rbanffy an hour ago

As a member of a prominent Transylvanian family, I am appalled, and profoundly offended, by the idea of someone even as much as suspecting Peter Thiel could be a vampire. He might be an evil bloodsucking parasite, but he lacks the sophistication mortals have come to associate with vampires over the centuries. It's shocking, really, that some people might confuse him with one.

  • bloomingeek 8 minutes ago

    Hisss...I mean, amen! I bet that scumbag has never eaten a bowl of Count Chocula either.

austinjp 3 hours ago

> Stoker, a theatre manager with no medical background, somehow described the basic mechanism of heterochronic parabiosis

Just to pick a nit...

Stoker's story was inspired by "The Vampyre" by physician John Polidori, who doubtless knew whatever his contemporary medics knew about blood.

Polidori, Lord Byron, and Mary Shelley told scary stories to each other by Lake Geneva in 1816, the "year without a summer". It couldn't get more gothic.

https://publicdomainreview.org/essay/the-poet-the-physician-...

amarant 4 hours ago

I think we're witnessing a schism within the vampire community. By the end of the article, the author is less than subtle about being Dracula, and is trying to use the respect his name no doubt commands among vampires to get the unruly youth(relatively speaking) to get their shit together. This article is a warning to Thiel and Johnson. Dracula sees you, and he does not approve of what he sees.

sgt101 3 hours ago

The novels Blindsight & Echopraxis by Peter Watts have a nice vampire sub-plot... basically his world has vampires which have been revived from the fossil record. They are posited to have gone extinct in recent times, but before then were human's key predator, keeping our populations strongly in check and then having to hibernate for decades to allow the breeding to provide new meat!

He's super interested in brain disorders and spins a good story about the trade offs of a terrible reaction to right angles in exchange for savant like powers of perception.

  • red75prime 2 hours ago

    I can't believe I haven't seen this yet: https://blindsight.space/memories/

    • sgt101 21 minutes ago

      It never occurred to me to see if there was a film!

      Mind you even more amazing I was on youtube yesterday and a short film showing the first chapter of the brand new book (published really recently) that I was reading popped up.

      Now I see that there is not only that film (in the DUST series) but also a miniseries someone has made...

      https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=antimemetics+di...

  • vict7 2 hours ago

    I have not read Echopraxis yet, but I thoroughly enjoyed Blindsight. Some very thought-provoking concepts in that book.

    The idea that vampires needed to take “anti-Euclideans” and the way the ship was constructed to avoid generating right angles were some great details.

    • Baeocystin 11 minutes ago

      Just a heads up, don't go in to Echopraxia expecting it to feel like Blindsight. When I first read it, I was actually pretty disappointed overall, and a few of my friends had similar reactions.

      Over a couple of years a few re-reads, though, I've come to enjoy it perhaps even more that Blindsight, but in a completely different way. It fills out a lot of the posits opened in the first novel, without coming to specific conclusions, but it gives you a lot to think about.

koakuma-chan 4 hours ago

> The Suspects Peter Thiel

Has anyone tried garlic on him?

> Vampires don’t drink blood because young blood contains an elixir. They drink blood because their own blood accumulates factors that accelerate aging, and they need to periodically dilute it.

I don't think this makes sense. Our bodies do not use the same blood forever.

  • observationist 2 hours ago

    This is actually one of the mechanisms behind "blood swaps" done by the rich and weird. Donating blood frequently also reduces various accumulated "factors" that reduce kidney stress, encourage healthy new blood, and is overall beneficial to health.

    Various other mechanisms can improve how effective your body is at recycling cells, encouraging autophagy and filtering things in the blood. There are a whole suite of various supplements and medicines that work in this system.

    As undead, though, vampires no longer produce new living blood, so require fresh blood of the living to restore lost function. Or something.

    I guess that'd make Bryan Johnson the ultimate thrall?

  • maerF0x0 3 hours ago

    The replication process makes worse and worse copies over time. Plus the cleanup crew gets confused and weak. Each bit of aging makes the process of keeping you young work less well, and hence you age more + faster.

  • ASalazarMX 3 hours ago

    Who knew we could coexist with vampires if we give each some kind of dialysis machine? Imagine the kind of cultural works someone with centuries of experience could create. Imagine a vampire historian!

  • 0x4e 3 hours ago

    Maybe garlic alludes to the working class.

