By “cure,” I’m not talking about one supposed case and one person researchers claimed to have healed.
I’m talking about a treatment that works across the board, in all or most cases of an actual disease.
The first obvious reason no genetic cure exists is: researchers haven’t proved a genetic defect is the actual cause of any disease.
They may say they have, but they’re lying. They’re using correlation of people who have Disease A with these people also exhibiting the same genetic abnormality.
That’s interesting, but it isn’t proof.
Proof comes when they try to cure the disease by correcting the genetic flaw.
And it turns out that the entire field of genetics is FROUGHT with challenges and problems launching any sort of attempted cure.
The problems are inherent in genetic tinkering of any kind.
Is anyone talking about all these problems at once? Is anyone listing them? Is anyone blowing that big whistle?
I am.
Here we go. This is what every serious genetic researcher in the world knows, but isn’t trumpeting. Nine very serious barriers:
ONE: Researchers can’t decide whether a disease might be caused by one gene or a collection of genes acting together. If acting together…exactly how are they collaborating?
TWO: Various mutations in various genes can cause similar disease effects…at least that’s what researchers think. But they can’t prove it. This confusion makes developing a genetic cure highly improbable.