reSee.it - Related Video Feed

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The clients of these underground operations are extremely wealthy, arriving in private jets and helicopters. They pay a hefty sum to spend time with a child, knowing that the child will not survive. If the child becomes disabled, no one will care for them, so they are immediately turned into organ donors. These operations are highly secretive and well-organized, resembling corporations. There is a medical team on standby, responsible for organizing the transplants and finding clients for the organs. The demand for organs is immense, ensuring that these operations continue.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Companies pay large sums for women's placentas, used in pharmaceuticals, beauty products, and medical procedures. Placentas from c-sections are more valuable due to less contamination, leading to higher prices. This may incentivize more c-sections, raising concerns about coercion.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker discusses stem cell technology, cloning, and the value of melanin in organs. They mention using SCNT to obtain genetic traits from African women, offering money for genetic material. They touch on the unethical nature of cloning for immortality and the profitability of planned parenthood in certain communities due to the value of melanin-rich organs. The speaker implies a conspiracy related to the high number of babies born in New York.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 expresses a fear that we are on the cusp of not being able to fall pregnant naturally, describing it as absolutely terrifying and noting that there has been something extra in the last couple of years contributing to this trend. Speaker 1 adds that probably everyone knows somebody now who has had difficulty conceiving, underscoring the pervasiveness of infertility concerns in society. Speaker 2 makes a striking claim about male physiology, stating that “The average 21 year old man has a testosterone level that's lower than what a World War two veteran would have in his sixties.” This line is presented as a factual observation within the discussion. Speaker 1 attributes the broader infertility and health decline to “an explosion of chronic diseases.” The speaker suggests that one can only assume there’s “a brilliant business model involved in making people sick and driving them to their doctors and putting them on medications for life.” The assertion continues that all these things are having a negative impact, and that there isn’t more done about it. The speaker advocates for simpler and natural methods that people can be trained in, implying that these approaches could address fertility and health issues more effectively than current systems. Speaker 0 then contends that if alternative methods to fall pregnant are offered, such as IVF, there is a lot of profit to be made with that, indicating a belief that IVF represents a lucrative avenue within the fertility industry. Speaker 1 concludes by proposing that the discussion “has to start with question everything,” encouraging a mindset of inquiry about conventional explanations, treatments, and the broader system. Overall, the conversation centers on concern about rising infertility and declining male testosterone, the idea that chronic diseases and a perceived profit-driven medical-industrial complex contribute to these problems, the suggestion of pursuing simpler and natural methods as alternatives to conventional treatments like IVF, and a closing call to adopt a mindset of questioning established narratives.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
California now pays for gay men in gay marriages to rent a woman's body for children, which is seen as child trafficking. Big fertility involves buying, selling, designing, and discarding people, reminiscent of a past we fought to end. This is all done in the name of progress and tolerance. Translation: California now pays for gay men in gay marriages to rent a woman's body for children, which is seen as child trafficking. Big fertility involves buying, selling, designing, and discarding people, reminiscent of a past we fought to end. This is all done in the name of progress and tolerance.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker announces the birth of the first baby clone, named Eve. The location is not disclosed. The speaker expected to have a press conference with the baby, parents, and scientists, but is alone due to the difficulty of the announcement. The speaker mentions working with human eggs since January and it took three months to finalize the process. They had success quickly and refined the technique until spring when they started implantations. Out of 10 implantations, five were terminated within the first three weeks. The parents have not yet appeared but the speaker hopes they will in the future.