This is not understood at
all. Yet it will not be just the wealthy, although they will get to
lead with wallets and their chins. Our civilization needs hands on
deck and the easiest way to get them is to turn your biological clock
back. That is way cheaper that actually spending twenty five years to
bring a new person on board.
After that it comes back
to trainability and enthusiasm.
What it does mean is that
retirement will actually disappear as a meaningful option and we will
see that all wind down.
Over the next decade, and
the time frames are seriously that short, we will be able to restore
everyone to been able bodied with scant exceptions and it appears
that we can reverse cellular aging sufficiently to allow a healthy
conditioned life for all participants. Real experiments are already
underway and protocols are been tried out on rich doctors.
Curiously some years ago
I received guidance that I would observe my one hundredth birthday.
Provided I can remain on track for another decade I can expect to
replace my teeth and restore my cellular health. These are not bad
ambitions. No one needs to reach one hundred as a physical wreak.
The take home for all of
you is to work assiduously to survive the next ten years as the
science catches up and to also make sure you are keeping your skill
set up to date. Or get better skill sets. Work on meditation as well
and connect spiritually with angels and apply compassion. This may
sound crazy to most, but it is important that you begin to think this
way.
The longevity gap
Costly new longevity
drugs could help the wealthy live 120 years or more – but will
everyone else die young?
By Linda Marsa
Picasso at home in his
villa in villa at Notre-Dame de Vie in Mougins in 1967 surrounded by
his latest paintings. He was 85 at the time. Photo by Gjon
Mili/Time Life/Getty
http://aeon.co/magazine/being-human/will-new-drugs-mean-the-rich-live-to-120-and-the-poor-die-at-60/
Linda Marsa is a
contributing editor for Discover magazine, a teacher on the writer’s
programme at UCLA, and the author of Fevered: Why a Hotter
Planet Will Hurt Our Health (2013).
The disparity between
top earners and everyone else is staggering in nations such as the
United States, where 10 per cent of people accounted for 80 per cent
of income growth since 1975. The life you can pay for as one of the
anointed looks nothing like the lot tossed to everyone else: living
in a home you own on some upscale cul-de-sac with your hybrid car and
organic, grass-fed food sure beats renting (and driving) wrecks and
subsisting on processed junk from supermarket shelves. But there’s
a related, looming inequity so brutal it could provoke violent class
war: the growing gap between the longevity haves and have-nots.
The life expectancy
gap between the affluent and the poor and working class in the US,
for instance, now clocks in at 12.2 years. College-educated white men
can expect to live to age 80, while counterparts without a
high-school diploma die by age 67. White women with a college degree
have a life expectancy of nearly 84, compared with uneducated women,
who live to 73.
And these disparities
are widening. The lives of white, female high-school dropouts are now
five years shorter than those of previous generations of women
without a high-school degree, while white men without a high-school
diploma live three years fewer than their counterparts did 18 years
ago, according to a 2012 study from Health Affairs.
This is just a
harbinger of things to come. What will happen when new scientific
discoveries extend potential human lifespan and intensify these
inequities on a more massive scale? It looks like the ultimate war
between the haves and have-nots won’t be fought over the issue of
money, per se, but over living to age 60 versus living to 120 or
more. Will anyone just accept that the haves get two lives while the
have-nots barely get one?
We should discuss the
issue now, because we are close to delivering a true fountain of
youth that could potentially extend our productive lifespan into our
hundreds – it’s no longer the stuff of science fiction. ‘In
just the last five years, there have been so many breakthroughs,’
says the Harvard geneticist David Sinclair. ‘There are now a number
of compounds being tested in the lab that greatly slow down the
ageing process and delay the onset of diabetes, cancer and heart
disease.’
Sinclair, for
instance, led a Harvard team that recently uncovered a chemical that
reverses the ageing process in cells. The scientists fed mice NAD, a
naturally occurring compound that enhances mitochondria – the
cell’s energy factories – leading to a more efficient metabolism
and less toxic waste. After just a week, tissue from older mice
resembled that of six-month-old mice, an ‘amazingly rapid’ rate
of reversal that astonished scientists. In human years, this would be
like a 60-year-old converting to a 20-year-old practically before our
eyes, delivering the tantalising dream of combining the maturity and
wisdom of age with the robust vitality of youth. Researchers hope to
launch human trials soon.
And earlier this year,
two teams of scientists – one at the University of California in
San Francisco, the other at Harvard – announced that blood from
young mice rejuvenated the muscles and brains of their elderly
brethren. They also identified proteins in the blood that catalysed
this growth, suggesting the possibility of another longevity drug.
Extensive research on
centenarians reaching age 100 and beyond show it’s not healthier
habits or positive attitudes that contribute to longevity, but
largely genes. Now scientists are busily sifting through millions of
DNA markers to spot the constellation of longevity genes carried in
every cell of these centenarians’ bodies. The hope here is to
concoct an anti-ageing pill by synthesising what these genes make.