  • groby_b 4 hours ago

    > I don't think this [ed:periodical dilution] makes sense. Our bodies do not use the same blood forever.

    You might want to read up on chaperone-mediated autophagy, and how that declines over time. There's a point to be made that yes, in old age we collect things in our blood that don't belong.

    It might not be solvable through dilution, but it's not like we get a full blood change every 5K miles either.

    • smegger001 3 hours ago

      as someone that donates plasma twice weekly I wonder what health effects of removing and filtering the blood regularly has if accumulation of byproducts is a major issue

      • jaggederest an hour ago

        I believe research has shown that blood and plasma donors have mild positive benefits.

  • sgt 3 hours ago

    Imagine showing up to a meeting with Thiel wearing a huge garlic and onion necklace.

    • koakuma-chan 3 hours ago

      "What important truth do very few people agree with you on?"

      "Garlic"

mlsu 3 hours ago

Love this concrete interpretation. The symbolic one is maybe more interesting:

Vampires:

- Consume the life force of the living to sustain themselves

- Are totally isolated and perverted from any kind of human community

- Have no family, no community ties

- Unable to feel love, warmth, connection with any human

- Must avoid spending time in the virtuous natural world (daylight, sunlight) and must instead be cordoned off indoors or in darkness, they do not live as most natural things do.

- Are kind of fallen/perverted; at one point, they were human, but they failed at being human (for instance: unbaptized, excommunicated, murderous, etc) and so were forced into exile often due to their own choice to live sinfully

Billionaires:

- cannot become a billionaire without thousands/millions of regular non-billionaires siphoning money (== time, == life force) upwards

- when they become a billionaire they are forced to be distanced from their community/family of normal people; middle class people are never "regular friends" with billionaires

- either their normal family/friends are 'bitten/infected' (wealth inheritance) or cut-off

- often are profoundly isolated on a personal level (are they talking to me for my money or for me?)

- often the direct cause of or at least complicit in the destruction of the natural world (i.e. cut off from sunlight; unnatural)

- often must make unethical or immoral choices to catapult themselves to wealth/powers (fallen, sinful)

solidasparagus 5 hours ago

> Here’s what’s genuinely interesting.

That's my current AI detector smell.

> He discontinued the blood exchange after data showed “no benefits.” A suspicious person might note that a vampire would say exactly this after the media got too interested.

I don't think it's the media (clearly the younger generations are media friendly), it's probably pressure from the older vamps.

  • sgt 3 hours ago

    Yeah, that does sound pretty AI-ish / marketing-bloggy. It’s not wrong, but it has a few classic “AI vibes”. If you want, I can........oh no!!!!!!

    NO CARRIER

  • ZoomZoomZoom 5 hours ago

    > You know what else is far-seeing? A creature that has been alive for centuries.

    Well, hello there!

an-allen an hour ago

Oh there are vampires. They are very old. But they are mostly illusions of light. Once the veil is removed the disappointment of hell sets in. Smoke, mirrors, DNA, sound.

The French people didn't invest the most elaborate head chopping off machine for just spectacle…

eviks 5 hours ago

Hope the author has some garlic silverware lying around after such a revealing article

  • machielrey 5 hours ago

    I realize now that I might be in trouble. Thanks everyone

    • rbanffy an hour ago

      I am deeply offended by someone associating Thiel with vampires. That idea is completely absurd. Vampires are famous for being handsome, interesting, elegant, well educated, and having impeccable taste for fashion. Thiel has none of these traits.

    • amarant 3 hours ago

      Cute. But I saw through your thin veil Mr Tepes. The irony of bragging about your opsec and revealing your true identity for leverage in the same sentence is considerable.

      Anyway, I hope your son, Adrian, is doing ok. I fondly remember hunting your horrors of the night with him

      -T.B.

david927 5 hours ago

This is a fun story from the early 18th century if you haven't read about it

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Count_of_St._Germain

  • david927 5 hours ago

    And I don't want to add fuel to a strange fire, but in 1764 when Jean-Jacques Rousseau wrote a letter to Beaumont regarding the absurdity of belief despite evidence, he used this as an example:

    "If there is in this world a well-attested account, it is that of vampires. Nothing is lacking: official reports, affidavits of well-known people, of surgeons, of priests, of magistrates; the judicial proof is most complete."