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The clients at these high-security brothels are extremely wealthy, arriving in private jets and helicopters. They pay a fortune to spend time with children who are not expected to survive or may become permanently disabled. These brothels, which operate worldwide, have their own medical teams and operating rooms. The organization is highly professional, resembling a complex corporation. There are individuals responsible for caring for the children, organizing organ transplants, and finding organs for clients. The demand for organs is substantial, ensuring the continuation of these operations.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Chinese couples are allegedly using American surrogates to have children in the US who then return to China with US passports. This "rent a womb" scheme involves Chinese parents paying American women to carry babies conceived with Chinese sperm and egg. The practice is happening thousands of times and costs around $200,000, with the surrogate receiving about $70,000. US officials are concerned that these children, as US citizens, could pose a national security risk in the future, potentially serving in the Chinese military with the ability to freely enter the United States. One example cited was a child born in Irvine in 2015 who could join the Chinese military at age 20. While birth tourism is illegal, this surrogacy loophole is not. Some members of Congress are concerned, but currently, there is no legal way to stop it.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The transcript depicts an undercover-style interview with individuals involved in a global child trafficking and organ harvesting operation. The speakers discuss how the network operates, the profits, and the brutal methods used to procure children and organs, often exploiting vulnerable mothers. Key points: - Donor kit and adoption timing: The trafficker (Speaker 1) explains the cost structure and process, saying he “gets €15,000 for abroad with a kid” and that delivering a child takes about two weeks if there are no special requests for gender. The plan requires several meetings, a party, and testing of the girl, with multiple people involved to ensure the girl’s compliance. - Recruitment and manipulation: The group uses persuasion and “positive thinking” techniques, aiming to see the girl’s reaction and exploiting mothers who are vulnerable or indebted. If a girl has a child, she is pressured or reassured before being persuaded to hand the child over. - Transfer options and appetite for either a child or organs: Depending on demand, the organization may pull a child from a brothel to satisfy clients seeking a child or spare parts. They advertise themselves as a sponsor or businessman abroad, receiving many replies from girls who think they are applying for companionship or work. - Targeted profiles and grooming: An “ideal” girl is described as selfish and easily pliable, with tactics including bribing experiences (a trip to Mazari), monitoring reactions to a child’s calls, and testing loyalty in ways that reveal vulnerability to manipulation. - After acquisition: If a girl agrees, discussions cover the child’s fate, with the implication that the child may be taken away and replaced with forged documents later. There is mention of marriages to Arab men and Muslim legal processes to adopt the child and move it abroad, often with easy, illegitimate name changes that erase traces. - Documentation and traceability: The process often involves swapping papers or creating new identities for the child in Poland or abroad, so that traceability is lost. This includes using new papers for Ukrainian-made children, or other methods to render the child effectively invisible to authorities. - Kidnapping and urgent transplants: Kidnapping is described as rare but possible in emergencies when a transplant is urgently needed. The organization uses coordinated efforts to manage the client’s access while avoiding exposure. - Violent and dehumanizing practices: The dialogue describes infants being tortured and dismembered for organs in a sterile room at a villa, with phrases indicating that infants “suffer” and are used as “spare parts.” Older children are drugged and exploited over time; infants are deemed “useless” for long-term exploitation. - Global network and sophistication: The brokers, medical teams, and logistics are likened to a corporation, with branches worldwide, high-security operations, and organized procurement of both children and organs. The demand is described as immense and ongoing. - Emotional detachment: One speaker notes the mother’s collapse into depression and a desire to kill herself and the baby; another reflects a chilling detachment about the mother’s suffering and the ultimate objective of profit. The dialogue reveals a highly organized, international criminal market for exploiting women and children, with both adoption fraud and organ trafficking tightly interwoven, including identity manipulation, forced payments, and extreme violence.