Well, if you're going to cure cancer you're pretty much wasting your time and resources, which could instead be allotted to reversing aging.
See, if we cure cancer populations of nursing homes will swell. This will cause staggering needs, which can't possibly be met, for geriatrics. And here we have the one fatal flaw of curing cancer: they just get older while gaining no productivity.
Not knowing much about biology sucks, doesn't it?
Of course, I could aways be wrong. With all of the things I've had the pleasure of learning over the last few years, I wouldn't exactly be surprised if I was wrong as hell and you were in fact from the future and they did cure cancer even though there's no way there'd be that many available hands to help without another baby boom literally tomorrow.
Still, there's much more impactful possibilities that frighten me if it's true that I'm not just crazy or that I'm a self absorbed and naive child.
People work full time jobs up to their late 70s now. We haven't just improved lifespan, we've improved quality of life. You ever hear of "assisted living communities?"
Well almost two decades ago a bunch of states went on a tear making 'integrated communities' programs, in part because a lot of bureaucrats were out of jobs and state and federal funding needed new horsearmor projects to stuff these guys somewhere and grab up the free expertise and political capital. It didn't work out for the bureaucrats mostly because of pushback from the public, but the result was that many nursing homes went out of business.
Other nursing home businesses started buying apartments in new development blocks, scattershot. What they did was pepper the elderly throughout communities, the same was the pre 2020s government used HUD and section 8 housing to demographically blockbust nice neighborhoods. What we found was, with the right demographic mix people tended to take care of each other, which today isn't hard thanks to the proliferation of automation. Healthcare isn't huge today because of the need to take care of all the elderly,no, the elderly are healthy enough that they live on their own, and by the time they can't, they tend to live in places with neighbors that look out for them on the occasion the bots can't.
Speaking of too many people, fertility is another problem entirely though even thats largely been solved. And on the same topic did you know you can now pay for growing and reattaching a new foreskin?
The gist of the breakthrough we made on health is 'young organs and young blood improve resistance to aging.' Which is why the industry went the organ printing route.
The gist of the breakthrough we made on health is 'young organs and young blood improve resistance to aging.' Which is why the industry went the organ printing route.
What did the people do when they found out how this knowledge was refined and distributed?
You know something is about to happen, right? Most here won't talk about it. Most on Voat or Reddit won't talk about it, but many out there know. I've watched it develop since the beginning and I've felt it coming for a long time. The fact that you didn't mention it (well, and mostly all of the times I've been through this same exact thing) sort of gave it away, though.
Either way, you called my bluff. I respect that, LARPfag.
Most of it was refined from bloodbank companies and venture capital projects. A british company started decades ago, working on a project to design machines that produced blood (instead of having to use donors).
Well, that company was bought by another company which is huge now.
The follow on research that paved the way for the manufactured blood and organ industry was from informatics holdings (independent capital groups formed by data scientists and other researchers across fields). The holdings grew out of 2020s 'biohacking' events and organizations, the same way tech companies in the 2010s grew out of organizations like ycombinator.
Edit: I get the joke though.
Edit: Generation Z which I was born into towards the tail end of it was lumped into the millennials in the 2030s, and got the moniker 'the happening' generation.
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