QAA Podcast - De-Extinction Nightmare Part 2: Colossal Lies (E369)
Episode Date: April 22, 2026In part two of this two part episode, Jack continues their look into the dubious practice of “de-extinction” this time as it is pushed in the 21st century by Colossal BioSciences. Created in 2019... by Ben Lamm and George Church, Colossal aims at making extinction, as well as the endangered species list, a thing of the past using CRISPR technology. Claiming to have revived the Dire Wolf and Red Wolf, the company actually has been more successful in massive PR campaigns and paying off critics than reversing species death. But who benefits when people believe that the ecosystem can be preserved through test tubes rather than policy aimed at protecting endangered animals? You guessed it: wealthy sociopaths who see traditional conservation efforts as a barrier to total planetary domination. Gimmie Truth by Brad Abrahams https://bradabrahams.net/independent/gimme-truth-be7s6 Subscribe for $5 a month to get all the premium episodes: www.patreon.com/qaa Check out our new podcast series network Cursed Media! Spectral Voyager Season 2 is releasing now! Binge the entirety of Truly Tradly Deeply by Annie Kelly and Megan Kelly as well as Science in Transition by Liv Agar and Spencer Barrows: cursedmedia.net Produced by Liv Agar & Corey Klotz. Theme by Nick Sena. Additional music by Pontus Berghe. Theme Vocals by THEY/LIVE (instagram.com/theyylivve / sptfy.com/QrDm). Cover Art by Pedro Correa: (pedrocorrea.com) qaapodcast.com QAA was known as the QAnon Anonymous podcast.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
If you're hearing this, well done.
You've found a way to connect to the internet.
Welcome to the QAA podcast, episode 369, Deextinction Nightmare Part 2, colossal lies.
As always, we are your host, Julianfield,
Liv Egar, Jack LaRoche, and Travis View.
In 2024, Donald Trump found himself talking about California's water policy.
That he was discussing water policy wasn't that surprising.
As climate change worsens and data centers grow, the state has found its water table increasingly taxed.
It wasn't even shocking that Donald Trump interrupted himself during a particularly vitrolic tirade against Biden's admittedly ailing health to complain about a far more insidious foe.
What was surprising was that the enemy in question was, in his words, a tiny, tiny fish.
You know water? I had a deal for water to come down from the north. They have so much water.
They don't do it because they're trying to protect a tiny, tiny little fish that hasn't made it.
He's a small fish.
I don't know. Why would you protect small fish?
They're lame.
No longer hot.
The tiny little fish is the critically endangered Delta smelt, found only in the northeastern part of San Francisco Bay.
These fish are indeed tiny, just two to three inches long, and only live about a year in the wild.
This was also not the first time they had found themselves as firmly lodged in
Trump's eurythra has the worm in RFK's Jr's brain. In 2016, Trump argued that California could not
possibly be experiencing the worst mega drought in 1,200 years, because, quote, a certain kind of three-inch
fish was still enjoying protections. In 2020, he complained to Sean Hannity about California having to ration
water due to dumping all of its supply into the sea, quote, to take care of a certain little tiny
fish. Hannity went on to dedicate an entire episode of his own show to complaining about the fish
and the government elevating it over the people of California. This belief was held so strongly
that on January 20th, 2025, Trump announced his quote, putting people over fish,
stopping radical environmentalism to provide water to Southern California presidential action.
Sarah Palin also weighed in on the Delta Smelt in her own unique voice.
Where I come from, a three-inch fish, we call that bait.
There's no need to destroy people's lives over bait.
Hydrologic studies show that conserving the delta smelt is not a zero-sum game.
The effect of, as Trump put it, dumping water into the ocean to save this tiny fish,
does not meaningfully impact the people of California in any way.
Why then, if the science shows it to be a non-issue, is this such a strong talking point?
It has to do more with what the fish represents than what it is in reality.
Yeah, I find this is often the case with how the Wright represents like conservation stuff is like they like it's it's with like virtue signaling as well as a concept is like the belief that like these people are also super cynical but they're just like hiding their cynicism. So it is like a war of all against all. But like the liberals are like siding with like not humanity or like not the in group in that war of all against all. In this case they're siding with the fish. The fish are invading. It's us or them and obviously we're going to choose them. Yeah.
I remember in the 90s, the sort of the representative of like silly conservation efforts among conservatives was the spotted owl.
People constantly made fun of like Al Gore or whatever for wanting to preserve the spotted owl.
Of course.
I mean, why would we save animals?
Oh, the cuck owl and the pussyfish, huh?
That's who you care about, freaking Californians.
The Delta Smelt represents every tree-hugging, peace-loving pot-smoking Californian.
Everything wrong with environmental.
policy and liberal rhetoric can be fit into its three-inch body. The fish was small enough to have a
starring role in almost every article about abortion and LGBTQ plus rights. Interestingly, very few
of these articles talked about the other species of endangered fish that was diverting water during
the droughts. The Chinook salmon. I'm sure there's no reason that they're avoiding going after this
large, majestic, fishable fish rather than the beta spawn that is the Delta smelt.
I mean, the Delta smelt is just the funniest.
The Delta smelt it.
Yeah.
He who dealt it, smelt it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Makes you think of farts.
Yeah.
This is what we bring you.
Half-hearted jokes because they're too childish, but I can't help myself.
That's the subheading of the QA podcast.
I can't help myself.
I can't help myself.
Methods of De-extinction.
When Dolly the Sheep was cloned in 1996, it generated a lot of intense,
scientific discussion. Many were interested in the idea of the advent of designer babies.
Others wanted to know what other animals could be cloned next. Dolly was important, not just because
she was a cloned animal, other animals were cloned before her, but because she was an animal cloned from
adult somatic cells, mammary tissue to be exact, hence her being named after Dolly Parton.
If we could clone this sheep from adult somatic cells, scientists theorized, couldn't we clone a thylacine?
What about a woolly mammoth?
These ideas were very fresh in George Church's mind, and ones that he spoke very openly about,
both in interviews throughout the aughts and into the 2010s.
After the publication of his book, Regenesis, How Synthetic Biology Will Reinvent Nature and Ourselves
in 2012, the very concept of de-extinction began to be talked about in earnings.
outside of speculative biology and rewilding spaces. De-extinction as a concept is pretty much what it says on the tin.
Extinction doesn't necessarily need to be forever, according to this philosophy. Resurrection could be
achieved in a number of ways. To put it into the most basic terms, if you took two dogs, for instance,
lives tiny little dog and my husky, and bred them together, each time choosing the breeding partner
with the most atavistic traits, my husky has more atavistic traits than most tiny little dogs,
you would, over time, end up with the wolf that the dog species came from.
This is what the Heck Brothers attempted to do to recreate the orocks from modern cattle.
Alternatively, you could speed run this process by, say, taking a chicken embryo and choosing
to edit the genes so that the tail would remain intact, the fingers would never fuse into a wing,
and the teeth would remain in the beak. This is what Jeffrey Epstein Associate,
and overall creep Jack Horner
has been trying to do with his
chickenosaurus project for over a decade now.
Although with his recent firing,
I imagine that project might now be extinct.
Damn, get his ass.
Finally, you could take the genome
of an extinct animal and through CRISPR,
edited in some of the sequences,
into a living surrogate embryo
to create a hybrid creature
that shows the traits of the extinct ancestor.
This is what George Church was most interested in,
and this is what the company,
colossal biosciences was formed to do.
This is also how the dire wolves that have been dominating the news cycle were made.
Colossal origins.
In 2019, mobile game creator and AI enthusiast, Ben Lamb approached George Church about de-extinction.
By 2021, they launched their company, Colossil Biosciences, the De-Extinction Company.
