer:
“But the campaign officials acknowledge that they have no evidence.
The Trump campaign has dismissed the accusations about Russia as a
deliberate distraction…..”
“No evidence”???
They got nothing. NOTHING!
All they have is a few anonymous agents who refuse to identify
themselves speculating on alleged hacking incidents that (they surmise)
were the work of Vladimir P. Strangelove in his remote Soviet Cyber-war
bunker. That’s not even enough material for a decent spy thriller.
Counterpunch | Here is a brief historical note on how at the height of the Cold
War the CIA developed it’s very own stable of writers, editors and
publishers (swelling to as many as 3000 individuals) that it paid to
scribble Agency propaganda under a program called Operation Mockingbird.
The disinformation network was supervised by the late Philip Graham,
former publisher of Timberg’s very own paper, the Washington Post.
Craig Timberg’s story, which was about as substantial as anonymous
slurs scrawled on a bathroom stall, lends rise to the suspicion that
the Post may still be a player in the same old game it perfected in the
1950s and continued across the decades culminating in its 1996
hatchet-job on my old friend Gary Webb and his immaculate reporting on
drug-running by the CIA-backed contras in the 1980s. The Post’s
disgusting assault on Webb was spearheaded, in part, by the paper’s
intelligence reporter Walter Pincus, himself an old CIA hand.
For Timberg, this was probably just another day at the
office: fling some red slurs on the wall and see what sticks before
moving on to his next big tech scoop (courtesy of hot tips from a couple
of anonymous teenagers in Cupertino) on software glitches in the
i-Phone 7.
For the subjects of hit-and-run journalism such as this, however,
it’s often a different matter entirely. In Webb’s case, the Post’s
deplorable and baseless attacks killed his career as an investigative
reporter and sparked a spiraling depression that ended with Gary taking
his own life. Although the CIA’s own inspector general, Frederick Hitz,
later confirmed Webb’s reporting, the Post never retracted its
slanderous stories or apologized for ruining the life of one of the
country’s finest and most courageous journalists.
Now it appears that the paper is circling round for yet another drive-by.
NYTimes | Struggling to keep Iraq from splintering, American diplomats pushed for a law in 2011 to share the country’s oil wealth among its fractious regions.
Under its chief executive, Rex W. Tillerson,
the giant oil company sidestepped Baghdad and Washington, signing a
deal directly with the Kurdish administration in the country’s north.
The move undermined Iraq’s central government, strengthened Kurdish
independence ambitions and contravened the stated goals of the United
States.
Mr.
Tillerson’s willingness to cut a deal regardless of the political
consequences speaks volumes about Exxon Mobil’s influence. In the Iraq
case, Mr. Tillerson and his company outmaneuvered the State Department,
which he has now been nominated by President-elect Donald J. Trump to lead.
“They
are very powerful in the region, and they couldn’t care less about what
the State Department wants to do,” Jean-François Seznec, a senior
fellow at the Atlantic Council, a research group in Washington, said of
Exxon Mobil’s pursuits in the Middle East.
As
America’s biggest oil company, with operations on six continents and a
stock market value of more than $390 billion, Exxon Mobil is in some
ways a state within a state. While Mr. Tillerson has never officially
been a diplomat, he has arguably left an American footprint on more
countries than any nominee before him — with an agenda overseas that
does not always mesh with that of the United States government.
robertscribbler | Rex will come to head an agency whose stated goals include the promotion
of human rights and the advancement of U.S. policy aimed at mitigating
and reducing the harms produced by human-caused climate change. But what
Rex has done — for his entire 41 year career at Exxon — is promote the
kind of oil extraction efforts in Russia that will saddle the Earth with
yet one more gigantic carbon bomb and broker business deals with some of the worst human rights abusers in modern history.
Russian efforts to increase oil and gas production focus on Arctic
regions of East and West Siberia. Exxon Mobile under Tillerson was
slated to provide Russia with extraction assistance when plans were shut
down by U.S. sanctions against Russia following its invasion of the
Ukraine. Tillerson opposes sanctions and has, in the past, looked the
other way when Russia has acted in an abusive fashion. Image source: EIA.)