    • dsr_ 2 hours ago

      “Don’t be silly, Bob,” said Mo. “Everybody knows vampires don’t exist.”

      -- first line of The Rhesus Chart, by cstross

u1hcw9nx 5 hours ago

>They drink blood because their own blood accumulates factors that accelerate aging, and they need to periodically dilute it. Feeding isn’t nutrition. It’s dialysis.

This seems to be the emerging consensus. When you get older your metabolism creates all kinds of crap that circulates in the blood.

You would like to have boosted kidneys parallel to real ones that can detect and remove all the slightly wrong proteins.

  • glitchc 3 hours ago

    To reframe the argument, it's more likely that mechanisms for clearing cellular debris become less effective with age.

  • johnisgood 5 hours ago

    Are there any reasons for this to work on non-vampires? :D

    • delecti 5 hours ago

      That was my thought as well. At least naively, it seems to follow that regularly donating blood might have health benefits. A typical donation is half a liter, and a person has about 5 liters of blood, so donating should in theory remove about 10% of the crap you've got circulating, right?

      Edit: You can donate every 2 months, so donating as often as possible would roughly halve the crud every year (0.9^6 ~= 0.53, ignoring the natural increase over time).

      • u1hcw9nx 3 hours ago

        I don't think it's very effective.

        It's your metabolism that produces that junk with increasing ratio of stuff that you need. If you just remove blood, the ratio of good stuff to bad stuff does not change. Same with kidney filtering if they can't recognize the difference.

        Blood transfusion from younger person gives you blood with better ratio.

        • delecti 3 hours ago

          The article includes a citation that explicitly states the opposite. Specifically citation 20 from the section "The Twist" (which is itself all about this idea):

          > [20] Mehdipour, M. et al. “Rejuvenation of three germ layers tissues by exchanging old blood plasma with saline-albumin.” Aging 12(10), 8790–8819, 2020. The UC Berkeley team found that diluting old blood plasma with saline and albumin produced rejuvenating effects comparable to young blood — suggesting the mechanism is removing pro-aging factors rather than adding youth factors. This was, at the time of publication, the strongest evidence that old blood is the problem, not that young blood is the solution.

          Maybe regularly donating blood would have more negative effects from losing good stuff than positive effects from losing bad stuff, or maybe not. There is evidence that it could be a net positive though.

          And even aside from the buildup of crud due to normal aging, environmental crud (nano/microplastics, PFAS, etc) is not produced by the body. It's still not totally settled science whether all of those things have negative effects, but regular blood donation would help clear it out, at least a little.

          • FarmerPotato 2 hours ago

            I was waiting for someone to consider the idea of synthetic dilutants.

            But a further horror is: you’re dumping your crud on the person getting your transfusion? I guess it’s better than dying in ER.

            • delecti 2 hours ago

              Yeah, unless your blood is significantly more cruddy than average, the recipient shouldn't really care that you had ulterior motives behind donating.

      • toast0 3 hours ago

        > it seems to follow that regularly donating blood might have health benefits

        It's pretty effective if you have excess iron (hemochromatosis) and your local vampires accept your donation; some don't because a donation where you get a significant benefit isn't a donation for the sole reason of helping others (and a free cookie). In that case, traditional bloodletting may be required.

      • RajT88 3 hours ago

        2 months for whole blood IIRC. You can do every 2 weeks for platelets, but I am not sure if that removes the crud or not. There's other donations with varying frequency (red, plasma, etc.).

      • johnisgood 5 hours ago

        Yeah, that is donating, now I wonder donating AND receiving (from a healthy individual). :D

        • dylan604 4 hours ago

          Why do you think Gavin Belson had a blood bag? This has been a trope for a while. They even had blood bags in the Fury Road movie, but that was more of a continuous supply than just trying to refresh like Gavin. I don't think using movie tropes in a discussion on vampires is out of line here

jagged-chisel 5 hours ago

Completely OT: In the link “what the longevity experts don’t tell you”[1] I found this:

“As a devout Baptist, he couldn’t use playing cards…”

And I’m wondering if I missed something in my Baptist upbringing. I have long since removed myself from any semblance of the Church and manage my own relationship with faith and any related higher beings, so it’s more a curiosity than pertinent.

