SNS: Absolute Genetic Synergy: A New "FBI" Part II
 
 
SNS Subscriber Edition • Volume 21, Issue 10 • Week of March 21, 2016

 THE STRATEGIC NEWS SERVICE ©
GLOBAL REPORT ON
TECHNOLOGY AND
THE ECONOMY
Absolute
Genetic Synergy:
A New "FBI" Part II


 
 


 
 
 

 
 

 

 

SNS: Absolute Genetic Synergy: A New "FBI"

Part II

 

 

In This Issue
Week of 3/21/2016    Vol. 21 Issue 10

FEATURE:

[Please open the attached .pdf for best viewing.]

Join us for the 2nd annual

SNS PREDICTIONS : WEST

 

Well, we are almost sold out, but we'd love to have our members join us, so please sign up now if you would like to be there. Where? At the Rosewood Sand Hill Hotel in Menlo Park, March 31st, 5-8pm. What? A couple of receptions (before and after) and several fascinating conversations about technology, the economy, security, drones, predictions, and whatever else comes up in general discussion.

To register now, go here:

www.stratnews.com/events/west

The evening will begin with a Centerpiece Conversation featuring special guest Mark Hurd, CEO of Oracle, with Mark Anderson, on the subject of "How Shifting Demographics Drives Technology Solutions."

Bill Ribaudo, National Managing Partner, Technology, Media & Telecommunications Industry, Deloitte & Touche LLP, will discuss an SNS project with Deloitte expert consultation, "Company and Country Business Models: Impact on Valuations, Measurement, and Worth."

And Mark Anderson will be discussing Technology Trends and Economic Landscapes Supporting Predictions for 2016, including the causes of, and events following, the China Economic Collapse. (As recently featured on 60 Minutes.)

 

GGB-carouselbanner-2016-full

Price is $95 - Seating is limited - Register now*:
www.stratnews.com/events/west

For Agenda details, visit: www.stratnews.com/events/west/agenda

"Mark is the one person in the world who seems to know about everything."

David Kirkpatrick, Founder and CEO, Techonomy

*Upon registration, non-SNS members will receive a complimentary

 1-month subscription to the weekly SNS Global Report.

image003

Hosted by
image004

Sponsored by
image005

 

 

Visit the SNS Store to check out the first of our SNS FiReBooks imprints!

Stealth-Japan-Cover-1

Stealth Japan: The Surprise Success of the World's First InfoMerc Economy, by Scott Foster

 

 

And -  

 

https://store.stratnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/01/sns-theft-nation-cover-800x1036.jpg

Theft Nation white paper - as featured on CBS' 60 Minutes - "How IP Theft Drives the Chinese National Business Model, and Its Effect Upon the Global Economy," by Evan R. Anderson

Get the source material behind the most-viewed 60 Minutes investigative episode in history, until now a Cabinet-level briefing book, on the world's most important information: how does China make its money, at what cost to the world, and what happens next?

 

Publisher's Note: In Part I of this piece, I described a new way of looking at how living things relate to their environment, using the sole lens of whether their genomes had been exposed to any given experience during the 3.5 billion years over which DNA has evolved. I suggested that, from a biological perspective, genomes were completely unprepared for things invented in recent times.

Last week I gave the example of jet lag, with the promise of detailed scientific studies in Part II. (Part I must have struck a nerve, as it brought in more new members than any other SNS issue in recent memory.)

In Part II, as well as providing more science on this subject, I include more areas of concern and examples of the risks we face when we ask our genomic "equipment" to do jobs for which it was not designed, and for which it has had zero experience, including increased exposure to cosmic radiation, medical x-rays, and processed foods, none of which existed during the creation and testing of our genomes and all of which lead to higher health risks. From disrupted biological clocks (in our cells and those of our microbiome) to unexpected toxic effects from new chemicals in what we eat, drink, and breathe, virtually all of these mismatches between genome and environment lead to reduced life expectancies. mra.