Colossal's stated mission is,
Through technological and engineering breakthroughs in bioscience and genetics,
Colossil is accepting humanity's duty to restore Earth to a healthier state,
while also solving for the future economies and biological necessities of the human condition.
What do you all think about that?
You know, it reminds me of that line from the Silicon Valley series in which the tech billionaire says,
I don't want to live in the world where people make the world a better place than we do.
It reminds me it's like, yeah, it has this this common,
heck arrogance of likes like, okay, everyone else before me, including conversations, had no idea
what we're doing. We're going to use our big brains or many dollars in our, in our Stanford grads
to really actually do what you've been trying to do. And of course, it usually ends in like,
you know, a horrifying disaster. Yeah. Yeah, the idea is that like all these other people are
actually just too stupid. And now that I've come along, thank God, I can apply my enormous brain
to this issue. This is very Elon Musk way of thinking. I mean, just all these guys, just the
hubris. I've said this many times, but it's incredible.
Well, since you said the keyword hubris, this is what colossal bioscience's stated goal is.
Colossil will revolutionize history and be the first company to use CRISPR technology
successfully in the de-extinction of previously lost species. On the journey, we will build
radical new software tools and technologies to advance the science of genomics overall.
Okay, yeah, so we're going to revolutionize the dang world. We're going to make a freaking before
and after, we're going to really be the best.
We're going to revolutionize history.
Yeah.
Revolutionized history is so stupid.
Yeah.
So to launch the De-Extinction Company in 2019, they received 15 million in seed funding
from some pretty interesting people, each without a single modicum of scientific background.
First, we have Thomas Tull, arguably best known as the founder of legendary entertainment,
and the person to finally bring Watchmen and 300 to the big screen.
He's the co-chairman of TWG Global,
an investment group that specializes in integrating AI into financial services
and is partnered with QAA favorites, Palantir, and XAI.
Sorry, you said it was partnered with QAA.
I was like, wait, which world?
We're partnering with that, me.
What's going on?
In 2022, around the same time as Colossal was getting established,
Tull became head of the United States'
innovative technology fund, which focused on building startups incorporating AI, quantum computing,
biotech, satellites, etc.
One of their largest investments was in Andrel Industries.
Next on the list here is Tim Draper, third-generation venture capitalist, which I guess would
make him a nepo grandchild.
He was one of the first investors in the totally legit company, Theranos.
Smart person.
Revolutionized history, they did.
In 2014 and again in 2018, he filed a petition to divide California into either six or three smaller states, since it has become increasingly ungovernable, in his words, as a single state.
Neither petition made it very far.
Yeah, I'm going to disrupt the United States voting by gerrymandering, but we're calling it something new.
Tony Robbins, motivational speaker alleged sex pest and neurolinguistic programming act.
advocate, was eager to put his money on the line as well.
I was going to say, like, that's an entirely new sentence, but it absolutely isn't.
That's like so, it's probably a lot of type of guys, those three things.
Mm-hmm.
So too were the cryptocurrency obsessive Winklevis twins.
Jim Breyer, formerly the second largest shareholder in Facebook behind Zuckerberg himself,
threw his money at the De-extinction Company.
Interestingly, post-2016, Breyer began focusing primarily on investing in artificial
intelligence specialized for use in health care spaces. The last of the public seed funding investors
was Richard Garriott, the creator of the Ultima video game series. And the failed...
No! Not you! And the failed 2022 NFT technology-based video game. No, no, not the creator of Ultima
Online, my most beloved game of all time. Mr. Garriott, you are hereby canceled. Once again,
your faves are implicated.
Yeah.
Fuck.
Well, I mean, he has sucked horribly at making games, like, for a while now.
To Julian's dismay, Garriott was also the inspiration behind James Halliday and Ready Player
One and is currently on the advisory board of colossal biosciences.
Yeah, well, you know, I mean, one of the funniest parts of Ultima Online was when someone
exploited a bug to kill Richard Garriott's King character in the middle of the big ceremony.
It was amazing.
That is pretty great.
So maybe we have to do that to him.
but in less of an ultima and less of an all-line.
Although Garriott is an accomplished adventurer,
he also is not a scientist.
Notably, even George Church himself has no background in conservation.
Great.
By 2024, the roster of donators had expanded
to include Paris Hilton, Tiger Woods, Tom Brady,
Peter Jackson, Chris Hemsworth,
and enthusiastic explorer
and ex highly lauded intelligence officer, Victor Vescovo.
All the stars are here.
Just lining up all their mugshots on the investors page.
Tom Brady had the following to say about all that colossal had done for him.
I kiss my boy on the mouth.
I love kissing him on the mouth.
I make him come back and kiss me on the mouth while I'm getting massage.
Now, the real quote, I love my animals.
They mean the world to me, my family, the former NFL star said.
I kiss him on the mouth too.
A few years ago, I worked with Colossil and leveraged their non-invasive cloning technology
through a simple blood draw of our family's elderly dog before she passed.
The company, quote, gave my family a second chance with a clone of our beloved dog, Brady continued,
adding that he is, quote, excited how Colossil and Viagin's tech together can help both families losing their beloved pets
while helping to save endangered species.
Viagin sounds kind of like a company that, like, helps make your deal.
dick harder through nanobots.
Yeah.
The way that he put it, like, simple blood draw makes it sound like it wasn't so simple
and maybe painful for the poor dying dog.
It was a simple, totally uneventful blood draw that did not kill our dog and replace it
with a Kubrick's tear version of our dog.
Yeah, specifying non-invasive.
It's like, no one, does that imply that people usually think you have to, like, kill an
animal to clone them?
Yep, yep.
We drew that blood, not through the asshole.
Definitely not through the eyeball and not through the ear.
Does that require a lobotomy?
The dog was fine, although dying.
Yeah, it's interesting that the words non-invasive are used because a blood draw is invasive.
Yeah.
As is the use of a surrogate, which you have to use in order to get a clone.
Well, I mean, non-invasive cloning technology.
I mean, as opposed to what the hell would invasive cloning technology be anyways?
Like we take a part of you and it has to grow the second half?
Yeah.
Like, yeah, we chop off the back half of the dog and it grows the front half.
I think invasive cloning is alien.
Yeah, it's the substance.
No, the alternative is that we liquidate you.
We turn you into a goo.
We make a bunch of you from the goo.
My beloved dog was liquidated.
We put it in a megel mold in the shape of a fucking Labrador.
Cloning stuff is always so insane, though, because it's like, that's not your dog.
Like, that's, people aren't just, like, determined by their genetics.
You know, like, unless you do the fucking Nathan Fielder experiment, identical environment.
I was thinking about that.
Yeah.
So Paris Hilton and Tom Brady are just two of Viagin's customers.
This company is one of two in the world, the others located in South Korea, that leverages the somatic cell cloning technology that was used in creating Dolly the sheep to replicate more than just livestock.
Since 2015, according to a recent Vice article,
they have cloned more than 1,000 cats and dogs for happy customers.
Viagen even says that their cloning has an impressive 80% success rate.
So what does it 20% look like?
You're real fucked up.
I was under the impression that I would have been 100% success rate sort of thing.
Like do we have a, again, is it like a substance at the end of the movie, sort of?
You know, some of these animals,
They're aging incredibly fast and getting depressed and trying to kill everything and everyone around them.
It's the last episode of Chernobyl for 20%.
$50,000 for a dog or cat or $85,000 for a horse, with no guarantee of success, this is a lucrative endeavor to be sure,
especially since they alone hold the patent for this style of cloning.
They even assert that it isn't ethically questionable, since each surrogate only,
goes through two pregnancies.
What happens after the surrogate is retired?
Don't worry about it.
The FDA last heard comments from the public on animal cloning in 2006, but have done nothing
to regulate the industry since hearing those comments.
Colossal bioscience has acquired Viagen in 2025.