1 - https://machielreyneke.com/blog/longevity-lessons/

  • jvalencia 5 hours ago

    As a devout Baptist minister, this is likely about one of two things, avoiding the appearance of evil (gambling, 1 Thess 5:22 - Abstain from every form of evil), and giving up something for the sake of others (gambling addictions within the church, Rom 4:21 - or do anything that causes your brother to stumble).

    The reality is that most churches recognize that they were too legalistic in the past, and so now address things like gambling more directly, and are perfectly ok with playing cards. FWIW YMMV :-)

    • prometheus76 4 hours ago

      I was under the impression that the injunction against playing cards was because of their proximity to tarot/occult practices. Mormons had the same injunction against playing cards until the 80s, when the teaching was no longer promulgated. Speaking as a former Mormon...

      • impossiblefork 3 hours ago

        Here in Sweden, where we also have free churches such as Baptists, Laestadians etc., the concern was definitely about gambling.

      • jvalencia 3 hours ago

        I think that's not wrong. Same principle, different sin... it looks like gambling, or the occult, or...

  • mikestew 5 hours ago

    I knew plenty of Midwestern Baptists that didn't participate in the triple crown of no-nos: dancing, drinking, and gambling. And cards aren't necessarily gambling, but cards are the bricks that pave the road to such evil. It's guilt-by-association (and some will tell you, wrongly, that playing cards are an outgrowth of tarot cards and the like), but there ya go. Oddly, I knew plenty of Baptists that played Yahtzee, which involves dice, and that seemed acceptable. Never minding that the Roman soldiers cast lots ("dice") for Jesus' clothing. :-)

    • larsiusprime 5 hours ago

      This is actually how the popular Texas dominoes game of "42" was invented. It's similar to Spades and other trick-taking games with bids and trumps, but it's played with dominoes, not cards, and therefore it's okay :) Two boys from a Baptist family who got in trouble for playing cards came up with it.

      http://texas42.net/42Article.html

  • dfxm12 5 hours ago

    Consider some writing contemporary to Rockefeller (there is a section on cards): https://baptisthistoryhomepage.com/social.amusements.willis....

    Consider that Titan was written maybe 100 years removed from the events and you're reading a secondhand telling of it from a blog. Maybe there is more context in the book if you're really curious, or maybe the context was lost from Rockefeller's time to the book, or from the book to the blogpost.

    Consider a few more things: If you ask 10 Baptists about something secondary to scripture like this, you may get different answers from different people, especially if they are from different eras, as religion changes over time. As another example, some Catholics grew up hearing the mass in Latin.

    It's funny though, Rockefeller appeared devout enough to understand that gambling was a sin. Rockefeller appeared to believe in an omniscient God. Did he really think his square counters would fool said omniscient God? People trying to find such loopholes in Religion is always fascinating to me. Of course, it could have all been a show.

    • ceejayoz 4 hours ago

      > Did he really think his square counters would fool said omniscient God?

      My favorite example of this is the string of fishing line around Manhattan.

      https://www.npr.org/2019/05/13/721551785/a-fishing-line-enci...

      • mrguyorama 10 minutes ago

        The difference is that it is an explicit belief of most jewish groups that God put these "clever" gimmicks into the rules on purpose, God wants you to look for them and be rewarded for looking for them, and God thinks the way jewish people debate about rules is awesome, and that "clever" workarounds are just the best.

        Contrast this with my Catholic tradition which insists that if I get cheeky with God I should expect to be slapped back down. Jesus seems nifty though, so it's a tradeoff.

        Also, I'm lying. Catholics had no problems playing dumb games with "The rules" to eat beavers when they weren't supposed to eat "meat" and also fish aren't "meat" to this day. We're fun like that.

ceayo 4 hours ago

I'm not really sure if the author (i.e. generative language model) is being serious or being sarcastic...

amoss an hour ago

Reasonable hypothesis. Supported by data. Seems legit

firefoxd 4 hours ago

I was hoping he would provide some insight about why they avoid the sun. From observation, thiel looks like he is getting too much sun, or at least his skin has been reengineered like Alucard. While Johnson is just cake [0].

Side note: for once, I'm enjoying a heavily AI assisted article.

[0]: you'll have to find that reference on your own.

larsiusprime 6 hours ago

Honestly, the surest sign of the existence of vampires to me would be a class of investors with extremely anomalous discount rates, suggesting that they are operating on inhumanly long time horizons, combined with a particular interest in real estate, as first documented in the field's seminal publication (Stoker, 1897).

stuaxo 4 hours ago

Early chatgpt really did not like it when I asked if Peter Thiel was a vampire.

