Bioscience company claims to have technology capable of resurrecting the woolly mammoth  – Jurassic Park is HERE



Are there any limits to what technology can do? Every day it seems limitations dissolve and boundaries are deemed obsolete.

That is certainly the case for a new tech company that just emerged in 2021. It’s called Colossal Biosciences, and it claims to have technology capable of achieving something that has never been done before: resurrecting extinct species.

Yes, you heard that right — Colossal Biosciences is the real-world version of the InGen Corporation from the "Jurassic Park" film franchise.

Founders Ben Lamm and Dr. George Church intend to reawaken the ancient woolly mammoth from its 4,000-year-old grave. They also have their sights set on other species, including the Tasmanian tiger and the dodo bird.

Glenn Beck, who’s equally fascinated and concerned, invites Ben Lamm on the show to discuss the company and its intentions.

Beck begins by reading Colossal Bioscience’s mission statement:

Through technological and engineering breakthroughs in biosciences and genetics, Colossal is accepting humanity’s duty to restore Earth to a healthier state, while also solving for future economies and biological necessities of the human condition. Colossal will revolutionize history and will be the first company to use CRISPR technology successfully in the de-extinction of previously lost species. On the journey, we will build radically new software tools and technologies to advance the science of genomics overall. We are leading the new charge of bioscience. We accept the responsibility. We see the light at the end of it all.

Lamm says that “these genetic rescue technologies not only can help bring these incredible animals back and help restore those ecosystems ... but can actually develop technology that we can use to advance conservation,” which he claims is crucial considering “we could lose up to 50% of all biodiversity between now and 2050.”

Colossal’s technological innovations can also “be applied to human health care and help with everything from cancer research to genetic engineering and getting rid of certain types of disease states in humans,” Lamm says.

Balanced ecosystem, conservation, improved health care — what could go wrong?

“Have you ever seen 'Jurassic Park'?” Beck asks Lamm, who laughs and claims he’s a big sci-fi fan.

Beck then asks the question we’re all thinking: “Is there anything you won’t bring back?”

Lamm’s response is interesting to say the least. Watch the full video here.


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'Jurassic Park' actor reveals battle against cancer: 'I'm not off the hook as such, but there's no cancer in my body'



Actor Sam Neill of "Jurassic Park" fame has disclosed that he was diagnosed with cancer last year, but he says he no longer has it.

"I'm not off the hook as such, but there's no cancer in my body," he said, according to the Guardian, which reported that he had undergone treatment for angioimmunoblastic T-cell lymphoma. Neill needs to take a chemotherapy drug monthly for the remainder of his life and said he feels "s***house" for a couple days following each treatment.

The actor, who played the character of Dr. Alan Grant in several "Jurassic" series films, wrote a memoir after being diagnosed — the BBC News quoted him noting that he "didn't have a ghost writer."

"I found myself with nothing to do," he said, according to the Guardian. "And I'm used to working. I love working. I love going to work. I love being with people every day and enjoying human company and friendship and all these things. And suddenly I was deprived of that. And I thought, what am I going to do?" he noted. "I never had any intention to write a book. But as I went on and kept writing, I realised it was actually sort of giving me a reason to live and I would go to bed thinking, I'll write about that tomorrow … that will entertain me. And so it was a lifesaver really, because I couldn't have gone through that with nothing to do, you know."

Neill noted that he would like to live another 10 or 20 years to see his trees and his grandchildren grow

"I'm not afraid to die," he said, according to the Guardian, "but it would annoy me. Because I'd really like another decade or two, you know? We've built all these lovely terraces, we've got these olive trees and cypresses, and I want to be around to see it all mature. And I've got my lovely little grandchildren. I want to see them get big," he said. "But as for the dying? I couldn’t care less."

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