Wanting to be youthful and healthy indefinitely isn't a crime . . . most people would prefer youth and good health to being elderly, infirm, and disease-ridden. Being youthful and healthy hurts no one else.
Likewise, most of us would prefer to be wealthy or at least comfortably well-off, as opposed to poverty-stricken and hungry. Having enough money to satisfy one's needs and even one's healthy desires also hurts no one else.
The problem comes when a person has no qualms about HOW they go about obtaining what they want.
Earning honest money is good (business people serve their fellow human beings, when all transactions are honest and voluntary). Theft and fraud are bad.
Taking care of one's health is good -- for those around you as well; it makes you less likely to become a burden on others, for one thing. Forcing or defrauding people by stealing their blood or other biologicals (as opposed to buying from informed adults and adolescents -- as with blood banks -- for instance) is bad.
Yes, adrenochrome is evil -- because it requires terrifying an almost-certainly enslaved or kidnapped person nearly (or completely) to death. But there are plenty of things we can do to slow aging and extend our years of good health, and demonizing that is a problem.
I haven't seen 1 person, in the discussion of adrenochrome, even vaguely suggest promoting a healthy lifestyle(which will likely lead to a prolonged life) as a bad thing. No idea where you pulled that from.
I'll repeat my response to Light1SingleCandle above, because it fits here also:
Well, alright -- you have a point. I had to think about it for a minute because I've seen a number of people here and elsewhere talk about wanting to extend life as being an unnatural, even an unholy impulse . . . and the "Illuminati monsters want to have their youth forever" comment reminded me of that. But you're right, neither that nor the content of the video really demonizes the pursuit of health and youthfulness.
Wanting to be youthful and healthy indefinitely isn't a crime . . . most people would prefer youth and good health to being elderly, infirm, and disease-ridden. Being youthful and healthy hurts no one else.
Likewise, most of us would prefer to be wealthy or at least comfortably well-off, as opposed to poverty-stricken and hungry. Having enough money to satisfy one's needs and even one's healthy desires also hurts no one else.
The problem comes when a person has no qualms about HOW they go about obtaining what they want.
Earning honest money is good (business people serve their fellow human beings, when all transactions are honest and voluntary). Theft and fraud are bad.
Taking care of one's health is good -- for those around you as well; it makes you less likely to become a burden on others, for one thing. Forcing or defrauding people by stealing their blood or other biologicals (as opposed to buying from informed adults and adolescents -- as with blood banks -- for instance) is bad.
Yes, adrenochrome is evil -- because it requires terrifying an almost-certainly enslaved or kidnapped person nearly (or completely) to death. But there are plenty of things we can do to slow aging and extend our years of good health, and demonizing that is a problem.
I haven't seen 1 person, in the discussion of adrenochrome, even vaguely suggest promoting a healthy lifestyle(which will likely lead to a prolonged life) as a bad thing. No idea where you pulled that from.
I'll repeat my response to Light1SingleCandle above, because it fits here also: