Search This Blog

Sunday, November 9, 2025

Tech billionaires back startup probing gene-edited ‘designer babies’ despite US ban: report

 A Silicon Valley startup backed by OpenAI’s Sam Altman and Coinbase’s Brian Armstrong is pursuing research that some fear could lead to the birth of a genetically engineered baby — a step that’s illegal under US law and banned in most countries, a report said.

The company, Preventive, says its goal is to end hereditary disease by editing human embryos before birth, a claim that has ignited fierce debate over safety, ethics and the specter of designer children, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Preventive, founded earlier this year by gene-editing scientist Lucas Harrington, has raised $30 million and set up headquarters in San Francisco, where it is conducting research on modifying embryos to prevent hereditary disease.

Coinbase CEO Brian Armstrong is an investor in a startup involved in researching the creation of genetically engineered babies.Getty Images for Vanity Fair

The company says its mission is to prove the technology can be made safe and transparent before any attempt to create a baby is made.

Altman and Armstrong are among the firm’s early investors, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Altman’s husband, Oliver Mulherin, said he led their investment, calling it an effort to help families avoid genetic illness.

Armstrong, who has publicly promoted embryo editing, posted that he was “excited” to back Preventive and argued it is far easier to correct a genetic defect in an embryo than to treat disease later in life.

But federal law prohibits the Food and Drug Administration from considering applications for human trials involving genetically edited embryos used to start pregnancies.

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman is also backing the Silicon Valley startup, Preventive.REUTERS

Harrington, who earned his doctorate under CRISPR pioneer Jennifer Doudna, denied that Preventive is preparing to implant an edited embryo or working with a couple to do so.

He said the company’s focus is preclinical research on whether editing embryos can be done safely.

“We are not trying to rush things,” Harrington told the Journal.

“We are committed to transparency in our research and will publish our findings, whether positive or negative.”

People familiar with Preventive’s operations told the Journal that the company had explored foreign jurisdictions, including the United Arab Emirates, where embryo editing might be permitted.

Harrington said work outside the US was being considered only because of regulatory restrictions, not to evade oversight.

The company has recruited advisers from reproductive medicine and genetics. Preventive’s website describes it as a public-benefit corporation, meaning it can legally prioritize social good alongside profit.

The company, Preventive, says its goal is to end hereditary disease by editing human embryos before birth.Shutterstock

Its charter defines that purpose as the “responsible advancement of genome editing technologies applied before birth to benefit humanity.”

The effort echoes the 2018 scandal in which Chinese scientist He Jiankui created the world’s first gene-edited babies, twins whose embryos had been altered to resist HIV.

He served three years in prison for illegal medical practices. Scientists say it remains unclear how the edits affected the children, who have not been publicly identified.

Harrington’s venture arrives as Silicon Valley money flows into reproductive genetics.

Federal law prohibits the Food and Drug Administration from considering applications for human trials involving genetically edited embryos used to start pregnancies.wimages – stock.adobe.com

Manhattan Genomics, co-founded by biotech entrepreneur Cathy Tie, and California-based Bootstrap Bio are also exploring embryo editing. Both have drawn scrutiny from bioethicists and regulators for discussing potential trials outside the US.

Critics warn that commercial embryo editing risks crossing into eugenics.

“They are either lying, delusional, or both,” Fyodor Urnov, a director at the Innovative Genomics Institute at UC Berkeley, told the Journal.

“These people armed with very poorly deployed sacks of cash are working on ‘baby improvement’.”

Supporters insist the goal is medical, not cosmetic.

Harrington and his advisers say early use cases would target devastating monogenic disorders such as cystic fibrosis or sickle cell disease, in which parents who both carry the same gene mutation have no chance of conceiving a healthy child through traditional IVF.

