The 5 Current Genetic Experiments Most Likely to Destroy Humanity
Good lord, what is it?
Nexia biotechnologies, a Canada-based research team and wretched hive of scum and villainy, have successfully spliced together the genes of the common goat with those of two different species of orb-weaving spiders. This has resulted in two living, healthy, male spider/goat hybrids named Webster and Peter.
Though the two male goats were the result of a long process of experimental trial and error, their genetic makeup is now stable and the scientists expect to introduce them to a female herd in the near future, where the new spider genes will carry onto the following generations naturally. Potential uses for these new hybrid goats are farming, research, or simply pairing up with a half-snake, half-lamb to form the world's most terrifying petting zoo.
For the love of god, why are they doing this?
The scientists goal is to produce spider silk, one of the strongest, most flexible substances on Earth that, up until now, has been near impossible to synthesize perfectly, and prohibitively impractical to farm on a mass scale. The "territorial nature of spiders" was cited as the primary reason for the failure of spider-farming, just barely edging out the secondary considerations that "it would also be a hell on Earth, the sight of which would follow you into your nightmares and stop the hearts of children with the sheer scale of its terror."
The researchers at Nexia have combined the glands responsible for milk production in goats with those responsible for silk production in spiders, and now hope to simply milk their goats for the precious, nigh-unbreakable fibers. To ensure nobody will question their inherent evil, the scientists accomplished this feat by turning "cells from cows' lungs and baby hamster kidneys into silk protein 'factories.'" When asked why, specifically, they had to harvest the kidneys of baby hamsters to mutate, the scientists laconically replied that "they scream much better than the big ones," before excusing themselves outside to laugh maniacally for the next 15 minutes.
What's going to happen to us?
A common stand-by for movie monsters, the giant spider has been a staple of horror since ancient times. The scientists at Nexia were apparently not satisfied with the potential of giant spiders alone, and instead decided that they need be combined with an animal notorious for its association with Satan and eating literally everything it can reach. Factor into the equation the ability to shoot enormous quantities of the world's strongest, stickiest naturally occurring fiber from their nipples, and congratulations, scientists! You've successfully tapped into a level of primal fear so intense it would leave even H.P. Lovecraft anxiety-vomiting into his hyperventilation bag.
Goats can climb treacherous mountains, survive in some of the world's harshest climates and travel in large herds. Now that scientists have introduced a spider gene that carries over through ordinary breeding, expect in the near future to be chased up the frozen side of a sheer cliff face by dog-sized goat-spiders who will suck the life-force from your prone body, after ultimately snaring you with the unbreakable projectile webs shot from their tits. In regards to that thought, and all of the subsequent time it has freed up by causing us to never have sex again, we would like to take a moment to sincerely thank these scientists for all of the newfound hobbies we can explore. This includes unexpected urination, explosive fear-diarrhea, spontaneous girl-sobbing, violent night horrors and, of course, our desperate, incomprehensible prayers.
You can find more by Robert Brockway at his own site, I Fight Robots
If you liked this article, check out 5 Scientific Reasons a Zombie Apocalypse Could Actually Happen .








#2 ZOMBIE PIG-MEN
ReplyF*ck you, Science. F*ck you and your spider-goats all the way to Hell.
ReplyReally science? Spider goats? f**k you, I always knew you hated humanity. Now if you'll excuse me, I'm going to go sob in the corner for a while.
ReplyI honestly hope this Robert guy is just trolling and doesn't honestly believe all this. Cos it just fails science in so many ways.
ReplyI thought the black plague was carried by flea-infested rats? Now I'm being told it was field mice. I don't know what to believe anymore!
Reply"Furiously" will always be the best adverb when combined with "masturbating"
Replycan't get enough of these fear-mongering articles.
Reply#5 we have GFP in almost everything we can put our hands on for years.
#3#1 manipulate genes in that way is kinda common practice. Considering you already happily shared many genes with other species, like RATS. That probably will make you feel better.
it's not really fearmongering
i thought it was kind of awesome
Before this article, I read an interview with Taylor Swift, wherein she was huffing the PCP for horses. The article before that the creator of Real Steel threatened to "knee cap" his secretary while smoking from a meth luge. But someone mentions gene splicing and that's offensive because science is involved...