In 2014, the high-risk game that Exxon was playing with Russia went
sour after Russia invaded the Ukraine. The U.S. under President Obama,
decided to apply sanctions against Russia for its military occupation of
Ukraine. And in subsequent years, Exxon lost at least 1 billion due to the combined sanctions and Russian military aggression.
Russia, meanwhile, saw its Arctic oil extraction efforts slow due to
lack of access to western technical expertise. Tillerson, at the time,
used his position as Exxon CEO to put pressure on the U.S. to lift
sanctions. Such efforts were arguably against the national interest —
which focuses on containing and preventing aggression by foreign powers —
and aimed at simply fattening Exxon’s and, by extension, Rex’s bottom line.
In critiquing an Exxon CEO, we might lable these actions as amoral
profit-seeking that runs counter to the national interest. But place
Tillerson as Secretary of State and we end up with moral hazard writ
large. For Tillerson, if he promotes similar goals while in office,
would be wrongfully using a public appointment to pursue a personal
monetary interest — in other words opening up the U.S. to corruption and
enabling Tillerson to perpetrate graft.
wikipedia | On 25 September 2015, the 193 countries of the UN General Assembly adopted the 2030 Development Agenda titled Transforming our world: the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.
Following the adoption, UN agencies, under the umbrella of the United Nations Development Group,
decided to support a campaign by several independent entities, among
them corporate institutions and International Organizations. The
Campaign, known as Project Everyone,[16] introduced the term Global Goals
and is intended to help communicate the agreed Sustainable Development
Goals to a wider constituency. However the decision to support what is
an independent campaign, without the approval of the member states, has
met resistance[17] from several sections of civil society and governments, who accuse[18]
the UNDG of ignoring the most important communication aspect of the
agreement: Sustainability. There are also concerns that Global Goals is a
term used to refer to several other processes that are not related to
the United Nations.
The Official Agenda for Sustainable Development adopted on 25
September 2015 has 92 paragraphs, with the main paragraph (51) outlining
the 17 Sustainable Development Goals and its associated 169 targets.
This included the following goals:[19]
spiegel | September 16, 2012 was a historic date. According to the statistics
of the National Snow and Ice Data Center in the US, Arctic sea ice
shrank to cover an area of just 3.41 million square kilometers (1.32
million square miles) on that day. It was the lowest coverage measured
since the beginning of satellite observations in 1979 -- some 760,000
square kilometers lower than the previous record minimum in 2007.
The
extent of the shrinkage indicates that the Arctic is changing at a
breathtaking pace; a new ocean is opening up.
At the same time, interest in both shorter shipping routes through the
far north and Arctic mineral deposits is growing. Norway is one of the
five countries bordering the Arctic that can benefit from their
proximity to the region's presumed riches. The decades-long exploitation
of oil and natural gas in waters further south has made the country
extremely wealthy -- and hungry for more. At the same time, polar
countries like Norway have to deal with increasing pressure from
politicians and environmental groups, which complain about the risks of
resource extraction and would like to see them remain untapped.
In an interview with SPIEGEL ONLINE, Norway's new Foreign Minister
Espen Barth Eide talks about the politics of resource extraction in the
region.
Rosenergoatom is promoting floating nuclear power plants (NPP) for energy supply for Arctic oil-and gas drilling platforms. Instead of using gas to produce electricity for the platform one floating NPP can ensure needed power supply. A promotion brochure from Rosenergoatom details the plans to use the floating NPPs for offshore oil and gas installations in the remote Arctic oceans.
The general concept of the plan is based on the same technology as the floating nuclear power plant currently under construction at the Sevmash plant in Severodvinsk in the Arkhangelsk region.