The Post has sought comment from Preventive, Altman and Armstrong.

https://nypost.com/2025/11/08/business/tech-billionaires-back-startup-pushing-illegal-gene-edited-designer-babies/

Mamdani reeks of Lenin — but NYC’s wise safeguard against Marxism stands in his way

 Zohran Mamdani’s victory-lap speech Tuesday night reeked of Vladimir Lenin after Russia’s 1917 communist revolution.

But instead of commanding a Red Army, the mayor-elect should be aware he will be facing lots of red ink. 

That’s on top of some very strict and sensible financial rules put in place some 50 years ago — just in case a deranged Marxist ended up running New York City. 

Yes, socialism can sound rousing when it’s pitched by a skilled orator.

Mamdani spoke of soaking the rich — failing to mention, of course, that they’re already paying some of the highest taxes in the country.

He ranted how the poor will finally have their day — in a city that already doles out everything from free health care to subsidized housing. 

He also dared President Trump, who was in DC undoubtedly watching this spectacle, to “turn up the volume” as he doubled down on his vision: free buses, government groceries, more welfare and free trans medical treatment — even for children. 

But NYC — with plenty of welfare statism already on the books — will never go full-on Soviet ­Union.

That’s because laws must be followed — even by a 34-year old backbench, lefty assemblyman with a degree in “Africana Studies” who visions himself as the second coming of Fidel. 

Those laws include something called “The Financial Emergency Act” of 1975.

It was the brainchild of former Gov. Hugh Carey and his outside adviser, the great philanthropist and investment banker Felix Rohatyn.

It was designed to prevent another politician-made catastrophe like the fiscal crisis of the 1970s, when the Big Apple nearly went bankrupt and began to implode, fiscally and socially. 

Cops were laid off and garbage piled up because we had no money and no one would lend to us — the budget was such a mess, no one knew if they would get paid back.

The mayor at the time was Abraham Beame but years of bad government, perverse spending and spotty accounting contributed to the mess. 

‘Drop dead!’ 

Gerald Ford, the president while all of this went down, famously told the city there would be no bailout from DC: “Drop Dead” was the headline of the day. 

We were on our own, but we had the political infrastructure to create reform: Carey, Rohatyn, civic leaders, bankers and more.

They cobbled together a budgetary infrastructure that, believe it or not, lasts to this day. 

New York City spends a lot of money; it has a $119 billion budget and a vast welfare state that includes health care for the indigent and much more. It also has huge amounts of debt to pay for this infrastructure — an amount almost as big as the entire budget itself is owed to bondholders. 

Accordingly, it also has high taxes — so high that businesses and high earners were fleeing even before Mamdani’s victory. 

And yet we know where all the so-called bodies are buried because of the Financial Emergency Act.

No matter how many freebees Mamdani doles out, how many grocery stores or rent-free apartments he creates, bondholders get first dibs on city tax revenues because Carey & Co. knew that we need them to keep buying debt or the place shuts down. 

On top of that, Mamdani must balance his budget based on stringent Generally Accepted Accounting Principles; he cannot end the year with a budget deficit, or something known as the Financial Control Board takes over the city’s fisc.

It’s chaired by Gov. Hochul, who has said she won’t raise taxes over fears of an exodus of the dreaded 1% who pay most of the bills. 

Of course the days of Hugh Carey and Felix Rohatyn are long gone.

Hochul claims to be a moderate, but she has been caving to the mini-Mamdanis in the State Legislature for years.

The comptroller is repped on the control board and he’s a leftist.

Mamdani has a seat as well and don’t expect any help from the commissars on the City Council.

The business community is hollowed and politically irrelevant. 

But the law is the law.

Our new mayor will face multibillion-dollar budget gaps that will need to be plugged in the next fiscal years.

They will only grow if bank earnings sputter or Jamie Dimon moves more of JPMorgan to lower-tax locales like Texas.

For Mamdani to pass his agenda and balance his budget, he will need a tax increase — and a vicious cycle will begin.

Taxpayers will bolt.

Bond downgrades will follow, heaping even more interest payments on the city. 

