by Lee Harding
Fraught with ethical problems, some of which have already been demonstrated
The Book of Genesis says God made the animals each âaccording to their kinds,â then humanity in the divine image. Of course, not everyone believes in a sacred creation. Some scientists would rather play god and mix the animal and human species. This endeavour is fraught with ethical problems, some of which have already been demonstrated.
In 1896 H.G. Wells wrote The Island of Doctor Moreau, a novel he would later describe as âan exercise in youthful blasphemy.â In the book, Moreau receives public scorn for his gruesome experiments in vivisection. So he withdraws to an island to continue his research out of sight and create half-animal, half-human creatures.
Life would soon imitate art. In 1900, German scientist Hans Friedenthal discovered that the blood cells of chimpanzees, gorillas, orangutans and humans were remarkably similar. He speculated that a hybrid ape-man was possible.
Dutch zoologist Herman Marie Bernelot Moens wanted to impregnate a chimp with human sperm but lost his teaching position over the idea.
In 1926, artificial insemination pioneer Ilya Ivanovich Ivanov tried three times to inseminate chimps with human sperm in French Guinea, Africa. He also wanted to inseminate African women with chimp sperm without their knowledge. When word got out about this, the Academy of Sciences of the Soviet Union stopped his funding.
It seems The Island of Dr. Moreau had unethical experimentation all wrong. The smarter approach was to start in secret, condition the public to welcome the benefits and then slowly bring the experiments mainstream. Some murky glimpses suggest this may well be happening.
What better place to consider clandestine experiments than a show called Conspiracy Theory? In 2012, former Minnesota governor Jesse Ventura made an episode of that program called Manimal Chimera. On the show, animal rights activist Chris DeRose warns him: âTheyâve created pigs and theyâve got human blood flowing through their bodies, mice with human brains.â
Ventura said heâd heard 10 years prior in Shanghai about rabbit-human embryos. Was this all for a good cause, such as growing organs?
DeRose wished that were true but said: âItâs for power, itâs for control.â Venturaâs production team even interviewed an alleged whistleblower named Dr. Hussein Hussein, who led them to a ranch in Reno, Nev., where sheep purportedly had human blood and livers.
University of Albany biopsychology researcher Dr. Gordon Gallup stated on camera that, during his graduate studies, his professor told him that the âhumanzeeâ had become real. The prof said a chimp had been inseminated with human sperm at the Yerkes National Primate Research Center in Atlanta, where he formerly worked. The result was euthanized a week after birth.
Stanford bioethicist Dr. William Hurlbut told Ventura that a Harvard professor said he wanted to âmix human and chimp genes in a new creature to see what each gene did. âŠÂ Some people would want to enhance humans for the bio-Olympics, maybe even as some sort of domestic slaves.â
By 2016, the chimeras were no longer part of a conspiracy theory and became acknowledged government-sanctioned science. In August of that year, the National Institute for Health Research in the United Kingdom announced it would allow human stem cells to be put into animal embryos.
In 2017, a team at Californiaâs Salk Institute for Biological Studies led by Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte developed pig-human hybrids by injecting human stem cells into a pig. His team of more than 40 collaborators took four years to figure out the process whereby they developed 186 chimeric embryos past three weeksâ gestation. By 2019, he developed human-monkey chimera embryos in China by a similar process.
Drs. David Niesel and Norbert Herzog explored the possibilities for hybrids in a Huffington Post article entitled, âThe Island of Dr. Moreau For Real.â
âStem cells have the ability to form any tissue,â the authors explained. âSo an animal embryo injected with human stem cells could produce an animal with a human kidney or lung. They could then be sacrificed for the human organs that they harbour. ⊠But what about animals where the human stem cells become part of the brain? Could we produce some animals that are capable of human thought? The potential for this now seems possible â wow! ⊠a fantastic new frontier for brain research.â
The authors seemed too whimsical as they concluded: âScientists will need guidance from ethicists and the public as this research begins to develop. It is not yet time to turn your backyard into a hybrid livestock ranch for human organs!â
Right. Or was a ranch in Reno doing that already?
Human-animal brain experiments came soon enough. Chinese and American researchers produced 11 transgenic macaque monkeys that included MCPH1, a human brain gene. The altered monkeys had better short-term memory and shorter reaction time than regular ones.
Scientists need ethicists, but some donât want them. The latter kind wants to be a god and heed neither a higher power nor mere mortal. Technology without ethics never goes well. We may long for the days before âeach according to their kindsâ was violated, and we mixed ourselves with animals.
Lee Harding is a research associate with the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.
Lee is one of our Thought Leaders. For interview requests, click here.
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