The plant will be built as a barge where the core of the nuclear power plant is its KLT-40 reactor. This kind of reactors is similar to the ones onboard Russia’s civilian fleet of nuclear powered icebreakers operated by the Murmansk Shipping Company. Given the speed with which the Artic ice is melting, there won't be much foward-looking use for a fleet of nuclear ice breakers....,
The Murmansk Shipping Company will turn the nuclear-powered container carrier “Sevmorput“ into a drilling vessel for the oil industry. The vessel will be ready for drilling operations in the Arctic within 18 months, the company announced this week.
With the transformation, the world will see the first ever nuclear-powered oil and gas service vessel. The place of work for the vessel is likely to be the Arctic, and first of all the Barents Sea.
When Trump supporters opined
that the “Deep State” would never
allow the populist real estate mogul to take office, I was skeptical. This
seemed to me like a made-for-television movie script rather than a real possibility:
after all, what could they actually do, aside from using force to prevent him
from taking the oath of office?
However, as the campaign progressed, and the Clintonites became
progressively more unhinged in their attacks on Trump, the Russian angle became
more prominent: former acting CIA Director Mike Morell’s accusation
that Trump is an “unconscious agent” of the Kremlin, and “not
a patriot,” seemed over the top at the time, but in retrospect looks more
like it was laying the groundwork for the current CIA-driven propaganda campaign.
But why would the CIA, in particular, have a special aversion
to Trump? Marcy Wheeler, whose analytical abilities I respect despite our political
disagreements, has this
to say:
“First, if Trump comes into office
on the current trajectory, the US will let Russia help Bashar al-Assad stay
in power, thwarting a 4-year effort on the part of the Saudis to remove
him from power. It will also restructure the hierarchy of horrible human rights
abusing allies the US has, with the Saudis losing out to other human rights
abusers, potentially up to and including that other petrostate, Russia. It will
also install a ton of people with ties to the US oil industry in the cabinet,
meaning the US will effectively subsidize oil production in this country, which
will have the perhaps inadvertent result of ensuring the US remains oil-independent
even though the market can’t justify fracking right now.
“The CIA is institutionally quite close with the Saudis right now, and has
been in charge of their covert war against Assad.”
The Saudis, having given
millions to the Clinton Foundation, along with their Gulf state allies,
were counting on a Clinton victory. The CIA has a longstanding relationship
with Riyadh, and together they have been working assiduously to not only overthrow
Assad in Syria but to forge a “moderate” Sunni alliance that will effectively
police the region while establishing the Saudis as the regional hegemon. This
was the Clintonian strategy while Hillary was at the helm of Foggy Bottom: Libya,
Syria, the alliance with the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, are all examples of
this utterly disastrous “Sunni turn.”
Trump represents a threat to this grand design, and therefore has to be stopped
by whatever means necessary. His desire to “get along with Russia,” his opposition
to regime change in Syria, his critique of the Libyan misadventure, his foreign
policy stance in general – all this meant that he would come to power and “drain
the swamp” of the CIA and the State Department.
The irony here is that the accusation leveled
at Trump – that his historic victory represents a successful attempt by a foreign
power to take control of the White House – is a classic case of projection.
What we are witnessing is a joint CIA-Saudi operation to overthrow the duly
elected President of the United States.
WaPo |Michael V. Hayden, a principal at the
Chertoff Group and visiting professor at George Mason University’s Schar
School of Policy and Government, was director of the National Security
Agency from 1999 to 2005 and the Central Intelligence Agency from 2006
to 2009.
A month ago I wrote here
about the importance and challenge of the intelligence community
establishing a relationship with President-elect Donald Trump.
That has just gotten more important and more challenging.
In
my November op-ed, I asked: “What role will facts and fact-bearers play
in the Trump administration? . . . Which of the president-elect’s
existing instincts and judgments are open to revision as more data is
revealed?”
I had in mind the
president-elect’s confidence in his own a priori beliefs and
specifically his rejection of the intelligence community’s judgment that
Russia had stolen American emails and weaponized their content to
corrode faith in our electoral processes.
This creates more than hurt feelings. The
intelligence community makes great sacrifices, and CIA directors send
people into harm’s way to learn things otherwise unavailable. And
directors have seen stars carved on the agency’s memorial wall
because of it. If what is gained is not used or wanted or is labeled as
suspect or corrupt — by what moral authority does a director put his
people at risk?