This is one of those things where it's like, where is the like Bush style like, you know,
Christian like paranoia about stem cells?
Because you'd think they'd be pretty not.
fond of this, presumably.
I guess the Trump admin is too
too busy doing evil things.
I mean, I guess we'll see that there's an
involvement, I guess, is the twist
there. But you would think that that
torp of Christian evangelical would
not be especially fond on the concept of cloning.
I mean, you would think. Yeah.
You would think a lot of things about these incredibly
inconsistent ghouls. Yeah.
Marketing is not an art form.
If you know the name
colossal biosciences,
it's likely because you've been exposed to their
frankly, excellent marketing.
Run
wild and free
through fields and forest
I'm a hunt
in the cold and darkness.
Stark your prey
find a way to
inside you
a feeling that got you
claws a still
It's just,
and you just love
It's just displaying something
That's like obviously not a dire wolf.
Oh yeah.
Like obviously that what a dire wolf
looked like.
The musician that you were hearing is Stan Bush, who is best known for the song The Touch
from the Transformers movie.
I don't know.
It's very, it's like the fact that it's being celebrated with, you know, an ironic 80s
hair metal style song makes me feel a little less serious, you know.
Yeah.
Die your wolf.
We're going to feed ourselves to die your wolves.
Put us in a pit with all the wolves we show.
Let us get.
torn apart. We deserve death every day.
Their videos are often viral sensations on YouTube and Facebook, or at least they were until
relatively recently. Even if you wisely are not on social media, you've probably heard about
the dire wolves. Time magazine's cover on April 7, 2025, announced their triumphant return.
Extinct, crossed out. This is Remus. He's a dire wolf, the first to exist in over 10,000 years.
Endangered species could be changed forever by Jeffrey Kluger.
I will admit, I saw this, like, briefly when it happened, and I was like, cool.
Like, it got me.
Cool.
I'm going to ride one into battle when my Serbian ancestors finally take over all of that region.
Exactly.
That was exactly what I thought.
And exactly that point, how did you know that that's my internal monologue?
Yeah, I don't know.
Well, you did say once that you walk around your apartment being like, I'm a fucking chud.
I'm a fat fucking chund.
So I gave me the fat fucking shot of internal voice.
That's true.
I do say that sometimes.
Liv, do you think it's even cooler
since Remus's brother is Romulus
and his sister is named Calisi?
Oh, okay.
Oh, gosh.
Yeah, yeah.
Fuck.
Oh, my God.
Shortly before the actual birth of the pups
in October 2024,
colossal unceremoniously replaced
its marketing team. The new hires were interesting picks. Also, sorry, why wouldn't you not lead
with Romulus? Like, who cares about Remus? There's no ream. Like, what the fuck? Well, Romulus looked like
an absolute freak. Slobbering and deformed. He has eight legs. Romulus looks more like a spider
with fur. Romulus looks like one of the wolves that swims in like the Simpsons, like
polluted radioactive lake. I like the idea that like the new team is,
still doing the same kind of shit, but like has changed completely. It's like, and now Joanna Newsom's
cover of Dyerwolf. Diary Wolf, you are coming back 10,000 years. Yeah, you guys didn't hear, but one of my
favorite lyrics from the Happy Birthday Dyer Wolf song is that he says, it's just one year you're alive,
which I think is supposed to be like you just turned one, but being phrased, it's just one year you're
alive makes it sound like they have an expiration date. Yeah. Yeah. It's like,
the inbred white tigers, whatever. It's like, congrats. Enjoy the year. They named the Dyerwolf
after their fate. Yeah. The new marketing team is led by Chris Klee, who goes by Klee. Klee. Klee was
formerly employed by Ben Lamb's previous startup, Hyper Giant, a military affiliated company that
specializes an AI decision-making software for space, defense, and critical infrastructure sectors.
Yeah, so they're sponsored by the guy who built the iron dough.
The new chief marketing officer was Emily Castell, whose previous credits include legendary entertainment, as well as her own marketing company.
She famously spearheaded global marketing campaigns for J.J. Abrams' 2013 Star Trek movie and developed the Monsterverse franchise mythology for the current Godzilla and Kong franchises.
Michael Doherty, regrettably, is also part of this esteemed team.
All of this is to say, if you can't help but think of Godzilla can't.
of the monsters and Jurassic World
when you're watching Colossil bioscience
videos online, that's no coincidence.
They literally hired the mastermind
behind those blockbusters campaigns.
By some accounts, the bulk
of their budget goes straight into marketing
and it shows. Again, I feel like
the sort of the Jurassic Park movies
have themes of the hubris
of scientific, you know,
over ambition, and how
like you can't plan for everything
and then, you know, life finds away
and like how it can end the disaster.
Yet this is what they're like taking inspiration from.
I wouldn't be upset if the dire wolves got them.
Somehow a dumber version of the Chachy-Ptie trying to recreate the Her robot.
We got even stupider, even less accurate to the kind of image what they're trying to copy in science fiction.
Pre-print panic.
In February 2026, a leaker posted inside knowledge to a very small subreddit
regarding what was happening at colossal biosciences.
They offered only a little by way of proof, but part of it was the following text exchange,
showing that they knew about the dire wolves prior to the announcement.
But it's amazing. Even this has a secret insider anon.
Yeah, it's like it's Q and not but real.
Okay, so the messages read, but this is a thing.
If they make a hairy elephant, big if, there's intention to actually release it in the wild.
With a dire wolf, they tried to make should note so different from the real thing,
they wanted to call it the colossal wolf, they wanted a slay.
bigger wolf to grift off of Game of Thrones hype and put on some fenced off land owned by a
billionaire and charge people to see it. Problem was, they couldn't figure out how to make a
wolf a bit bigger. This is literally why the company exists to find a cosmetic win and sell.
CEO has done exactly multiple times. Someone answers, fuck's sake. Yeah, the wolf situation really shows up
the bullshit. BTW. That's between us for now. Sorry. And the date of this exchange was March 4th,
2025. Jesus Christ. Yeah, I mean, this is not surprising. Again, like, you could go back to the first
part of this two-part episode and see that, like, it was always just cosmetic win bullshit that
was really going on behind the scene, like trying to recreate something that looked enough
like something that people would believe it. According to this leaker, whose Reddit account is now
deleted, during an introductory meeting, someone had the nerve to ask Ben Lamb how exactly
colossal biosciences, planned to make money, seeing how the company is not a non-profit.
Ben Lamb was said to have replied, Jurassic Park is a multi-billion dollar franchise. They don't have any
real animals. All they need to do is pump an animal out and plaster it all over lunchboxes,
T-shirts, etc. Fuck, this is your monetization strategy? Merch. It's not, it doesn't even make sense.
Jurassic Park doesn't exist. Dumbass.
It's not a company.
It's a fucking entertainment.
Right.
You got to start a good, you have to make a first good movie.
You can't even do that.
Make Dyerwolf the movie and then call me when it becomes as big as the first Jurassic Park.
Good luck getting fucking sexy Jeff Goldblum in it too.
Yeah, because the analogy is like Game of Thrones, but it's like it wouldn't be like
Jurassic Park making money.
It would be like another company selling Jurassic Park merch.
Yes.
You don't have the main product that's making all the money, which,
is Game of Thrones.
Yeah.
A company promising to bring back a dinosaur, never doing it, and then selling merch anyways.
You also does make sense.
Like Jurassic Park is like a trademarked intellectual property.
You can't have a trademark on the dire wolf.
It's just an animal.
Anyone could put the dire wolf on a t-shirt.
Even in the most like charitable interpretation of what he's saying, which is that in the
Jurassic Park movies, there is Jurassic Park merch and they bring back an animal and then
they plaster that everywhere and sell the merch.