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker discusses somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) as an alternative to cloning, where one's own DNA is inserted into an unfertilized egg. Ethical concerns arise as obtaining eggs for research involves surgical procedures and questionable aims. The speaker mentions investing in SCNT technology and expresses a desire for the genetic traits of curvy, sexy, black women from Africa. They offer to pay $100 for eggs and engage in a bidding process. The speaker also mentions the value of other biological materials like umbilical cords and period blood, emphasizing the importance of not wasting them. The discussion concludes with the acknowledgment that older eggs may not be suitable for their purposes.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The clients of this organization are wealthy individuals who arrive in private jets and helicopters. They pay a large sum to spend time with a child, knowing that the child will not survive or may become disabled. In such cases, the child's organs are immediately harvested. This organization has branches worldwide, with highly secure operating rooms. It operates like a complex corporation, with a medical team on standby and individuals responsible for finding organs for clients. The demand for organs is high, and the organization continues to meet this demand.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The transcript centers on a documentary-like investigation into child trafficking, including the sale of babies for organs and for prostitution, and the operational mechanics of trafficking rings in Europe. - The conversation opens with a debate about the worst fate for a child, with pedophilia deemed the “worst option,” but there is a tension about judging a parent who might sell their child. The speakers acknowledge they want to remove a problem and question the significance of the child’s fate. - A narrator explains encountering a girl willing to sell her child to a brothel or as an organ donor, and aims to save her while documenting the process. The girl was relocated from a criminal environment to a different town, but remained controlled by an agent who wanted to sell her child. The sale is described as foiled by the COVID-19 pandemic and border restrictions. - When the pregnancy is discovered, the pregnant young woman seeks a solution and believes she cannot keep the child, framing it as the best possible decision under the circumstances. The trafficking network involves a well-known criminal underworld contact who is told there is a child for sale and who can help. - The interview reveals that in Germany, small children are sometimes held with a family until age three or four and then sent to a brothel. The sale of a newborn can be arranged so the mother signs the child trafficker in as the father, who then takes the baby abroad, making it hard for authorities to trace the child as “officially somewhere in Europe with its father.” - Emotional attachment to the baby is discussed; one participant reports no emotional attachment, focusing on practicality. The fear of life being over with a child is framed as slavery, constant care, and sleepless nights, highlighting the practical burdens rather than affection. - On profitability, the mother emphasizes selling a child for organs yields high returns, whereas selling for a brothel is considered in terms of possible cash, with initial offers around 50,000 to 150,000, sometimes 80,000 euros, though later deemed possibly a scam using Polish zloty. - The liver is cited as a high-demand organ, valued around 70,000 euros, with the heart valued similarly, and other organs like the retina also in demand. The ads and market dynamics are discussed, including portals like “Sperm donors, let's make babies,” where ads from women wanting to give away or sell their children appear; a mother posts an ad for money, receiving responses from families and recognizing banners that target young girls. - The interview reveals a chilling willingness to commodify the child; the mother states she cares about her own child above the others and expresses disbelief in divine punishment for such acts. She gives the baby the name Marcelina, while another participant has not named the unborn