No cakewalk 

The budget deficit will grow, and Control Board oversight looms, over a budget crisis that could make the 1970s look like a cakewalk.

Back then at least, many big businesses outside of banking were still domiciled here; the outer boroughs were populated with stable, middle-class neighborhoods. 

But today much of that is gone.

Even the stock exchange is diversifying, with a viable rival starting in Dallas. 

Mamdani’s power to run the city like Lenin will be severely diluted unless he wants to cede control to Hochul or ask his pal Donald Trump for a bailout.

When The Donald responds, I have a hunch how the headline will read. 

https://nypost.com/2025/11/08/business/the-fiscal-budget-remaining-intact-remains-on-the-communist-leninist-policies-of-mayor-elect-mamdani/

BBC expected to apologize after using doctored footage of Trump’s Jan. 6 speech in doc

 The BBC is reportedly expected to apologize after using a “doctored” clip of President Trump’s Jan. 6, 2021, speech in a documentary released last year.

BBC chairman Samir Shah will apologize to the UK House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee on Monday, expressing regret for misleading viewers by splicing together clips of Trump’s “Stop the Steal” rally in the Panorama documentary, which aired last October, the Telegraph reported.

The mea culpa comes after Michael Prescott, the British network’s former Editorial Guidelines and Standards adviser, released a damning 19-page report alleging widespread bias within the organization and highlighting warnings he issued in May about the “doctored” speech, according to the outlet.

BBC Chairman Samir Shah will apologize to the UK House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee on Monday, the Telegraph reported.AFP via Getty Images

The whistleblower claimed the BBC “mangled” the clip in its documentary “Trump: A Second Chance?” to make it appear as if the president encouraged crowds to storm the Capitol.

Prescott noted that the network aired footage of Trump appearing to tell rally-goers: “We’re gonna walk down to the Capitol and I’ll be there with you and we fight. We fight like hell and if you don’t fight like hell you’re not gonna have a country any more.”

The apology comes after a whistleblower report alleged widespread bias within the network.ZUMAPRESS.com

The clip was spliced together from three separate parts of Trump’s speech — with a nearly hour-long gap edited out to make it seem like one fluent sentence.

Trump’s actual remarks were: “We’re gonna walk down, and I’ll be there with you, we’re gonna walk down, we’re gonna walk down any one of you but I think right here, we’re gonna walk down to the Capitol and we’re gonna cheer on our brave senators and congressman and women.”

The BBC edited out the president saying, “I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the Capitol building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard.”

The report on alleged BBC bias was sent to the network’s governing body by a former standards adviser.Bloomberg via Getty Images
About 54 minutes into Trump’s speech, he told the crowd, “We fight like hell, and if you don’t fight like hell, you’re not gonna have a country anymore.”

Prescott called the deceptive editing “shocking,” according to the report.

“This created the impression that Trump said something he did not and, in doing so, materially misled viewers,” the ex-adviser wrote.

The report claimed a BBC documentary improperly spliced clips of Trump’s Jan. 6 “Stop the Steal” rally.Photo by Samuel Corum/Getty Images

The BBC program also made it appear as if members of the Proud Boys, an extremist right-wing group, were inspired to march toward the Capitol Building after Trump’s speech.

The footage the program used of the Proud Boys heading toward the Capitol, however, was taken before Trump’s address.

“It was completely misleading to edit the clip in the way Panorama aired it,” Prescott added.

“The fact that [Mr. Trump] did not explicitly exhort supporters to go down and fight at Capitol Hill was one of the reasons there were no federal charges for incitement to riot.”

The BBC did not immediately respond to The Post’s request for comment but told the Telegraph in a statement that Shah will provide a full response to committee chairs on Monday.

https://nypost.com/2025/11/08/world-news/bbc-expected-to-apologize-after-using-doctored-footage-of-trumps-jan-6-speech-in-documentary-report/