Silicon Valley Pioneers Futuristic Medical Technologies

Paolo Messina
6 min readSep 10, 2022

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A host of revolutionary medical technologies, from age reversal to organ reconstruction, could be on the horizon according to witnesses.

The life span in industrialized countries is about 76 years for males and 82 years for women, but this may soon change. A group of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs is investigating claims from firsthand military witnesses who suggest it may already be possible to regenerate failing organs and damaged limbs — or even altogether regress the age of an individual.

These statements would have once seemed far beyond the abilities of current science — then the New York Times released its now-famous 2017 articles on the Nimitz Incident and Unidentified Aerial Phenomena. Since then, a sequence of public and private sector disclosures have suggested that government agencies may have had research programs regarding UFOs and their associated technologies for decades.

Though much remains officially unacknowledged, firsthand witnesses and various researchers have claimed that so-called ‘alien reproduction technology’ is a significant component of ongoing R&D. This field has gathered enough attention to spur several documentaries, available on Amazon, Hulu, and other streaming platforms.

Of these projects, a considerable portion deal specifically with the field of bioengineering. A group of Silicon Valley entrepreneurs are investigating these claims and exploring the feasibility of taking such bioengineering technologies to market.

They’ve organized a Conference on Secret Military Technologies and their possible applications to civilian life, taking place at Silicon Valley’s Plug & Play Tech Center this Sep 16–17.

Pioneering organ reconstruction technologies today

The need to regenerate organ tissue, or even entire organs, is critical to modern medicine. Taken cumulatively, organ failure is the leading cause of death worldwide. If we were able to replace organs inside the human body on an industrial scale, we’d likely take a significant step towards extension of the human life span.

According to Dr. Doris Taylor, co-founder at Miromatrix and tentative conference speaker, two key problems stand in the way — availability of replacement organs and rejection.

Miromatrix is pioneering a regenerative medicine technique that uses porcine organ scaffolds to regrow human cells, making the synthetically recreated organ quasi-human. This technology is currently in pre-clinical trials according to the company website, however it holds the promise to drastically increase the availability of organs for transplant in cases where organ dysfunction isn’t of a sudden and traumatic nature.

It’s possible, in future, that the technology will be perfected by using a patient’s own stem cells, which would likely decrease rates of transplant immunological rejection substantially. Transplant rejection is one of the most significant limits of today’s medicine.

This type of technology seems poised to drastically improve survival rates for conditions that, today, can’t be resolved because patients run out of time. However, even these developments lag behind the capabilities some firsthand witnesses claim top secret military projects have achieved– more below.

Another area in which regenerative medicine is rapidly advancing is limb restoration. As far as we’ve seen, no mammals have the natural capacity to regenerate lost limbs — though some animals can, including salamanders, starfish, crabs, and lizards.

Recently, researchers at Tufts University were able to induce the reconstruction of a limb in African clawed frogs, which normally don’t have this ability.

The technique used by the scientists at Tufts includes a biocompatible silica cover and a gel infused with five different drugs, which instigated a process of limb regrowth that researchers hope could, one day, have human applications.

This second approach appears closer in principle to the technologies firsthand witnesses have reported observing in military labs associated with a project referred to as the Secret Space Program.

And the developments of modern science are only getting stranger…

Age regression technology and the rise of biotech

After years of research on aging, it seems American startups are beginning to advance from lab to market. One example is Texas-based Allosteric Bioscience.

This company is trying to develop drugs that target the modulators of human aging using a discovery process rooted in computational chemistry. In particular, they’re using a combination of artificial intelligence and quantum computing to weigh factors that contribute to identifying an effective drug.

They also hope that, in future, they’ll able to synthesize the proteins responsible for human aging and control the process at will.

California-based Cyclarityx is taking a different route. The founders have identified oxidized cholesterol as the primary cause for atherosclerosis, which in turn seems to be the underlying cause of many other age-related diseases. Basically, they want to remove oxidized cholesterol from human cells using one in a class of molecules known as cyclodextrins. Cyclarityx is currently in clinical trials.

In short, human ingenuity is at work in the medical fields of anti-aging, limb regeneration, and organ regeneration. It all sounds promising…

Could someone be ahead of the game?

Early this year, Disclosure Project leader Dr. Steven Greer released an interview in which he claims he was invited to a secret underground military facility in El Paso, Texas. During the visit, he says he was shown advanced medical research that combines electromagnetic physics with genetics to regrow human limbs.

A source of ours, Ileana — introduced in our article on brain boosting technologies — reported something similar.

At a high level, she says that the individual is placed inside a medical pod containing serum, plasma, and hydrogel. Utilizing holographic technology, the pod scans the body to assess damage and applies an ostensibly electromagnetic field that initiates targeted cell reconstruction.

Current science may offer a glimpse into visualizing the mechanics at work in this futuristic technology. Researchers at Penn Medicine published a work on how Magnetic Field and Hydrogels Could Be Used to Grow New Cartilage, suggesting that an appropriately tuned magnetic field could aid in rebuilding complex body tissues. At least one publication offers an overview of work in the field.

The technology mentioned by Dr. Greer and Ileana, however, is far more advanced — and they claim it already has human applications.

There are other accounts of similar technologies in the so-called Secret Space Program (SSP).

In a recent interview, entrepreneur and former SSP member Chris O’ Connor, recalls his experience.

He claims to have been put in a med-pod at the age of 2 years old, growing to roughly 25 years old in the span of 3–4 weeks. He also recalls the hydrogel and serum, claiming that — in his case — the procedure was involved because he needed to be grown to a different age.

During the first part of his tenure in the Secret Space Program, O’Connor says he actively worked on the medical technologies with a particular focus on memory suppression and consciousness storage technology. The latter technique is used when a body is so severely damaged that it can’t be repaired. In that case, a new body is created in the laboratory and the consciousness is transferred.

As hard as this is to believe, we now have several firsthand military witnesses discussing these futuristic medical procedures.

Separating fact from fiction to identify practical applications

In assessing where our technology is going, it seems we’ve already taken the first steps towards making these medical technologies a reality.

The accounts of these witnesses, although objectively hard to believe, should be considered as serious investigation continues in this sector.

The information that we’ve received from alleged members of the Secret Space Program can help scientists and entrepreneurs forge novel approaches to existing questions, new research strategies, new business concepts, and, finally, new companies.

Whether or not these technologies already exist in the shadows, human ingenuity will eventually prevail over secrecy. The question is — what should we work on now?

We’ll discuss this and other questions at the First Annual Silicon Valley Secret Space Program Business Applications Conference at Plug & Play Tech Center, this September 16–17th.

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