child. - The trafficking network’s operation is described in detail: a broker coordinates with a German or Dutch ring, with multiple brothels and a system of drugs to control child victims. A child is described as moving through stages—from adoption into a family, to a brothel around age four, to a larger network, with frequent sexual abuse but regulated intervals of activity to avoid overdose. The children are kept largely indoors within brothels, sometimes allowed limited outdoor access under supervision, and often suffer severe social and psychological consequences. - A separate account details the recruitment and identification of pregnant victims, the length of stay in brothels, and the eventual fate of children who do not adapt to mainstream life, highlighting how the organized rings operate with surgical precision and a global scope.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A whistleblower from Stem Express revealed that a liver from a 5-month-old aborted baby was sold for $17,000 to a taxpayer-funded lab. Planned Parenthood claims that 75% of abortions are due to financial issues, suggesting that this amount could have covered someone's rent for a year. This situation highlights a troubling reality where the financial transactions surrounding abortion may prioritize profit over the value of life.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Some companies collect women's placentas for use in pharmaceuticals, beauty products, and medical procedures, with reported values ranging from $50,000 to $500,000. The value is reportedly higher for placentas from C-sections, as they are considered less contaminated than those delivered vaginally. This raises concerns about whether financial incentives are influencing the rising rates of C-sections among women.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The speaker discusses somatic cell nuclear transfer (SCNT) as an alternative to cloning. They mention using unfertilized eggs and inserting their own DNA to renew body parts. Ethical concerns arise due to the need for women to provide eggs for research, which involves surgical procedures. Another speaker talks about investing in SCNT and expresses a desire for the genetic traits of curvy, sexy, black women from Africa. They offer to pay $100 for eggs and bid $500, mentioning the value of other biological materials like umbilical cords and placenta. The speaker acknowledges that older women may not be suitable candidates.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
A woman who has been involved in trafficking for many years discusses the disturbing shift in the industry. Previously, traffickers would force girls to have abortions, but now they deliberately impregnate them to provide babies for the trafficking world. These babies often do not survive long, as they are starved and subjected to horrific abuse. Technology companies, like Ericsson, have connected evil individuals and facilitated live rapes online. Governments have the power to stop this, but choose not to. There is a genre of sadistic pornography that focuses on hurting children and trafficking victims. These acts are real and based on firsthand accounts. The individuals involved in these crimes are considered wicked, as they aim to inflict pain on God's creation.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Big money is being made from the sale of fetal body parts. Even pro-choice advocates are disturbed. People want liver and lower extremities. The price is $30 to $100 per specimen. Providers try to change the presentation so it's not vertex. If starting from a breech presentation, dilation happens as the case goes out. There are steps to change the COVID presentation. If enough dilation is maintained, the person doing the procedures understands what is needed. Knowing what is needed makes a huge difference. One person had 8 cases and knew which were more likely to yield what was needed, making decisions accordingly. Conversations are happening behind closed doors with affiliates.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
The clients at these exclusive brothels are incredibly wealthy, arriving in private jets and helicopters from unknown locations. They pay a hefty sum to spend time with a child, knowing that the child's life is limited. If the child becomes permanently disabled, they are immediately used for organ harvesting. These brothels, which operate worldwide, have high security and are meticulously organized. It's not just an individual running the show; it's a complex corporation with a medical team on standby. There are people responsible for caring for the children, organizing the transplants, and finding clients for the organs. This disturbing operation shows no signs of stopping.