Even that doesn't make sense because it's a fucking fictional movie written by people.
They don't have to fucking do any actual business.
Plus, we all know how that turned out really well.
The company did great.
Jurassic Park, nothing wrong with it.
It's great that they put stuff on lunchboxes.
God, just the levels of stupidity here, more like Ben lame.
Counterpoint, though.
They could just sell copies of the Happy Birthday Dyer Wolf song.
Yeah, it's so true.
It was so epic what they did there.
Oh my God, it was so cool.
You know, more interesting than all of this was another revelation that the leaker shared.
They're almost certainly lying about how they made the diewolves.
The diewolf DNA that was synthesized had its expression patterns change into something non-functional
as soon as the gray wolf epigenome kicked in.
The head of the dire wolf team was a guy named Sven Bockland.
He was fired, and I do not know what happened after he was fired.
But then four weeks later, the puppies were born.
There's no way they figured out how to overcome the messed up expression patterns in that
time. What's even more suspicious is the reason they said internally the edits weren't working is because
they were editing a wolf and not, according to what I heard prior to announcement, a jackal, who they
said was its closest relative. So not only did they have four weeks to work out the bugs, but the
animal's entire taxonomy. This makes me think their preprint is also bullshit. So that's interesting
that the die wolf was more closely related to a jackal. So they, at least ostensibly at some point,
we're trying to make this a bit more real and then they were like, fuck. Okay, let's just, let's just
a white wolf. Yep, let's just throw that in. Jack, I think you have a good shot at becoming
part of this company just based on your name. I think that you have a long future. I'd recommend
just slight rename to Jackal LaRoche. Well, as this episode goes on, you might see that you
have a really good point since I'm criticizing them. A pre-print is essentially a draft of a research
paper made publicly available prior to undergoing peer review. The pre-print and question,
on the ancestry and evolution of the extinct dire wolf, notably includes fan favorite George R. Martin,
among its nearly 40 authors, with his author contribution listed as, quote, writing, reviewing, and editing.
What the fuck does George R. Martin know about any of this?
Soul aesthetics in pop culture and PR anyway.
So it's like, oh, here's the author of a very popular franchise and intellectual property.
Let's get him on board.
Travis is currently losing his mind.
He is holding the sides of his brain as if to keep the brain in place.
In 2021, a study done by nature revealed that the dire wolf occupied their own lineage in the Canad family tree, separate from wolves, jackals, African wild dogs, and coyotes.
This study was long contested by colossal, as they claimed that their own DNA analysis of two additional dire wolf skulls revealed that the gray wolf skulls revealed that the gray,
wolf was the closest living relative to the dire wolf and vice versa.
Actually, I did my own study and it turns out that they genetically identical to the gray wolf.
It's exactly the same.
They're literally disrupting science.
They're literally disrupting in the negative sense.
So why else would the gray wolf and not a jackal be chosen as the surrogate for the dire wolf?
Interestingly, the preprint did not support these claims.
Yeah.
Science covered the publication of the preprint and Colossal offered the following explanation.
Our results support the results of the 2021 paper, says Gred Gedman, a computational biologist at Colossel,
and co-lead author of the new preprint, with some important distinctions.
The original study found, for example, that dire wolves diverged from other wolf life canids
nearly six million years ago.
The new data places the split more recently, with dire wolves, gray wolves, jackals,
and dogs sharing a common ancestor roughly 4.5 million years ago.
So in short, Colossil's own preprint is showing that gray wolves, coyotes, doles, and jackals
could all equally lay claim to being the most closely related relative to the dire wolf.
Considering the degree to which the preprint claims hybridization took place,
even the maimed wolf might try and take a shot at the throne.
Notably, this preprint barely touched upon the dire wolves that Kolof,
produced at all. So little, in fact, was said about them that their white coat color was not even
addressed. This problem of pigmentation is one that has raised a lot of eyebrows among the scientific
community, since other studies have argued that dire wolves likely had pale reddish fur.
Colossal has argued that the white coats are due to the dire wolves they sampled having lived in
the north near ice. But wolves, when white-coated, are born with a dark brown or dark gray coat that only
later lightens to white, and the dire wolves were born pure white. Scientists and lay people alike
speculate that the white pigmentation, the colossal dire wolf sport, came from literal dog genes.
Did they choose, this feels like it might be a stupid question. Did they choose white because of ghosts?
It is widely believed that yes, that is why they chose white. The way Liv mumbled song
of ice and fire, like to get it out of the way, to not sound like a huge fucking nerds. I don't want, I don't want
It's funny that like earlier the sort of the Nazi dream of reviving animals was based upon legends and know an earlier you know misunderstanding.
And now the modern one is based on like HBO shows.
The other point that refutes the idea that they are white because they lived near ice is that all dogs that are evolved for a northerly climate have fluff in their ears.
And that's to keep the ears warm.
All animals there have fur in their ears.
My husky has fur in his ears.
If you look at pictures of the dire wolves that Colossal made,
you can see the pink skin of their ears
because they have so little fur there.
You know, I think they should clone Tony Soprano.
If we're doing HBO stuff, let's bring Tony back.
Beyond all of this, the leaker also claimed that Colossal
had partially plagiarized some of their findings.
A lot of the research they brag about producing,
whether it be conservation,
or for human health is stolen.
Look at the second screenshot.
Color image comes from a paper
that is written by Vincent Lynch,
one of the people they led a smear campaign against.
The black and white comes from a patent colossophile.
They stole the figure and research.
Pretty much everything they pump out is like that.
So it's a reasonably compelling argument.
Enough about the fucking dire wolves, though.
Thank you.
Let's stop talking about, sorry by I said fire in this way.
I don't...
My precious little ghost.
Others such as Scientific American, the BBC, and the IUCN have gone into much more depth about the lies and misinformation that Colossal is spreading with them.
It's more important to pay attention to some of the less talked about claims.
With that, I'd like to introduce you to the so-called ghost wolves and the far more destructive lies that Colossil is peddling regarding them.
The Red Wolf, Canis Rufus, is the only wolf endemic to North America.
and the rarest canine in the world.
There are only 17 living in the wild.
In 2024, colossal cloned four canines that they claimed to be red wolves, one female and three males.
They claimed this to be an amazing technological breakthrough, the likes of which would save the red wolf from a genetic bottleneck and help the species thrive in the wild.
None of this is true.
These animals will never be allowed to breed with red wolves, either in captivity or in the wild, for a very simple,
reason. The animals that colossal bioscience is cloned are not red wolves. Listen, I don't see
the problem. They are wolves that are red. That's the species name. Yeah, this is the same logic.
Again, Goring's like, the horse look kind of like other horse. It's not even modern
de-extinction stuff. We're going back to the heck brothers. That's right. The Red Wolf's historic range
stretched from as far as New Jersey down across the bulk of Texas and Oklahoma. Now, the only
remaining population of red wolves is a closely monitored one in alligator river national wildlife refuge in
North Carolina and as of 2025 consists of 16 named individuals. This alligator river population was
founded by individuals captured along the Gulf Coast of Texas in Louisiana, the last refuge of the species.
The last known red wolves were captured seven years after this initial capture program in 1980.
The same year that the United States Fish and Wildlife,
Wildlife Service declare the species formally extinct in the wild. Now, red wolves look an awful lot
like coyotes. To the untrained eye, the species is nearly indistinguishable to them. In 2021, a study was published
titled Reviving Ghost Alleles. Genetically Admixed Coyotes along the American Gulf Coast are critical
for saving the endangered Red Wolf. This study assessed the genomic ancestry and morphology, or physical appearance,
of coyotes in southwestern Louisiana.
Remember how I said red wolves are the only wolf species endemic to the United States?
Well, just because they are endemic doesn't mean that other canines didn't exist in the United States.
