US Scientist Has Technology to Teleport Aliens from Mars to Earth

Recently in the FOI request for the Pentagon’s secret UFO program, the Advanced Aviation Threat Identification Program (AATIP) by the British newspaper The Sun, extraordinary information was revealed. The newly published document says that time travel and antigravity technology are possible and can be harnessed by humans to visit other worlds. Surprisingly, in 2013 the American scientist and entrepreneur Dr. Craig Venter claimed to have the technology to teleport Martian life to Earth.
John Craig Venter is an American biotechnologist and entrepreneur. He is known for leading the first draft of the human genome sequence and assembling the first team to transfect a cell with a synthetic chromosome.
In 2013 Dr. Venter said he was confident there was life on Mars and announced his plans to send a “biological teleporter” to the Red Planet to find Martian DNA and send it back to Earth.
Gene genius Craig Venter. image credit:
Ethan Pines for Forbes
Not only will his invention detect and decode DNA hidden in supernatural soil or water samples – proving once and for all that we are not alone in the universe – it would also transmit the information back to Earth and allow scientists to reconstruct living copies in a biosecurity facility”. He wants to detect life on Mars and bring it to Earth using a machine called a “digital to biological converter” (DBC), or biological teleporter.
Dr’s machine Venter would just create a copy of an organism from a distant location, more like a biological “fax machine”. Storing the genetic code in a computer and transmitting it like any other data is the basic idea.
In 2013 the team of Dr. Venter and scientists at NASA’s Ames Research Center conducted field tests of this technology in the Mojave Desert south of Baker, California: a dry, Mars-like environment. The researchers tested the unit that would in theory send data from Mars. But, according to Dr. Venter also exists a prototype unit that would receive the data transmitted here on Earth.
teleportation is real
Dr. Venter, the genetics maverick who created the first synthetic life form in 2016, sending aliens back to recreate on Earth may sound like science fiction, but it’s “potentially real.”
Imagine this scenario – a new virus is discovered with characteristics that make scientists worry about its impact on the world. These scientists sequence the virus and understand its exact genetic makeup. They share this information with other scientists around the world via email and these scientists synthesize a replica of the virus in a controlled laboratory environment so they can study what makes it unique. Suddenly we don’t just have two replicas of a virus, we have genetically identical versions of the same virus. We got biological teleportation.
The first biological teleporter is located in a laboratory on the lower level of the San Diego building that houses Synthetic Genomics Inc. (SGI), looking something like an oversized equipment cart. Image credit: MIT Technology Review
Dr. Venter came to publish
A DBC prototype capable of downloading digitized DNA instructions and synthesizing biomolecules from scratch. At the heart of Venter’s foray into “biological teleportation” is the idea that all life – at least on Earth – is essentially DNA software systems. DNA directs and creates the most tangible biological “hardware” made up of proteins, cells and tissues.
In 2010 researchers led by Dr. Venter at the J. Craig Venter Institute in San Diego, California, announced that they had created synthetic “minimal” cells. The genome in each cell contained just 473 key genes considered essential for life.
DBC is Venter’s attempt to transfer and manufacture life. Eight feet long and six feet tall, the machine is a Frankenstein beast of mechanical blocks and wires spread across a two-story table. “We are working on machine portability using new technologies such as microfluidic chips and microarrays,” the authors explained.
Equipped with an ethernet hub, DBC downloads DNA files from the Internet and prints the code using the four chemical bases of DNA – adenosine, guanine, thymine and cytosine (A, G, T, C).
“It’s a packaging of complex biology that each of our tiny cells does remarkably well on a much, much smaller scale,” explained Dr. Vent.
The Doctor. Venter envisions combining DBC with technologies from his synthetic organisms to build a “blank slate” receptor cell capable of producing food, oxygen and fuel — the perfect workhorse to send around the world or into space.
In theory, the cell would be able to receive any synthetic genome designed to produce life-supporting molecules. Venter says these cells need to be engineered, but notes that it can be done.
Having a DBC on board means that a crew flying through space would no longer be dependent on meeting supply ships – and we’ll never have a real-life Mark Watney starving and stranded on Mars.
“People are worried about the Andromeda strain. We can rebuild the Martians in a P-4 spacesuit lab instead of having them land in the ocean,” Venter said.
It is possible that bringing alien lifeforms here to Earth in a digital form, and then being brought to life by assembly in some genomics lab, has enormous potential for accidental release into the world where that lifeform may be beyond our ability to native species to combat, including our own.
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