There's another posibility with the pigs one, the use of pigs to grow human organs was mentioned in Margaret Atwood's book Oryx and Crake. In that the pigs have human brain tissue, and are thus hyper inteligent, when they break free they are able to set elaborate traps for humans like the Velociraptors in Jurassic Park. PS, someone should tell Ross Noble about PERVS, since half his standup involves either pigs or AIDS.
ReplyOminous omens? Seriously? That doesn't sound the LEAST bit redundant to you???
ReplyJust sit down and laugh, candy ass.
Omens can also be a good thing. Despite what years of horror movies have ingrained into you, omens are not inherently ominous and not redundant. It's at worst alliteration.
Cow people made me thing of the secret cow level from Diablo 2.
Replyi feel nothing
ReplyI'd like spider-web shooting tits. It'd be handy.
ReplyYeah, but what about breastfeeding????
Maybe one side shoots webs and the other is milk? Let's not try this, okay?
, which sure beat the old-fashioned way of making a Jellyfish Monkey--furiously masturbating a jellyfish directly over a spread eagle monkey
Replydr pepper came out my nose at that one
James Tiptree, Jr. wrote a sci-fi short story called "The Milk of Paradise" about an alternate reality where scientists raised humans to act as cows.
ReplyThe cow-human hybrid made me think of this.
sometimes when im home alone i like to cover my body in vaseline and pretend im a snail
Reply Hide All See All 3 Replieswat
Only the truly funny people of the world copy/paste a comment that's been around for awhile.
SALT!!! SHE NEEDS SALT!!!
This article made me laugh (which makes sense considering it's intended as comedy), but a lot of the fears in here have a grain of real bullshit (that's bullshit people actually believe) they're tied to, like the whole genetic engineering "Frankenfood" scaremongering.
ReplyAlmost every piece of food you eat is genetically engineered; get over it people :P If cavemen had science fiction and horror movies, they'd be convinced that using fire would burn the world to a crisp, or domesticating animals would lead to a race of dominating animals, as hubris for "going too far" and "playing God."
Um, forgiveness...but haven't both of those examples already happened, and at least more than once if not a number of times to boot?
Man's deliberate or accidental introduction of specieses(what's the plural of "species"?) into ecosystems around the world has forced radical change as a "dominating animal" replaces existing ones(cattle for buffalo in North America, toads & rabbits in Australia, etc) and fires have repeatedly burnt entire buildings, cities and landscapes throughout history(Rome, London,Chicago, San Francisco, Moscow, Kyoto, etc) either through Man's negligence or maliciousness(Molotov cocktails, Greek fire, flamethrowers, napalm, etc)...certainly not the "entire world" burning to a crisp, but still :P
Not that I'm disagreeing with you re: the bullshit factor, tho :)
BTW: "hubris" is the act of arrogance that causes things like this to happen, not the consequence or punishment for doing so...ie: "going too far" and "playing God" *is* "hubris".
There are also numerous actual persons throughout history who have expressed regret over their creations and how they were used for horrific purposes...including Kamran Loghman who developed pepper spray with the FBI, Albert Einstein whose work led to the development of the atomic bomb, and Kenneth Bainbridge who actually worked on the Manhattan Project and subsequently became a speaker against nuclear weapons.
Add in the infamous Alfred Nobel who thought that dynamite would help deter war in the face of massive explosive damage(and subsequently established the Peace Prize that bears his name when a French newspaper printed a premature obituary for him naming him "The Merchant Of Death" when his factory blew up), and the track record for new technologies being used safely, comfortably and solely for beneficial purposes does not look very good at all, imo.
emo and "pre-cried into", classic stuff, kudos
ReplyWhen asked why, specifically, they had to harvest the kidneys of baby hamsters to mutate, the scientists laconically replied that "they scream much better than the big ones," before excusing themselves outside to laugh maniacally for the next 15 minutes.
ReplyQuite possibly the funniest sentence ever written.
This article tested my mental fortitude. During my class I only chuckled twice, and I do not know how I pulled off that feat. This article was amazing.
ReplyThere's an old Japanese children's story about a monkey and a jellyfish. It involves organ theft. No kidding, the jellyfish tries to steal the monkey's liver. Now that's a proper fairytale
ReplyNever too early to teach kids the ins and outs of the Black market.