Over the tens of thousands of years that red wolves lived here,
they mixed with other canids we know in love like gray wolves, coyotes, and later dogs.
According to the 2021 study,
38 to 62% of the coyote genomes contained red wolf ancestry acquired in the past 30 years
and have an admixture profile similar to that of canids captured before the extirpation of red wolves.
We further documented a positive correlation between ancestry and weight.
Which is to say, in spite of the species' extinction in the wild,
the ghost of the red wolf's genetic material has persisted within the coyote population.
Also notable is that the highest percentages of red wolf,
genes persisted in land preserves where hunting is illegal. More on that later. So, red wolves and coyotes
look similar, and the southwestern Louisiana coyotes have a high percentage of red wolf DNA. How can we tell
the difference between the two? Red wolves are larger and heavier than coyotes. Male red wolves reach
70 to 80 pounds, whereas male coyotes weigh 30 to 40 pounds. This size difference affects both
prey preferences and mating habits, with red wolves taking larger prey than coyotes and thus inhabiting an
entirely different ecological niche. They will even displace coyotes within their territorial ranges.
Red wolves also have a different multi-generational family structure, whereas coyotes are a lot more
fluid within their social structure, which is to say they may look similar at a glance, but the deeper
you look, the more stark the differences become. See, the problem is we just have to find the gene
that makes, you know, a Red Wolf have a multi-generational family structure and just edit in
that for the coyotes. It's very easy. It's quite simple.
Well, yeah, then you'll have multi-generational structures within coyotes, just make them a little bit
bigger, kind of like the dire wolf.
Make them white too.
Of course, because they're, yeah, they need to be white.
Because it goes hard. It looks cool. That's, you know.
The dire coyote.
Meet LA 52F, the creature that colossal biosciences, the de-extinction company,
cloned. Yeah, not too impressive. I mean, he's lying down, he's got big old ears. Reminds me of some
of the coyotes I see around here. Yeah, you know, big old airplane ears. Yeah.
Joseph Hinton, research scientist at the Wolf Conservation Center and the man who captured
LA 52F for the original 2021 project, wrote this. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service relied on
seven metrics to determine if a canad was a red wolf. L.A. 52F met one of these requirements.
That was total body length.
LA 52's head length and width, shoulder height, hind foot length, ear length, and body mats were too small to classify her as a Red Wolf.
She was two years old and weighed 17.5 kilograms at the time of her capture.
So yeah, literally, their skull measurements.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I thought that horse phrenology wasn't enough.
You guys needed some canine phrenology.
No amount of phrenology is enough for this podcast.
Don't worry.
Never.
Colossal is more than happy to boast about the birth of their first pup derived from LA 52F.
Nike Ceda, according to Colossal, translates to ghost daughter.
The bulk of the writing that Colossal does in regard to the Red Wolf is couched in how the work Colossel is doing is helping Native Americans retain their heritage.
Putting that aside, here's what they have to say regarding Nikea Keda.
This pup is the clone product of a ghost wolf female from Cameron Parish, Louisiana, selected based on her high red wolf and ghost genetic content, 70.8%, and 610 ghost alleles, the maximum recorded to date.
Her cells were collected when she was captured and collared at two years old, weighing 17.5 kilograms.
And within the red wolf morphos space, hind foot length equal 22 centimeters.
See figure below.
The 17.5 kilogram weight and the hind foot length of 22 centimeters are both below the accepted range for an animal to be considered a red wolf.
Great, so just we're wrong and we're so confident. Awesome.
Colossal, along with science and conservation influencers such as Hank Green, Forest Glante, and Coyote Peterson, have all used this so-called ghost wolf, LA52F, and the clones from her, and a few other Gulf Coast canids, as evidence that genetic rescue,
is the only way to save the genetic diversity of the remaining Alligator River Red Wolves,
who are going extinct due to inbreeding.
Except, inbreeding and lack of genetic diversity was never the problem for these animals.
Remember how more Red Wolf DNA was present in the Gulf Coast canids and land preserves where
hunting was illegal?
Joseph Hinton says this.
The leading threat to Red Wolf survival is human-caused mortality, vehicle collisions, and shooting deaths,
Cloning another biotechnology cannot protect red wolves from cars or bullets,
nor do they increase human empathy for red wolves.
They reproduce naturally in captivity and in the wild.
We don't need to clone them.
It is limited captive space that prevents the population from increasing
and improving genetic diversity.
Resolving this requires a community to care for these animals,
and the wolf conservation center works to identify new partners to join the Red Wolf community.
The cloned quote-unquote red wolves are not Red Wolves.
They were derived from coyotes captured in southwest Louisiana
for the Gulf Coast, Canada.
project. I know these were coyotes because I served as field supervisor and captured 44 coyotes for
the project during 2021 to 2022. Several of the coyotes that I captured in 2022 may have served as donors
for cloning. I also continue to conduct field research in the region independent of that group.
I have yet to capture anything that approaches a red wolf from that area. Regardless, we need to
focus on our wild and captive red wolf populations. We now know that at least one of the coyotes
that he captured did serve as a donor for the cloning, LA52F.
Colossal Biosciences is actively harming Red Wolf conservation efforts by spreading misinformation about the species.
Stock options and stolen ideas.
One of the most interesting advances made in the realm of de-extinction started with the birth of Elizabeth Anne, a black-footed ferret in 2020.
Elizabeth Anne was born from a cell sampled from Willa in 1998, stored in the San Diego Frozen Zoo.
Over the next two years, two more clones were made of Willa.
By 2025, these three clones had produced multiple litters, helping 15 new ferrets enter the breeding population of this critically endangered species.
The group behind the Blackfooted ferret initiative was Revive and Restore, a de-extinction company affiliated with the Long Now Foundation.
Revive and Restore was founded by former Mary Prankster, Stort Brander, author of the Whole Earth Catalog.
The other co-founder of this nonprofit is Ryan Fellin, a serial entrepreneur who primarily worked in pageant.
oriented health care. Also instrumental in revive and restore success for a decade or two
was ancient DNA expert Beth Shapiro. Remember the somatic cell cloning technology that made Dolly the
sheep? Viagen, the company that cloned Tom Brady's dog, holds the patents for it. They were the
company that cloned Elizabeth Ann, being the only company allowed access to that technology in the
United States. Well, colossal biosciences bought Viagin just last year. They announced the purchase with
the following video.
Jesus.
For all of this now.
I think it's all,
the only thing they're missing is like
the, you know, the Red Wolf Conservation
making a post about like, it's a cute
hecking pupper and the pupper is red
and there's more of them now.
Yeah, this is R.L.
Yeah, absolutely.
Any big thoughts about the content
of that video?
Just, yeah, millennials must be stopped.
Just with a gun.
And then after that,
whoever made that with a
in that order.
Fact.
Colossil really enjoys mentioning the blackfooted ferrets a lot,
but they always attribute the success of the project to Viagen,
not to revive and restore the company that actually spearheaded the project.
And San Diego's Frozen Zoo, which has been freezing samples since 1975,
well, Colossel is starting a biovolta in Dubai and framing it as if this has never been done before,
naturally.
Oh, and Dubai, sure.
In Dubai, where else were we doing the Bioval?
Let's in the Petrode slave state.
Yeah, that's much...
America, this wasn't evil enough.
Sponsored by Muhammad bin Salman as well.
Yeah, Muhammad bin Salman.
Chinook Salman.
There is a video of this announcement.
This idea of a BioBall and doing it here in Dubai
is something that we're incredibly passionate about, right?
To do it in a way where we can actually wrap educational content around it,
make it a living lab, right?
We'll have a permanent biovolta at the museum.
It's the first of its kind biovolta in the world.
Our focus is to get as much endangered species
from the region, BioBank, at the museum.