Video Saved From X

reSee.it Video Transcript AI Summary
Doron from Israel discusses taking a clinic in the US to Caucasian donors and shipping their embryos to India. Surrogacy is being commercialized, leading to businesses undercutting each other and bidding for the cheapest baby. Clinics and doctors are motivated to implant multiple embryos to guarantee a child, sometimes leading to selective abortion or some fetuses not going home with the intended parents. An agent claimed she could get a baby suspiciously fast, confirming extra newborns were available for purchase. The agent then offered to sell the baby they brought to the restaurant, which was characterized as human trafficking. The commodification of human reproduction may lead to unregulated practices as demand grows and prices drop. The industry is multi-billion dollar a year, and assisted reproduction and surrogacy may expand to China, Mexico, and across the world, creating what some call a "baby farm."

The Peter Attia Drive Podcast

352 ‒ Female fertility: reproductive health, treating infertility & PCOS, and the IVF process
Guests: Paula Amato
reSee.it Podcast Summary
In this episode of The Drive Podcast, Peter Attia and Paula Amato discuss female fertility, emphasizing the unique physiological aspects compared to male fertility. Women are born with a finite number of eggs, peaking at around two million in the womb, and decreasing to about 400,000 by puberty. Each month, a group of eggs begins to mature, but typically only one is released during ovulation. Hormones like follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) and luteinizing hormone (LH) play crucial roles in this process. Attia and Amato highlight the importance of early intervention for women considering pregnancy, particularly those in their 20s who may want to freeze their eggs. They discuss the impact of lifestyle factors, such as exercise and stress, on fertility. Extreme exercise can disrupt menstrual cycles, while maintaining a healthy weight and diet is beneficial. The Mediterranean diet is recommended for its overall health benefits. The conversation shifts to assisted reproductive technologies, particularly in vitro fertilization (IVF). IVF involves several steps: ovarian stimulation with hormones, egg retrieval, fertilization, and embryo culture. The success rates of IVF vary significantly based on factors like maternal age and egg quality. Genetic testing of embryos is becoming standard practice, allowing for the selection of chromosomally normal embryos, which have higher implantation success rates. Amato explains the process of egg retrieval, which is performed under sedation and guided by ultrasound. The retrieved eggs are fertilized either through conventional IVF or intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI), where a single sperm is injected into an egg. The embryos are then cultured for several days before being assessed for viability and potential genetic abnormalities. The discussion also touches on the emotional and psychological aspects of fertility treatments, emphasizing the importance of communication and support for patients. Attia and Amato address the rising rates of infertility, attributing it to factors like delayed childbearing and environmental influences. They encourage women to monitor their menstrual cycles and seek medical advice if they experience irregularities. Looking to the future, Amato mentions promising research areas, including the potential for extending fertility through medications like rapamycin and advancements in genetic testing and embryo selection. The conversation concludes with a call for better awareness and education around fertility issues, particularly for younger women, to help them make informed decisions about their reproductive health.

Breaking Points

Designer Babies: Tech Elites Go FULL EUGENICS
reSee.it Podcast Summary
An old morality tale about a 'defective' child reappears in today’s biotech world, where Silicon Valley promises to design healthier or smarter babies. The Black Stork warned against hereditary risk, and this transcript traces a contemporary echo: embryo testing and selection offered by Orchid and similar startups, with Nor Sadiki describing how IVF embryos are analyzed for health, IQ, hair color, and other traits. The interview notes that the New York Times covered a tech founder backed by Peter Thiel to develop these offerings, and mentions Elon Musk among rumored clients. The argument presented is that parents can, and perhaps should, identify embryos with lower genetic risk and transfer those with the best chances of a healthy life, a stance presented as a positive moral choice rather than a taboo. Advocates frame this as progress, while critics warn of a new eugenics ecosystem driven by markets, wealth, and status. The conversation expands to immigration policy, white-nationalist rhetoric, and the danger of a rigid genetic hierarchy, echoed in references to Gatka and broader fears about AI and future inequality.

Armchair Expert

Dov Fox | Armchair Expert with Dax Shepard
Guests: Dov Fox
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Dov Fox, a law professor and bioethics expert, discusses his new book, *Birth Rights and Wrongs: How Medicine and Technology Are Remaking Reproduction and the Law*, and his podcast, *Donor 9623*, which explores the story of a sperm donor who misrepresented himself. Fox, a Rhodes Scholar with a background in law and political philosophy, shares his personal experiences growing up in a complex family dynamic after his parents' separation and his father's struggles with alcoholism. The conversation delves into the implications of sperm donation, particularly focusing on the case of Donor 9623, who was marketed as an ideal donor with impressive credentials, but whose true background revealed serious mental health issues. Fox highlights the lack of regulation in the sperm donation industry, where donors are not adequately vetted, leading to potential risks for families relying on these services. He notes that one in 50 children in the U.S. are conceived through assisted reproductive technologies, a statistic that may surprise many. Fox emphasizes the ethical dilemmas surrounding genetic selection and the societal implications of eugenics, contrasting historical forced sterilization practices with modern parental choices in donor selection. He argues that while parents may seek to enhance their children's genetic traits, this raises complex moral questions about the nature of parenting and the role of luck in life outcomes. The discussion also touches on the emotional challenges faced by families when discovering unexpected truths about their donor's background, and how these revelations can reshape their understanding of identity and family. Fox advocates for a more regulated approach to the fertility industry, suggesting that the legal system needs to catch up with the advancements in reproductive technology to protect families and ensure ethical practices.