Then there is the ethic of
the intelligence profession, captured by the gospel of John’s dictum in
the agency’s headquarters lobby — that the truth will set you free.
PCR | Ironic, isn’t it, that it is those who purport to be liberal and
progressive who are responsible for the revival of McCarthyism in
America. Moreover, the liberal progressives are institutionalizing
McCarthyism in the US government. There is clearly a concerted effort
being made to define truth as fake news and to define lies as truth.
Ironic, isn’t it, that it is the war criminal Hillary, responsible
for the destruction of Libya and the near destruction of Syria until the
Russians intervened, that the liberal progressive forces are desperate
to have as president. Not only did the liberal progressive forces
attempt to elect a war criminal president of the US, they are doing
their best to delegitimize the president-elect who opposes the
orchestrated conflict with Russia.
Ironic, isn’t it, that the liberal progressive bloc refuse to give peace a chance.
The faked news report from the imbeciles at PropOrNot, which was
hyped by the fake news sheet, WaPo, claiming that I was a Russian agent
was supposed to do my credibility harm. Instead, the 200 List told
everyone where they could get good information, and my readership went
up. Moreover, I almost got a Russian passport out of it. But before
sending it along, Putin checked with Russian intelligence and was
informed that I am not on their roster.
The rumor is that if the House intelligence bill passes with Title V intact, those of us on the PropOrNot list could be called before
congressional hearings in a replay of McCarthyism. If they waterboard
me, I might breakdown and implicate Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Jim
Baker, David Stockman, and all the rest. The evidence against us is
pretty strong. Trump is suspect because he wants peace with Russia, and
so did Reagan. From the standpoint of the Hillary forces and the
presstitutes, anyone who wants peace with Russia is bound to be a
Russian agent.
The way the presstitutes have framed the issue, there are no legitimate reasons to be for peace.
craigmurray | I have watched incredulous as the CIA’s blatant lie has grown and
grown as a media story – blatant because the CIA has made no attempt
whatsoever to substantiate it. There is no Russian involvement in the
leaks of emails showing Clinton’s corruption. Yes this rubbish has been
the lead today in the Washington Post in the US and the Guardian here,
and was the lead item on the BBC main news. I suspect it is leading the
American broadcasts also.
A little simple logic demolishes the CIA’s claims. The CIA claim they
“know the individuals” involved. Yet under Obama the USA has been
absolutely ruthless in its persecution of whistleblowers, and its
pursuit of foreign hackers through extradition. We are supposed to
believe that in the most vital instance imaginable, an attempt by a
foreign power to destabilise a US election, even though the CIA knows
who the individuals are, nobody is going to be arrested or extradited,
or (if in Russia) made subject to yet more banking and other
restrictions against Russian individuals? Plainly it stinks. The
anonymous source claims of “We know who it was, it was the Russians” are
beneath contempt.
As Julian Assange has made crystal clear, the leaks did not come from
the Russians. As I have explained countless times, they are not hacks,
they are insider leaks – there is a major difference between the two.
And it should be said again and again, that if Hillary Clinton had not
connived with the DNC to fix the primary schedule to disadvantage
Bernie, if she had not received advance notice of live debate questions
to use against Bernie, if she had not accepted massive donations to the
Clinton foundation and family members in return for foreign policy
influence, if she had not failed to distance herself from some very
weird and troubling people, then none of this would have happened.
The continued ability of the mainstream media to claim the leaks lost
Clinton the election because of “Russia”, while still never
acknowledging the truths the leaks reveal, is Kafkaesque.
I had a call from a Guardian journalist this afternoon. The astonishing result was that for three hours, an article was accessible through the Guardian front page which actually included the truth among the CIA hype:
The Kremlin has rejected the hacking accusations, while
the WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has previously said the DNC leaks
were not linked to Russia. A second senior official cited by the
Washington Post conceded that intelligence agencies did not have
specific proof that the Kremlin was “directing” the hackers, who were
said to be one step removed from the Russian government.