  • mystraline 4 hours ago

    It got very "mad" at me. It was funniest thing all day.

    Thanks for the recommended chuckle.

jamilton 5 hours ago

>The public begins to associate blood transfusion with eccentric billionaires rather than with undead predators. This is a critical narrative shift.

Not much of a shift...

  • kps 4 hours ago

    You misunderstand. Coming out as vampires is meant to improve their reputation.

prometheus76 4 hours ago

Interesting that the author didn't mention anything about stem cell injections. Those have been in vogue among the elite for decades (millennia?).

  • FarmerPotato 2 hours ago

    Yeah… and anytime the narrative switches from transfusion to blood-sucking, I object “but what about stomach acid?” Bodies break stuff down first.

  • dylan604 4 hours ago

    How could it be millenia? Have we been able to isolate stem cells that long, or are you suggesting feasting on placenta as suitable?

holografix 21 minutes ago

Incredibly sad to lear that Peter Thiel owns so much land in one of the earth’s most beautiful places.

If I was a kiwi I would be livid at the government allowing this purchase to go through.

stared 5 hours ago

> Increased sun exposure was associated with an older appearance and accelerated with age (p  0.015), as was a history of outdoor activities and lack of sunscreen use.

Bahman Guyuron et al., "Factors Contributing to the Facial Aging of Identical Twins" (2009) https://gwern.net/doc/longevity/2009-guyuron.pdf

oxag3n 8 minutes ago

Hard to tell if it's a sarcasm or not.

lbrito 4 hours ago

Fun read but I stopped after detecting AI:

"The young blood doesn’t add youth. It removes age."

"Feeding isn’t nutrition. It’s dialysis."

Etc. Why is LLM so enamored with the "Its not x, its Y" idiom? Its so ridiculously overused its almost comical

  • doodpants 4 hours ago

    The flaw in trying to detect AI by its use of particular idioms is that it would have learned these idioms from its training corpus, which consists of writings from actual human beings.

    In other words, some people actually write like this.

    • johnmwilkinson 4 hours ago

      It’s not that people don’t write like this, it’s the over-usage and general tone.

      • alex_young 4 hours ago

        It's not that “I can detect AI” posts sound more templated than the writing they’re critiquing, it's the clankers are learning from it and adapting.

        • uwagar 4 hours ago

          its not that i cant detect your AI detection, its just that i cant watch you quietly do it.

    • lbrito 4 hours ago

      You're absolutely right!

      I have a friend that has used ems all his professional life and is livid that they're now a telltale for AI. So yeah, false positives.

      • FarmerPotato 2 hours ago

        Include the Gen Xers who read The Mac Is Not A Typewriter in the 90s or were merely into fonts.

        Heck, anyone used to a word processor that automatically changes dash dash into em-dash.

        There’s a lot of us that knew how to use em-dash.

      • lionkor 3 hours ago

        Its not just a telltale sign. Its a fact.

    • therobots927 3 hours ago

      Key word here being “some” people. Not nearly at high enough frequency that this way of talking was noticeable before. AI uses this pattern CONSTANTLY and it’s very fucking irritating.

      • achenet 2 hours ago

        Have you ever met human beings that constantly reuse a certain idiom/figure of speech/linguistic pattern?

        The valley girl using "like" every other word, for example?

        Or I had a colleague who would use the expression "we can say" (in French, because we were speaking in French) basically every couple sentences for a bit.

        Humans also repeat speech/linguistic patterns, therefore "repetition of the same pattern" is not sufficient to mark text as produced by AI :)

        • lbrito 2 hours ago

          Yes but there are a lot more "idiom personalities" in humans (you just mentioned several) than there is in AI. Basically every English-language interaction with AI anywhere in the world produces more or less the same argot and style. Its like (heh) we're all talking to the same valley girl stereotype.

  • xutopia 2 hours ago

    Hemingway writes like that. Hemingway editor encourages that kind of style.

  • machielrey 3 hours ago

    Thank you for your feedback - I will pass it on to my ghostwriter.

_joel 5 hours ago

Why am I reading this in Freddie Mercury's signing voice?

  • block_dagger 4 hours ago

    Although better known for his singing voice, it's true that the voice he used when cryptographically signing private messages was also impressive.