Interesting Times with Ross Douthat

Should You Select Your Kids With An Algorithm? | Interesting Times with Ross Douthat
Guests: Noor Siddiqui
reSee.it Podcast Summary
In this discussion, Ross Douthat interviews Noor Siddiqui, founder of Orchid, a Silicon Valley startup focused on advanced genetic screening for embryos. Siddiqui explains that Orchid allows parents to sequence the entire genome of embryos, providing comprehensive information about potential health risks, including serious conditions like heart defects and pediatric cancers. This technology aims to empower parents to make informed decisions before pregnancy, shifting the current IVF process, which often relies on limited genetic testing. Siddiqui emphasizes that this service is not just for older or high-risk parents but is beneficial for anyone wanting to protect their future children. The process involves IVF, where embryos are created, and a portion of their cells is sent to Orchid for analysis. The results include chromosomal analysis and screening for over 1,200 monogenic disorders, as well as polygenic risk scores for conditions influenced by multiple genes. Siddiqui acknowledges the ethical implications of embryo selection and the potential societal impact of widespread genetic screening. She argues that while embryos are precious, the technology can help prevent suffering from genetic diseases. The conversation touches on the moral status of embryos, with Siddiqui asserting that parents should have the freedom to make choices based on the health of their future children. The discussion also raises concerns about the potential for a genetic divide based on socioeconomic status, with Siddiqui advocating for broader access to IVF and genetic screening technologies. Ultimately, she believes that informed choices about embryo selection can lead to healthier future generations, while also recognizing the importance of personal agency in reproductive decisions.

Relentless

#46 - Ending The Genetic Lottery | Noor Siddiqui, CEO Orchid
Guests: Noor Siddiqui
reSee.it Podcast Summary
Orchid’s founder Noor Siddiqui discusses the transformative potential and ethical contours of whole-genome embryo screening, a technology that gives parents far more information about their embryos during IVF than the traditional 1% genome view. She explains that Orchid enables screening for thousands of genetic conditions across the genome, allowing couples to compare embryos by their calculated genetic risk and to select those with substantially lower projected disease burdens. This shifts the decision-making from a subjective, morphology-based “beauty contest” to a data-driven process aimed at reducing risks of pediatric cancers, neurodevelopmental disorders, and complex diseases influenced by many variants. Noor frames this as a way to genetically bless a child and to move health risk earlier, before pregnancy is fully underway, which she believes can dramatically improve lifelong outcomes for families. topicsList fromTranscriptWeed out health risks through embryo screening, genetic risk scores, IVF economics and access, regulatory and societal implications, emotion and meaning in pregnancy, historical panic around new technologies, patient-led adoption, global differences in IVF uptake, future traits like intelligence and non-health attributes, ethical considerations, love and trust in the Orchid community. otherTopicsList fromTranscriptSocietal debate about information ethics, information hazard and parental autonomy, international fertility tourism and cross-border access, private versus public funding for IVF and embryo screening, the emotional toll of miscarriages and congenital diagnoses, the evolution of reproductive technology and moral panics, the role of patient advocacy in driving adoption, potential unintended consequences of widespread screening, the idea of “ethical black box” in genetics, the contrast between health benefits and cosmetic trait preferences

My First Million

It’s The Most Taboo Business Model We’ve Ever Seen
reSee.it Podcast Summary
The podcast discusses the startup Co-Fertility, which offers free egg freezing in exchange for half of the eggs. This model combines egg freezing and donation, addressing the rising trend of women freezing eggs as they delay childbirth. The hosts note that traditional egg freezing can cost around $10,000, making this startup's approach potentially appealing to those who can't afford it. They also share personal anecdotes about egg donation and the emotional complexities involved. Additionally, they highlight Dr. Becky, a parenting expert who built a successful community called Good Inside, which offers parenting advice and has around 50,000 paying members. The conversation touches on the effectiveness of content-driven business models, where experts leverage social media to build trust and monetize their knowledge through memberships and courses. They explore the importance of recognizing when to quit ventures that aren't thriving, emphasizing the value of strategic decision-making in business.
View Full Interactive Feed