Craig Murray, the former UK ambassador to Uzbekistan, who is a close
associate of Assange, called the CIA claims “bullshit”, adding: “They
are absolutely making it up.”
“I know who leaked them,” Murray said. “I’ve met the person who leaked
them, and they are certainly not Russian and it’s an insider. It’s a
leak, not a hack; the two are different things.
“If what the CIA are saying is true, and the CIA’s statement refers to
people who are known to be linked to the Russian state, they would have
arrested someone if it was someone inside the United States.
“America has not been shy about arresting whistleblowers and it’s not
been shy about extraditing hackers. They plainly have no knowledge
whatsoever.”
But only three hours. While the article was not taken down, the home
page links to it vanished and it was replaced by a ludicrous one
repeating the mad CIA allegations against Russia and now claiming –
incredibly – that the CIA believe the FBI is deliberately blocking the
information on Russian collusion. Presumably this totally nutty theory,
that Putin is somehow now controlling the FBI, is meant to answer my
obvious objection that, if the CIA know who it is, why haven’t they
arrested somebody. That bit of course would be the job of the FBI, who
those desperate to annul the election now wish us to believe are the
KGB.
NYTimes | The
point is that delivering deep and lasting reductions in inequality may
be impossible absent catastrophic events beyond anything any of us would
wish for.
History
— from Ancient Rome through the Gilded Age; from the Russian Revolution
to the Great Compression of incomes across the West in the middle of
the 20th century — suggests that reversing the trend toward greater
concentrations of income, in the United States and across the world,
might be, in fact, nearly impossible.
That’s the bleak argument of Walter Scheidel, a professor of history at Stanford, whose new book, “The Great Leveler”
(Princeton University Press), is due out next month. He goes so far as
to state that “only all-out thermonuclear war might fundamentally reset
the existing distribution of resources.” If history is anything to go
by, he writes, “peaceful policy reform may well prove unequal to the
growing challenges ahead.”
Professor
Scheidel does not offer a grand unified theory of inequality. But
scouring through the historical record, he detects a pattern: From the
Stone Age to the present, ever since humankind produced a surplus to
hoard, economic development has almost always led to greater inequality.
There is one big thing with the power to stop this dynamic, but it’s
not pretty: violence.
The
big equalizing moments in history may not have always have the same
cause, he writes, “but they shared one common root: massive and violent
disruptions of the established order.”
opendemocracy | Don Halcomb is
a 63-year-old farmer who grows corn, soybeans, wheat and barley on his
7,000-acre family farm in Adairville, Kentucky. According to a
report in the New York Times he’s expecting his profits to vanish this year
because crop prices are falling and seeds and fertilizer are increasingly
expensive, their costs driven up by Monsanto, Dupont and other agribusiness
giants.
“We’re
producing our crops at a loss now,” he told the Times, “You can’t cut your
costs fast enough…It’s just like any other industry that consolidates. They
tell the regulators they’re cost-cutting, and then they tell their customers
they have to increase pricing after the deal’s done.”
The ‘deal’ cited by Halcomb concerns Monsanto’s
recent announcement that it plans to merge with Bayer, one the world’s largest
producers of agricultural chemicals and biotechnology products, spiking fears
that the new conglomerate will raise the cost of inputs even further. Less
competition equals more room for large corporations to dictate their prices and
raise their profit margins, producing a virtual monopoly on seeds which will
prevent farmers from diversifying and encourage the trend towards
highly-vulnerable agricultural monocultures.
It’s a fearful image that’s been exercising my imagination
in recent weeks, evoking some powerful theological memories in the process.
Yes, I did say ‘theological’, though perhaps ‘spiritual’ is a better word, so what’s
the connection between spirituality and seeds?
springer | Most contemporary evolutionary biologists
consider perception, cognition, and communication just like any other
adaptation to the environmental selection pressures. A biosemiotic
approach adds an unexpected turn to this Neo-Darwinian logic and focuses
not so much on the evolution of semiosis as it does on the semiosis of evolution.