  • layer8 4 hours ago

    In that version, there can be only one.

crmd 5 hours ago

I hope the old vampire Dons give some fashion advice to the new guys, e.g. “A vampire doesn’t wear Arc’teryx“.

otikik 2 hours ago

Nicely put, I hope you have very potent solar lamps at home

soiltype 5 hours ago

Interesting... I first went to the linked recent post What the Longevity Experts Don't Tell You. Sorry to be harsh: it was nonsense. It just lists a few weird, unscientific behaviours of John D Rockefeller and tries to draw lessons (to what end? longevity? is Rockefeller still alive?) from them despite there being no indication those behaviors even had any effect, let alone positive impact on longevity. It also doesn't bring up things "the longevity experts don't tell you," it's just summaries of topics in a single biography.

Still I gave this article a shot. I don't understand what it's doing. Like, one of the points about Thiel is that he destroyed Gawker to cover up his vampirism. He actually destroyed Gawker to cover up his relationship to Epstein, the pedophile and saboteur of US social/economic integrity. Why put a silly spin on that? I guess the entire thing is just a little joke... just doesn't feel like it belongs on the HN front page. I had higher expectations.

  • dgacmu 5 hours ago

    It's not nonsense, it's satire. I was laughing most of the way through both of these articles.

    The Rockefeller one literally points out that the guy did all this weird stuff and then his son, who didn't, outlived him.

  • JimmyBuckets 5 hours ago

    Also weird it didn't mention Peter Attia's connection to Epstein outright. It did this weird tongue-in-cheek thing for a few paragraphs referencing Epstein only in the foot notes. I still can't tell whether what I read was actually praising these guys or extremely subtly sardonic.

insin 6 hours ago

> Appears to not age but also to never have been young

/me snorts

OutOfHere 5 hours ago

The article misses the simplest technique:

Just donate blood as often as possible. This results in a loss of cholesterol, other bad lipoproteins, excess iron in those who have it, and PFAS toxins. It is frequency-dependently associated with longevity.

Whole blood donation avoids the plastic lining of plasma donations, with the latter undesirably transferring unwanted microplastics into the body.

For those with sufficient spare money, instead of donating blood, just get various blood tests every other week, additively comparable to a donation if the tests are substantial.

Granted, this is antithetical to being a vampire, but you will still have to make up for it by supplementing sufficient healthy nutrients, e.g. electrolytes, ferric pyrophosphate, protein, etc. to allow your body to quickly restore the lost blood.

As a disclaimer, do not ever donate blood if you use narcotics, disallowed drugs, injectable drugs, or have unsafe intimate practices, or might have chagas or TB or even long Covid.

  • 1970-01-01 4 hours ago

    >It is frequency-dependently associated with longevity.

    Paper where more frequent cycles in women correlate to longer lifetimes? That would have to be true if this were true.

    • Sohcahtoa82 4 hours ago

      I'm assuming you're referring to blood loss from menstruation? That's typically only 30-40 mL (1-1.5 fluid ounces, about a shot glass).

      Nowhere close to the amount given during a donation.

      • 1970-01-01 3 hours ago

        Heavy bleeders would be in the 100-200ml range. This group should correlate with longevity.

  • drewg123 4 hours ago

    So maybe they were on to something with leeches?

  • koakuma-chan 4 hours ago

    Every time I do blood work I almost faint.

    • janeerie 2 hours ago

      I used to have this problem until I was given the tip to tense various muscles throughout my body during the process. Do not listen to the nurses who tell you to relax!

  • fyrabanks 5 hours ago

    does this imply that you're just giving shitty blood to people that need life saving procedures?

    • mrguyorama a minute ago

      The microplastic filled blood will manage to oxygenate their brain and other organs and save their life, and then they can donate it on to the next person in need.

      Feels a little homeopathy... How many people can we put the same blood through?

    • munk-a 4 hours ago

      Bad blood is better than no blood!

      Also, I'm not certain how much they treat blood, but I wouldn't be surprised if it ends up being a purification system sort of similar to Dialysis where you rely on an external machine for removing impurities.

    • overfeed 4 hours ago

      > does this imply that you're just giving shitty blood...

      2 questions: is there any other kind? If there were, ate people requiring transfusion in a position to make demands to the donors (not vendors)

boutell 4 hours ago

Flawless logic!

