Robobug goes to war: Troops to use electronic insects to spot enemy ‘by end of the year. In the future the use of electronic insects like with small micro cameras, with chimerical that paralyze the enemy for awhile .
Imagine one million small insects flying at night to Iran or other terrorists government creating havoc and sending signals to disturb the communication signals of the enemy, create wave interference , implant listening devices, or even spread any other chemical to prevent the terrorists from moving forward or making a war.
These insects will be self destroyed if they get captured and creates more harm if some one try to destroy them. So when the are sent to the war zone they are the gates of hell carrying a message surrender in peace or meet your maker.Nano technology of the future will add this arsenal to it is inventory.
The application will be endless for electronic insects.As God used insects, blood, frogs to inflect God rath on his enemy in Egypt to listen to Moses .
World’s most deadly animal are not the creature at the top of the list that we are most afraid of. If we look at those animals that we afraid of, there’s the usual dangerous snakes, sharks, spiders, bats and some big predators like wolves and alligators. The top killer, however, tends to register as nothing more than an annoyance, much less something to be deathly afraid of. As Bill Gates pointed out , that killer is the mosquito.
No other species, including our own, is responsible for the loss of as many human lives each year as mosquitoes are. Humans murder around 275,000 other people each year. Snakes kill around 50,000, while dogs (mainly from rabies transmission) claim another 25,000 lives. The worse killer in Africa beside viruses is the hippopotamus it kills more human that other animals .
Some of the most feared animals (sharks, wolves) kill fewer people a day than the thugs in Iran, Syria and south Iraqi Government who are puppets to Iran kill 250 people a day mostly Christians ,sunni Muslims, kurds, woman and children part of ethnic cleansing that is the daily practise by terrorists like Hizboallah, Iranians army , syrians army and other terrorists around the world.
Terrorists and mosquitos are here in earth to annoy us , blood suckers , insects in human form , they will not stop until they inflect their poison on every one, we have to defend our nation. First step is not to make a deal with the devil. Snake can not be trusted.
The diseases that mosquitoes carry and transmit to people they bite, on the other hand, kill 725,000.
The worst is malaria, which kills more than 600,000 people every year; another 200 million cases incapacitate people for days at a time. It threatens half of the world’s population and causes billions of dollars in lost productivity annually. Other mosquito-borne diseases include dengue fever, yellow fever, and encephalitis
Robot Insect technology will be used in the future wars.
It’s no joke. Those mosquitoes were so big they could carry off small children!!! Almost every resident About 46 million years ago, a mosquito sunk its proboscis into some animal, perhaps a bird or a mammal, and filled up on a meal of blood. Then its luck turned for the worse, as it fell into a lake and sunk to the bottom.
Fossil millions of years ago.
Normally this wouldn’t be newsworthy, and nobody would likely know or care about a long-dead insect in what is now northwest Montana- Canada.But somehow, the mosquito didn’t immediately decompose and become fossilized over the course of many years. It is, in fact, the only blood-engorged mosquito fossil found.The fossil is even stranger because it comes from shale, a type of rock formed from sediments deposited at the bottom of bodies of water, as opposed to amber.”The chances that such an insect would be preserved in shale is almost infinitesimally small,”
Scientists in Canada bombarded the mosquito fossil with molecules of bismuth, a heavy metal, which vaporizes chemicals found in the fossil. These airborne chemicals are then analyzed by a mass spectrometer, a machine that can identify chemicals based on their atomic weights. The beauty of this technique, called time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry, is that it doesn’t destroy the sample — previously, similar techniques required grinding up portions of fossils. The test revealed hidden porphyrins, organic compounds found in hemoglobin, the oxygen-carrying protein in blood, hidden in the fossilized mosquito’s abdomen.
The finding may bring to mind the story of “Jurassic Park” a novel and movie in which scientists resurrect dinosaurs from DNA preserved in blood-engorged mosquitoes preserved in amber. Although this finding doesn’t really make this fictitious story any more likely, it does show that complex organic molecules besides DNA can be preserved for a long time.
Researchers don’t know what kind of animal the blood came from, since hemoglobin-derived porphyrins amongst different animals appear to be identical. The study is exciting, because it provide more evidence that porphyrins, organic compounds found in “virtually all living organisms from microbes to humans in varying amounts” are “extremely stable” — and are thus a perfect target for studying long-dead plants and animals.
“Winnipeg is [incorrectly] known the “Mosquito” capital of Canada. The mosquito is jokingly considered Manitoba’s provincial bird!!!” In reality the capital designation rightly belong to Komarno, Manitoba, about 70 km north of Winnipeg. In fact the name Komarno is Ukrainian for mosquito. There is a 4.6 meter statue of a mosquito, built in 1984 in Komarno. Apparently the town is now saving up for a big bug zappe.Mosquitoes can carry deadly diseases like Western Equine Encephalitis, and many parts of Canada are now on the lookout for West Nile Virus, a mosquito-borne disease that was unheard of in North America until 2004 when it killed more than a dozen people in the New York City area. Now days the Zika virus make a come back and it might be transfer with the mennonites who take frequent flights between latin america, mexico and Canada.
Current technologies we use against mosquitoes simply are not adequate: existing measures are losing the war. The choice of implementing Genetically Modified Mosquitoes ( GM ), mosquitoes is not a choice of no risk versus risk, it is a matter of choosing the least risky among all existing choices in a war against very real continuing disease risk. Genetically modified mosquitoes are not the only innovative solution being tested in this war: resistance-proof insecticides, anti-mosquito fungi, bioprospecting for drugs and repellents, biopesticides, better education programs and new traps are in play. There is room for all of these, but all of these entail risks, not least of which is diversion of limited resources to little effect.
Regulatory structures are important controls on the implementation of innovation. They guide safe use and fair testing. The community developing GM mosquito technology is always looking over its shoulder at the India experience (in 1974, scientists studying the genetic modification of insects for disease control were accused of conducting secret biowarfare research) and is in no mood to repeat it.
The first open releases of GM mosquitoes have now taken place in the Cayman Islands, Malaysia and Brazil. In all three countries the biotechnology company Oxitec released ( GM yellow fever mosquitoes) with the intention of reducing the population of this species, which also transmits dengue fever.
In choosing the British Overseas Territory of the Cayman Islands to undertake the first releases, Oxitec bypassed the provisions of the Cartagena Protocol (covering impacts on biodiversity) and the Aarhus Convention (covering access to environmental information), both of which would apply in the U.K.
The Cayman trials were in an inhabited area where dengue is not endemic; the smaller Malaysian trial was in an uninhabited area in a country where dengue is endemic; and the ongoing, much larger Brazilian trials are in an inhabited area where dengue is endemic. Only in Malaysia did the company openly consult the public, and even there, a small-scale release caused public concerns due to the lack of transparency about the timing and insufficient public information. Further, only a summary of the risk assessment has been published, leaving the regulator’s decisions about what hazards to include, and whether or not they were significant, open to dispute. People must know, public and communities must be addressed before using these secret technologies.
Thank for reading . Be a good citizen of this world , follow the light f the truth, dont be a robot , think and make your mind , stand up for what’s right and don’t stand on the sideline hoping the world will be better. As long as evil government , countries sponsored terrorists exist in this earth there will be no peace.
Steve Ramsey, PhD. Calgary, Alberta- Canada