What is meant here, is that evolutionary forces are themselves
semiotically constrained and contextualized. The effect of environmental
conditions is always mediated by the responses of organisms, who select
their developmental pathways and actions based on heritable or
memorized past experience and a variety of external and internal
signals. In particular, recognition and categorization of objects,
learning, and communication (both intraspecific and interspecific) can
change the evolutionary fate of lineages. Semiotic selection, an effect
of choice upon other species (Maran and Kleisner 2010), active habitat preference (Lindholm 2015), making use of and reinterpreting earlier semiotic structures – known as semiotic co-option (Kleisner 2015), and semiotic scaffolding (Hoffmeyer 2015; Kull 2015), are some further means by which semiosis makes evolution happen.
Semiotic
processes are easily recognized in animals that communicate and learn,
but it is difficult to find directly analogous processes in organisms
without nerves and brains. Molecular biologists are used to talk about
information transfer via cell-to-cell communication, DNA replication,
RNA or protein synthesis, and signal transduction cascades within cells.
However, these informational processes are difficult to compare with
perception-related sign processes in animals because information
requires interpretation by some agency, and it is not clear where the
agency in cells is. In bacterial cells, all molecular processes appear
deterministic, with every signal, such as the presence of a nutrient or
toxin, launching a pre-defined cascade of responses targeted at
confronting new conditions. These processes lack an element of learning
during the bacterial life span, and thus cannot be compared directly
with complex animal and human semiosis, where individual learning plays a
decisive role.
The determinism of the
molecular clockwork was summarized in the dogma that genes determine the
phenotype and not the other way around. As a result, the Modern
Synthesis (MS) theory presented evolution as a mechanical process that
starts with blind random variation of the genome, and ends with
automatic selection of the fittest phenotypes. Although this theory may
explain quantitative changes in already existing features, it certainly
cannot describe the emergence of new organs or signaling pathways. The
main deficiency of such explanations is that the exact correspondence
between genotypes and phenotypes is postulated a priori. In other words,
MS was built like Euclidean geometry, where questioning the
foundational axioms will make the whole system fall, like a house of
cards.
The discipline of biosemiotics has generated a new platform for explaining biological evolution. It considers that evolution is semiosis,
a process of continuous interpretation and re-interpretation of
hereditary signs alongside other signs that originate in the environment
or the body.
nature | Scientists in London have been granted permission to edit the genomes of human embryos for research, UK fertility regulatorsannounced. The 1 February approval by the UK Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority (HFEA) represents the world's first endorsement of such research by a national regulatory authority.
"It’s an important first. The HFEA has been a very thoughtful, deliberative body that has provided rational oversight of sensitive research areas, and this establishes a strong precedent for allowing this type of research to go forward," says George Daley, a stem-cell biologist at Boston Children's Hospital in Massachusetts.
The HFEA has approved an application by developmental biologist Kathy Niakan, at the Francis Crick Institute in London, to use the genome-editing technique CRISPR–Cas9 in healthy human embryos. Niakan’s team is interested in early development, and it plans to alter genes that are active in the first few days after fertilization. The researchers will stop the experiments after seven days, after which the embryos will be destroyed.
ibiology | Advances in rRNA sequencing and other techniques have allowed
scientists to characterize novel symbiotic partnerships. In her first
lecture, Dr. Margaret McFall-Ngai provides an overview of the three main
types of symbiosis: mutualism (both partners benefit), commensalism
(only one partner benefits), and parasitism (one partner benefits, but
the other partner is harmed). McFall-Ngai’s research is currently
focused on understanding the establishment and maintenance of symbiotic
relationships, and the molecular effects that these relationships have
on development, health, and disease.
In her second talk, McFall-Ngai tells the story of a symbiosis between the Hawaiian bobtail squid and Vibrio fischeri (V. fischeri),
a type of luminescent bacteria that enables the squid to hunt at night.