I have a spoiler-tastic fan theory about the movie Marty Supreme that is apropos here.

cushpush 5 hours ago

Fantastic. Several halloweens ago I wore vampire fangs and told a beautiful girl at a concert that I worked at the local blood bank. She said "yeah?" and I followed up with, "would you like to make a donation?"

sandworm101 an hour ago

Vampire therapy is real. Give an old person an infusion from a closely-matched teenager and they improve by almost every metric. This isnt speculation. It is a noted side effect of any treatment invovling transfusion. (It also helps that older immune systems are less active and react less dramatically to forgien blood.)

gpderetta 4 hours ago

Time to break the Masquerade it seems.

jyscao 5 hours ago

Big if true :P

snvzz 5 hours ago

If interested in rejuvenation, I would suggest investigating LEVF's Robust Mouse Rejuvenation.

RMR1 done and shows promise, RMR2 started recently.

giraffe_lady 3 hours ago

Something I've wondered for a long time: Can a vampire enter your home uninvited if they are a cop with a warrant?

  • FarmerPotato 2 hours ago

    I first read that as “cop without a warrant”. Sign of the times.

mac3n 3 hours ago

see also Floyd Kemske, "Human Resources: A Corporate Nightmare"

https://archive.org/details/HumanResourcesPdf

> Corporate management is the use of humans as resources. So is vampirism.

>Biomethods, Inc. is a struggling biotechnology company whose venture capital group is growing tired of pumping in new blood every quarter.

  • FarmerPotato 2 hours ago

    Future: Peter Thiel takes lead to rebrand VC as Vampire Capital…

themarbz 6 hours ago

Now this is the kind of content I come to Hacker News for.

bazillion 2 hours ago

"But as the days of Noah were, so shall also the coming of the Son of man be." (Matthew 24:37)

More and more, you are seeing what occurred in the time of Noah become commonplace to talk about under the guise of technology. In Noah's day, there was a hybridization program to dilute the blood of man to prevent the coming of the Messiah, but Noah was "perfect in his generations", or not part of the hybrid lines branching off of humanity. And now, what is old has become new again.

The article might address the topic in satire, but there is a truth that is being touched on in it that is hard to look at -- the use [devouring of, injection of, swapping out of, ritualization of, etc.] human blood and tissue is happening right under our noses, and it's nothing new. The vampires lore did not just come out of some sort of novel work of fiction or a novelization of a fable, but is rooted in something that is very, very real. Vampire-like beings existed in the pre-flood (antediluvian) days, but now only exist in spirit after their bodies were destroyed by the flood. The spirits, desiring to be embodied, now go about the rituals of what once created them all over again, so that we might have a new generation of their brand of evil come forth.

What you're witnessing on a large scale through global politics is the public-facing humiliation ritual of mankind being carried out by the fallen angels and those under them that long sought our destruction:

   1) The epstein file information showing all sorts of satanic/luciferian references, as well as possible cannibalism
   2) Xi and Putin discussing organ harvesting benefits (implying an underlying focus on it)
   3) Congressional disclosure of inter-dimensional beings existing and being unexplainable.
   4) The saturation of things that would have been considered unabased debauchery in generations past being put into every facet of culture as if coordinated
If you even give credence to one of the things I listed, then you're keenly aware that it's nearly impossible to talk to anyone about that topic unless they've self-selected into a social group that already believes that that thing is wrong. Others embrace one or more of the topics as a positive thing, such as welcoming the idea of inter-dimensional beings, or furthering human lifespans through genomic editing, or even just promoting the type of debauchery that would have had entire cities leveled in Old Testament times.

But, this has all been prophesied to happen, and is happening exactly as it is spoken of. The truth is being suppressed, even within ones own mind, because a person of the world of today does not love the truth. There is only one way to enter in to the truth, which is to begin seeking the person whose very name is Faithful and True (Revelation 19:11). According to the following verses, to not do so would lead one into a delusion from which there is no escape:

"The coming of the lawless one is according to the working of Satan, with all power, signs, and lying wonders, and with all unrighteous deception among those who perish, because they did not receive the love of the truth, that they might be saved. And for this reason God will send them strong delusion, that they should believe the lie, that they all may be condemned who did not believe the truth but had pleasure in unrighteousness." (2 Thessalonians 2:9-12)