One of the reasons why we thought that announcing it here
at the World Government Summit
is because all of you can play a very valuable role
in working with your governments
and we can help train and support and build capabilities
for species protection and biovolts
and then leverage this shared research.
this shared resource that the UAE was so gracious and investing in starting to build with us.
When can we have it in the museum?
So I want to have it in 2027 or sooner.
So the biovolta would be part of Dubai's Museum of the Future.
Just no comment, honestly, at this point.
The Dubai Museum of the Future, there's no depiction of gay people at all.
Well, we've bred it out.
Yeah, we can just crisper that out.
Yeah.
Even the elephant herpes vaccine created to halt the spread of the disease ravaging
capted Asian elephants populations has been more widely reported as a win for colossal biosciences
rather than the product of the work of Baylor Medical College in Houston's zoo, who had been
initially working on it since the early odds.
So where are the scientists in all of this?
Well, Colossal has a habit of buying off the bulk of them through the offering of either stock
options, cozy positions within the company, or both.
When Revive and Restore sold their woolly mammoth-de-extinction project and its research
to George Church and Collossal Biosciences, Colossel was quick to begin courting the head
scientist on the project as well.
Beth Shapiro now holds a comfortable position within the company, where she seems contractually
obligated to never say a bad word about them.
Help, she even appeared on the Joe Rogan experience recently.
All of this was extremely surprising, given her hardline view.
against colossal prior to working for them, nearly all of which seem to have been erased from
the internet. Money, money, money, money, money, money, money, money, money, money, money, money,
in a second colossal bioscience's leak on the same small subreddit I mentioned before,
correspondence between a journalist called quote-unquote Nate and evolutionary biologist Tom Gilbert
surfaced. The leaker summarized the information. Outside of Gilbert flat out admitting to Nate,
that if a colossal makes a hairy elephant, you won't be used for rewilding, just publicity.
suspects that Gilbert isn't being 100%
honest in spite of this admission.
Nate found out through a CIO that Gilbert
holds stock options, something he neglected
to mention. To me, this confirms
what I heard that the advisory board is just
critics bribed into silence with stock options.
Gilbert clearly has a broader role than he let
on as he's an author on the dire wolf paper.
Oh my God.
Sure, yeah. This is just like the scientist
version of like the comics who did the Riyadh
festival, basically. It's like
how big is the number? Okay.
It's almost like criticizing colossal bioscience
is a great way to just get them on your radar so that you can get paid off.
Yeah.
I wonder what their slush fund to pay off critics is.
I mean, it's like just how big of the budget exactly are we talking?
Yeah, I do wonder, like, who took a bigger check to sell out here, whether it is scientists or comedians.
I wonder who they paid more.
Like, whose number is higher?
Well, it's got to be the comedians because they have a better chance of making a good living.
Scientists say, yeah, it's like even well-respected scientists don't get paid very well.
That's true.
That's true.
hard-hitting scientist who substantially criticizes what Colossel is doing on a large scale
somehow seems to end up on their advisory board. And I'm wondering if any of us will get an offer
after this episode airs. Please. Yes. Yes. If anyone, if anyone be on the record against this
company and what they're doing, just in general, my expert opinion. In fact, you know, I think this will
make a regular feature. We should criticize Colossal every month on this program, which is listen to many
people all over the world.
Would you just paste the segment at the bottom of every episode, like rat for the cursed media
plug?
That tiny, tiny fish.
Remember how much people hate the Delta smelt, but never had a bad word to say about the
chad of a fish, the Chinook salmon?
There's actually a term for this phenomenon in conservation spaces.
On a small forum for zookeepers, zoo chat, user JVM explained it this way.
In conservation, we often have the concept of an umbrella species.
Part of this idea that if we can convince people to...
tigers are worth protecting and they donate for tigers, we can use that money to protect all of the
many species in the same ecosystem as tigers. I would argue U.S. zoos lean towards a similar system,
where many donors are donating to build exhibits for elephants or gorillas or polar bears,
and the zoo may use some of the funding to include or improve other exhibits for smaller species.
I think to some degree, though, these strategies are also an admission that people are more
likely to donate for charismatic megafauna than wildlife conservation for its own sake,
and that we need to be strategic. It would be great if that would be great if that would
was what colossal biosciences was doing. Bulley mammoths and dire wolves are an easy way to generate a
lot of fundraising after all, and some of that funding would then get diverted towards conservation for still
living species, such as increasing red wolf diversity, or finding a vaccine for HIV and elephants.
Unfortunately, the ghost wolf debacle has demonstrated that this is not the case, and likewise,
the elephant vaccine was simply a project that colossal poured money into, rather than contributing to
meaningfully themselves. Plus, Colossil's track record with elephants is not something that is supporting
ethical conservation. The leaker continued in the second leak. If they have been telling the truth about
prepping an elephant for being a surrogate, as opposed to the artificial womb they've been hyping up,
then they will be risking likely death and guaranteed immense suffering for the female elephant
that will probably not carry the fake baby mammoth to term. To me, this is just they are planning
to get sold soonish. I really hope I'm not wrong. What is also concerning
with this is Nate found out Colossal has achieved elephant materials from a guy named Charles Gray
at a place called African Lion Safari. This park is widely regarded as one of the worst in terms of
animal abuse, especially elephants. So if there was anywhere they could go for this, ethics be damned,
this is it. Then again, herd mammoth team was fired for a lack of results. So fingers crossed,
the impregnation is just another lie. So we're getting a sneak peek into maybe the 20% of failures on these
clonings, a little bit what they look like.
Yeah, horrifying deaths in birth.
Just stabbed by a mammoth tusk.
The link provided included a breakdown of the litany of animal abuses documented at Canada's original
safari adventure, African lion safari, including the use of bullhooks to control the elephants,
in spite of them being banned in the United States in 2023, and most zoos in Canada no longer using them.
I don't like that that implies that they could if they wanted to.
I'm sure that's what that means.
It is what it means.
They have not yet been banned in Canada.
Even among zookeepers, African lion safari has a terrible reputation,
with multiple trainers having been attacked by elephants,
who were never then removed from the herd.
Even one was killed.
Charlie Gray, that's what he's primarily known as instead of Charles,
who has a glowing description on the colossal website,
has also been known to allow free contact between visitors with elephants,
as well as forcing them to give birth alone and chained rather than with the herd, despite evidence showing that that results in poorer outcomes for both the cow and the calf.
Oh my God, this guy is a monster.
A zookeeper replied to the news from the leak with this wry comment.
I've long wondered where Colossal intended to source a breeding age female Asian elephant to act as a surrogate for their mammoth plans,
since viable breeders of that species outside of the Association of Zoos and Aquarium's jurisdiction,
which refuses to work with the colossal are quite rare.
Guess I finally found my answer.
I think that really sums up how zookeepers feel about Charlie Gray.
Now, skirting the AZA's jurisdiction might be a little bit easier when you have friends in high places.
Remember all of that initial seed funding from various AI-oriented venture capitalists?
The earliest donor who gave $100,000 directly to George Church himself was none other than Palantir founder and End Times obsessive,
Peter Thiel. He was like, this money is going to be used towards facilitating some form of
suffering, right? Like, you can guarantee that. Of course, he was like, yes.
Speaking of the military, a startling amount of their executive advisory board has high-level
military backing. David Sperk was the DOD's first chief data officer and senior counselor for
Palantir. Andrew Titus was principal director for biotechnology at the DOD and worked for in QTel.
Rear Admiral Hugh W. Howard III was commander of the Naval Special Warfare Command and former Director of Operations for the National Geospatial Intelligence Agency and Director for Counterterrorism Policy in the Office of the Secretary of Defense.
Victor Vescovo, an early investor I mentioned before, spent 20 years supporting, quote, counterterrorism efforts overseas.