McFall-Ngai and collaborators have identified the molecular mechanism
by which nascent Hawaiian bobtail squid select V. fischeri from
the thousands of other bacteria in their habitat. V. fischeri induces
developmental changes in the squid that drive daily rhythms of gene
expression, which are necessary to control bacterial growth, a crucial
cycle in this symbiotic partnership.
genomemag | Imagine if doctors could correct a cataract, for
instance, not by using a scalpel or laser to perform surgery, but rather
by sending off miniature surgical tools to reach right in and fix the
diseased gene that was responsible. It might surprise you to learn that
scientists have already shown that this sort of thing is doable today —
not in humans perhaps, but in much tinier and fuzzier mice in the lab.
The procedure doesn’t work perfectly every time (which partly explains
why no one has tried it in a person just yet), but when it does, the
animals grow healthy and disease-free.
Scientists in China successfully cured 24 mice of their eye
condition, which was produced by a single, mutant copy of one gene. That
demonstration, reported in the scientific literature two years ago, was
billed as the first to show that it’s possible to correct a genetic
disease using a genome editing tool, which scientists call CRISPR-Cas9.
Although in mice, the findings offered the first proof of principle that
scientists and doctors might one day have sufficient skill and
precision to edit single-gene disorders out of human genomes in much the
same way.
Jinsong Li, one of the leaders of the study from the Chinese Academy
of Sciences, said then that he believes it is “absolutely possible to
use CRISPR to cure genetic disease in the near future.” As further
evidence in support of Li’s conclusion, his paper came out alongside
another by researchers in the Netherlands. They had used CRISPR to
correct a gene that causes cystic fibrosis in adult stem cells derived
from patients with the single-gene disorder.
omicsonline | Genome editing technologies may in the future have therapeutic potential
for various incurable diseases: cancer, genetic disorders, HIV/AIDS to
mention the most obvious. Genome editing of somatic cells, which is at
it various clinical stages, is a promising area of therapeutic
development. This year, a group of Chinese researchers led by Junjiu
Huang - a gene-function researcher at Sun Yat-sen University in
Guangzhou, used complex enzyme-editing tool CRISPR-Cas9 as a therapeutic
agent to eradicate the human β-globulin (HBB) gene from the germline of
the human embryo. The mutations in HBB gene cause β-thalassaemia (a
deadly blood disorder). The research was, however, not completely
successful, and had to be abandoned at its preliminary stage. This
research was published in the journal Protein and Cell after it was
rejected by the journal Nature and Science on ethical grounds. Caution
flags have been raised about the use of CRISPR-Cas9 on human germline
editing. This research has generated the debate among the world-renowned
scientists about the ethical concerns and implications of CRISPR-Cas9
human germline editing. While some members of the scientific community
have argued that a moratorium should be called on human germline
editing, others have argued that it is unethical to withhold a
technology that would eliminate devastating genetic diseases. This paper
critically evaluates the challenges, ethical concerns and implications
of CRISPR-Cas9 human germ line editing.
phys.org | As
the floor plan of the living world, DNA guides the composition of
animals ranging from unicellular organisms to humans. DNA not only helps
shepherd every organism from birth through death, it also plays an
essential role in the development of many human diseases.
But it wasn't
always so. Long before DNA emerged as the molecule of life, its closely
related cousin, RNA (ribonucleic acid), held center stage.
The RNA world refers to a time in earth's distant past when primitive
forms used RNA rather than DNA to archive genetic information, pass it
along using RNA-based copying machinery and perform biological
reactions.
With the emergence of DNA, RNA came to play an intermediary role,
copying DNA messages known as genes and translating them into proteins.
This pathway from DNA to RNA to protein has become so engrained in the
field of biology it is often referred to as "the central dogma."
Recently, however, RNA's strict subservience to DNA has been called
into question. New discoveries have prompted an explosion in RNA
research, with vital implications for both the foundations of biology
and the practice of medicine. (Sidney Altman, who won the Nobel Prize
for establishing that RNA can act independently and perform chemical
reactions on its own, providing powerful evidence for the RNA world
hypothesis, has recently joined ASU's School of Life Sciences).
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