Finally, Laura Nouseberger was Chief Information Officer for the Department of the Air Force.
force, which includes the Air Force as well as Space Force.
What good.
Mammots in space!
A new video making it seem like millennials need to be cold.
To add to all of this, their quote-unquote sustainability expert is McKinsey and Company,
who are deeply in bed with the biggest polluters on the planet, including Exxon and BP.
They even had to shell out $600 million for their role in the opioid crisis.
It really just seems like the main appeal here is like, can we do the horrifying science fiction stuff in real life?
Like, we can do that? Okay, awesome. Yeah, no, I'll spend money. If we can fundamentally try to alter nature in a way that like we don't think about the consequences before we do it, then yes, absolutely. I'm happy to dominate nature and control it possibly for my own gain in the future.
In Q-Tel, in case you don't know, is an extension of the CIA. They pour funds into tech companies to keep abreast of the latest scientific findings and reportedly sit in.
on every colossal biosciences board meeting.
They also lavished colossal biosciences with around $460 million,
stating that, quote,
it's less about the mammoths and more about the technology.
There you go.
Yeah.
Why aren't people asking more questions about this?
Questions like, what are these people's addresses so that I can give them a visit?
That's good.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, definitely threaten the CIA.
You're going to be fine, Liv.
They can't reach Canada.
No, no, it's fine.
I mean, if you think about the people who are involved here,
it's pretty disturbing considering the deep focus on genes that Maha has as well.
And the fact that so many of these people are data brokers.
Yeah, it's about purity.
To bring it back to the original bit of part one,
it's an extension of these people's beliefs about humankind
and what they want to do to it.
In this case, it's much more, you know,
much more based upon, you know, scientific manipulation of human beings, less about sociological,
you know, hurting them into a certain area. Yeah, it's not good. It's somehow even worse than the
dossi attitude to it, somehow even more frightening. And also just as simpatico with the CIA.
One of the big reasons that this might not be covered as much as it should be is because at least
one of colossal's ties to the current administration became much more explicit recently.
On the heels of the dire wolf announcement, Secretary of the Interior, Doug Bergam, posted this to X, the Everything app, which I quote here in full.
The mission of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is to work with others to, quote, conserve, protect, and enhance fish wildlife plants and their habitats for the continuing benefit of the American people.
The Department of the Interior is excited about the potential of de-extinction technology and how it may serve broader purposes beyond the recovery of lost species, including strengthening biodiversity protection efforts,
helping endangered or at-risk species.
The endangered species list has become like the Hotel California.
Once a species enters, they never leave.
In fact, 97% of species that are added to the endangered list remain there.
This is because the status quo is focused on regulation more than innovation.
It's time to fundamentally change how we think about species conservation.
Going forward, we must celebrate removals from the endangered list, not additions.
The only thing we'd like to see go extinct is the need for an endangered species list to exist.
We need to continue improving recovery efforts to make the
that a reality, and the marvel of de-extinction technology can help forge a future where populations
are never at risk. I'm pretty sure no one celebrated the addition of a species to the list.
I had a party when the wolves went back on it. Fuck them. Yeah. And continuing, since the dawn of our
nation, it has been innovation, not regulation that has spawned American greatness. Wrong. The revival of
the dire wolf heralds the advent of a thrilling new era of scientific wonder, showcasing how the
concept of de-extinction can serve as a bedrock for modern species conservation.
Also wrong.
The dire wolf revival carries profound cultural significance as it embodies strength and courage
that is deeply encoded within the DNA of American identity and tribal heritage.
What the fuck?
Holy shit.
Breakthroughs of this nature will inspire leading minds and future generations of innovators
to chase the impossible, capture it, and unleash its potential.
Okay, so yeah.
capture, maybe kill.
Exclamation point.
The Department of the Interior looks forward to a vibrant future full of innovation
that advances core missions such as wildlife conservation.
Yeah, such as, holy shit, does this suck?
Bergam, well, I won't say what I'd like to do to Doug Bergam.
Give him a hug and kiss.
That's what Julian was going to say.
Kiss on the cheek.
Hug on the butt.
I mean, I think that you can say you want to feed him to the dire wolves.
Yeah.
I can say that I agree with you.
I can't believe the fact that tribal heritage got pulled out again in this shit.
That's insane.
Yeah, Jesus Christ.
Wheeling that out.
Wheeling that out is like, yeah, like Chuck Norris pretending to be part Cherokee.
It's just a fucking adding insult to injury.
This starry-eyed support of colossal biosciences and Ben Lamb and deep distaste for the Endangered Species Act did not come out of nowhere.
Two years prior, when Doug Bergam was the government.
Governor of North Dakota, he awarded Colossal Biosciences a $3 million equity investment.
In fact, he was seen on multiple occasions hobnobbing with Ben Lamb at Black Tie events,
and one of Bergam's cabinet members has even gone on to join Colossal in an unpaid advisory role.
Public domain acquired a series of emails between Lamb and Bergam's Commerce Commissioner Josh
Tegan from March 2023, leading up to the acquisition of the equity investment, in which Ben
Lamb misspells the species of extinct bison that they were previously investigating de-extincting.
Public domain wrote this on the matter. At the time the North Dakota partnered with Colossal,
Lamb told the forum newspaper that the company was attracted to the state because of its business-friendly
environment, that it was exploring building a laboratory there. Quote, thank you to Josh Teigen
and the North Dakota Department of Commerce for taking an interest in our work as we expand our footprint
to the northern region. Our woollies, sick, will certainly appreciate the cooler climate. Unquote,
Colossel wrote in a LinkedIn post about the forum article, referring to its ongoing effort to bring
back the William Ameth. After leaving state government, Teagan took a role as an unpaid advisor to
Colossal. Aurelia Skip with Giacometo, who served as a director of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service
during the First Trump administration, is listed on Colossel's website as a member of the
company's Conservation Advisory Board. It's great. Sure. Yeah, I mean, yeah, it's really bad.
There is no future for humanity in which the United States exists.
Yes.
Yeah, I mean, these people's image of what conservation means,
which is like cutting funding to, you know, national parks,
pollution, destruction, do Supreme Court,
things that just allow you to throw whatever you want into rivers
whenever you feel like it.
And it's like, well, we're compensated by that
for funding an evil corporation that is going to do gene splicing
to make, you know, Chinook salmon have pure genetics,
Pure Aryan genes.
Like that commentates for it.
Replace NASA with SpaceX.
Replace everything that's good with a private company that does the opposite of what it's supposed to.
The initial email exchange was only the beginning.
Following it have been virtual meetings, gift basket exchanges, and joint dinners at the Explorers Club.
Colossal spokespeople have protested and said that these meetings are perfectly normal business behavior, which is understandable.
Still, the frequency of these meetings and close camaraderie shown between Lamb and Bergam should give the public a bit of pause.
Consider how strongly Bergam has praised Collossal throughout his time in D.C.
And how this advocacy for Colossal coincides with his goal of neutering the Endangered Species Act.
The following are two quotes from an all-hands meeting that he held.
There are now dire wolves that are now living for real that were created through the
same kind of technology with DNA and CRISPR, Bergam said in his speech.
If we're going to be in anguish about losing a species, then now we have an opportunity to
bring them back. I mean, pick your favorite species and call up colossal instead of raising
money to get animals on the endangered species list. Let's figure out a way to get them off.
And this is one tool. I think we have to think about that as an innovation opportunity to
transform the way we've been thinking about it for the past 50 years and the possibility to bring
back species, he added. You want carrier pigeons? Let's bring them back. You want dodoes? Bring them back.
So this is the fantasy that, like, in order to preserve the continued existence of a species
doesn't involve actually caring for their environment, figuring out a way to sustainably coexist
with the animals on Earth.
Instead, like, just fuck all that.
Don't do any sort of, like, you know, federally protected measures to ensure that they
continue to survive alongside of us.
Instead, just like, just let them go extinct, call up colossal, and they'll make a new one.
It's like, you know, it's like, they go extinct, they come back.
Well, it's all the same.
So like all the stuff about like federal protection, not necessary.
Yeah, instead of these damn, you know, alarm bells going off,
we could start a publicly traded Ponzi scheme.
People might wish to categorize this is just talk.
Sweeping cuts, however, have already been made to fish and wildlife staff.
Noah has long been hobbled.
Bergam has developed a strategic plan that cites, quote,
species delisted from endangered list as a literal benchmark
for Trump over the next four years.
All of this is happening with regular meetings still occurring between Bergam and Colossal
representatives, mostly Lamb.
So just fucking juke the stats if it looks bad.
Colossal recently added a picture of Bergum and a snippet of his statement about how it is,
quote, innovation, not regulation that has spawned American greatness.
And, quote, the concept of de-extinction can serve as a bedrock for modern species conservation.
Listen, whoever said bedrock had to be rock or in the bed.
It could be squishy and it could be, you know, above sea level.
In late April of 2025, the Trump administration moved to redefine the definition of harm
within the Endangered Species Act as a first move towards dismantling it entirely.
While so far, not much movement has come of this move,
enough has succeeded to allow for ultra-deep water drilling in the Gulf of Mexico,
regardless of the endangered species that inhabit the protection.
area, including one of the most endangered whales in the world. Similarly, protected land in Alaska
has been opened up to allow for logging and drilling, and the Forest Service itself has been dismantled.
On April 9, 2025, on the Zookeeper Forum, Dillot Testo replied to a post that Panthera man made that said,
quote, extinction is forever. But to put it bluntly, some people are too stupid to realize that.
with this short summary that I feel really sums up the whole damn mess.
This was always my biggest concern with the whole de-extinction idea.
I recall at some point on this forum I posted,
I think there is one element to de-extinction not fully appreciated by its pariahs.
Generations have grown up knowing of the woolly mammoth and do-do
and how they're no longer alive.
They represent semi-a-audically, something that was but is no more.
They hold us in humiliation, but an accountability also.
If the day ever comes where that Neo-Dodo takes its first steps onto the forest floor of Mauritius,
what effect would that have on the minds of lawmakers and politicians?
That what was is again.
Would they feel the same way about species on the highway to hell as they did before?
Or would they convince them that this can be done with everything?
As in, it's not a big deal that an animal goes extinct.
We can just bring it back.
And now within just four months of posting that,
I'm seeing with my own eyes the politicians cozing up the idea
that we don't need to put in the effort of making things better for our planet, we can just
bring it back anyways.
Ever since January 20th, the inauguration, I've had a certain feeling that the fight against
big companies who, in the path towards the fantasy of exponential growth, trample all that
lives in their troll, has been lost, and the thing that we are hurling towards will be hellish
in many respects.
I try to hold hope that whatever we are living through right now will come to an end, and one
day the children of this generation will read about this time and think, was he really the
president? Were people that naive? How weird? That's a thought I'd like to cling to, but sometimes
it's difficult. Yeah, that's horrifying. Truly. Wow. Just great end of the episode. Thank you,
Jack. I mean, you know, yeah, it's put bluntly, but it's put correctly. Yeah, I think fascists have
to understand nature as a thing that they can control. It's one of the reasons why a lot of conspiracy
theorists will, like, deny climate change and be like, oh, the reason why the weather is rude is because
there's like some weather control facility out there, like altering things to, like, harm you.
It's like, it's always human beings throughout the helm.
Even when the human beings are the enemy, it's impossible to understand the idea of thinking of
humanity in general as like this really small part of the biosphere that is still fundamentally
at its mercy is like far more terrifying to them, far more inconceivable than just that like,
you know, whatever ridiculous Qunon conspiracy about a global cabal poisoning their donuts is.
There always has to be like some way for science, some way for like,
heavy-handed state, economic, you know, corporate involvement to fix a problem.
Well, that's nice, Liv.
Welcome back to the new show on the history channel, Pimp a Dodo.
This week we're going to be injecting it with CRISPR stuff and trying to make it glow in the dark.
You thought the Dodo was back, but now the Dodo's glowing.
I'm going to, we need the weather underground.
Like, we simply need eco-terrorists to come back.
I mean, yeah, it's really horrifying that they would just do everything in their power to avoid the conclusion that, you know, preserving the world and preventing it turning into like, you know, a wasteland takes care and effort and, you know, giving a shit about even like, you know, a three inch smelt fish.
Yeah, the idea that we like have to, we have to care about our co-organisms in order to keep living on this planet in a healthy way is horrifying to them.
Well, it's the same thing that's happening right now with Maha and autism, where autism is such a heinous thing because you can't enter the workforce.
The Delta smelt is terrible because it's not a fishable fish.
Everything has to have a use, a use in some way to capitalism in order for it to have worth.
So what's the use of a national park unless we can also drill into it?
Yeah.
And of course, that doesn't apply to all autistic.
people. It's, it's, uh, but there, there are some forms of autism that are debilitating in terms of
being able to be, you know, productive quote unquote members of like capitalist society and
continue to generate, you know, ever increasing rates of profit. It's really such a good feeling
to, um, have listened to all of this and to realize that we're close to having a darrow wolf again.
Yay. It's like for my favorite TV show Game of Game of Thrones.
Game on Thrones.
Thank you for listening to another episode of the QAA podcast.
You can support us for five bucks a month and get a second episode for every main one.
That's patreon.com slash QAA.
We also have cursedmedia.net, which is our miniseries network on which you can listen to the ongoing episodes of Spectral Voyager season two, time slip radio, as well of all of our past and future miniseries.
Jack, where can people find you?
They can find me on jacklerosh.com.
Amazing.
Live.
Liveagar.com for my newsletter.
I stream on Twitch sometimes.
Twitch.tv.
TV slash Livakar.
Great.
And I'll plug my Instagram, Julian Fields, as well as my Twitter, Julian Fields.
Travis, you want to plug anything?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Go to Logan Strain Photography on Instagram.
I have not updated it over a year.
But there are some photos I did take on there.
Nice.
Well, we hope you take more photos of beautiful birds as they all go extinct.
Listener, until next week,
may the Delta smelta fish bless you and keep you.
Hey, everyone.
It's your Inner Earth correspondent, Brad,
coming to you from the Time Cave.
My new documentary, Gimmie Truth, co-directed with Simon Ennis,
is world premiering in Toronto this Friday, the 25th, at 7.30 p.m.
And Saturday, the 26th at 2.30 p.m. as part of the Hot Docs Film Festival.
I've been working on this film for as long as it been a part of the podcast.
and you'll definitely recognize a few of our subjects from past episodes.
So if you're in the city, please join us.
We'd love to get melted with you in person.
We have auto-keyed content based on your preferences.
Well, before they can bring a woolly mammoth back to life,
first they mix its DNA with that of a mouse,
and created a woolly mouse.
In just a few years, Klausel will use this same technology
to bring the woolly mammoth back from extinction.
Alright, crazy question.
Can I touch it?
Yes, you will be the first person ever outside of our animal operations team to touch the mice.
Like I actually never even pet the boy mice.
I'm literally going to hold an animal that until recently never existed in history.
This Dale. Dale is so soft.
I now have Willie Mammoth D&A. Anyone want to buy it?
I know, no, no, no. Someone wash his hands, please.
No. Colossosso has spent over $400 million not just bringing back animals, but also saving them from extinction.
We have over a thousand species already in this biovolta long.
There are over a thousand species in here that could one day go endangered and you're just holding
onto their DNA in case you need to bring it back.