Within the next 50
years, advances in the science of longevity might make the dynamic
elderly the rule rather than the exception – think Pablo Picasso,
Pablo Casals or Dave Brubeck, all of whom remained dazzling artists
or musicians into their ninth decade. People in their forties and
fifties today could be the beneficiaries of this seismic shift. ‘It
could happen in my lifetime,’ says the 44-year-old Sinclair.
As novel compounds
slow or even reverse ageing, the longevity divide could become a gulf
as wide as the Grand Canyon. The wealthy will experience an
accelerated increase in life expectancy and health, and everyone else
will go in the opposite direction, says S Jay Olshansky, a longevity
researcher and professor at the School of Public Health at the
University of Illinois at Chicago. ‘And as the technology advances,
the gap will only grow.’
What will the new
world look like? We already have a clue.
Being poor, in of
itself, is stressful because it circumscribes every aspect of one’s
life. Scraping to come up with routine living expenses – food,
shelter, medical care, transportation – can cause chronic insomnia
and anxiety, which boosts levels of cortisol, the stress hormone in
the blood. This already makes the poor more vulnerable to a cascade
of debilitating, life-threatening ills, from diabetes to high blood
pressure and heart disease. ‘Poverty is a thief,’ Michael Reisch,
a professor of social justice at the University of Maryland, recently
told a US Senate panel. ‘Poverty not only diminishes a person’s
life chances, it steals years from one’s life.’
In stark contrast, the
privileged in the US already have distinct advantages that give them
a toehold into a better, longer life. These range from simply growing
up in less toxic environments with two financially stable parents to
the ability to secure good jobs that provide decent salaries and
adequate health insurance. They live in more prosperous communities
with less crime and decent public schools, ample doctors and
hospitals, better food and nutrition, and superior social services
that cushion any fall.
Caleb Finch, a
gerontologist at the University of Southern California, calls them
‘the healthy elites’. ‘They engage in health-promoting
behaviours, they don’t smoke, and they’re more likely to have
time to exercise,’ he says. ‘People who are poor get sick more
often. They live in higher-density households, and when one gets
sick, everyone gets sick. And these disparities are going to expand.’
To be sure, as baby
boomers age, there’s been a great deal of hand-wringing about the
swelling ranks of ‘greedy geezers’, the oncoming grey tsunami of
the sick and frail elderly who will be an emotional and financial
burden on their families and friends, and whose infirmities could
bankrupt the healthcare system. The stereotypical image of an
octogenarian is someone enveloped in a cloud of confusion tottering
around with the aid of a walker – not Clint Eastwood, 84,
energetically helming the movie Jersey Boys (2014), or the
US Senator Dianne Feinstein, 81, riding roughshod over grandstanding
colleagues and even the President himself when she senses an
injustice. But hidden in these alarming predictions about the
unprecedented ageing of humanity is an entirely different story –
about the escalating numbers of people such as Eastwood and
Feinstein.
Recent studies show
that nearly 30 per cent of people over the age of 85 – a milestone
that is often considered the benchmark of the old-old – remain in
excellent health, and 56 per cent of them say their health doesn’t
stop them from working or doing household chores. In the future, for
those who avail themselves of the pricey new drugs, the healthy
super-old could be more common at age 100, 120 or more. ‘The
experience of ageing is about to change, and older people will have
substantially different age-health trajectories than their
predecessors,’ says Olshansky – especially if they have access to
drugs unlikely to be covered by insurance, since ageing is not a
disease.
It could be grounds
for revolution if the wealthy lived twice as long while the poor died
even younger than their parents did
The 74-year-old Finch
could be a candidate for that bounty, if it comes soon enough. Long
one of the nation’s leading gerontologists, the lanky scientist
shows no signs of slowing down. Sure, he has friends and colleagues
who have long since retired – or ‘unplugged’, as he calls it
over a salmon salad lunch near his office on the USC campus. It’s
an apt metaphor for what I’ve seen happen to lifelong friends who
opted for the gold watch when they turned 65, and their gradual
retreat from the daily pressures of working life that force us to
stay mentally sharp and current. They seem diminished, fading like
old pictures from their once vibrant and fully engaged selves.
But for Finch, his
career is a fulfilling calling rather than just a 9-to-5 job. His
busy office is the nerve centre for a full plate of projects,
including a recent scientific expedition to Peru where he autopsied
the mummified remains of people who died 1,800 years ago, plus he
swims regularly, ever since he was on the Yale University team as an
undergraduate.
Think of the drugs
that might make all 70-somethings – or eventually 90-somethings –
much like Finch. What if the mantra ‘80 is the new 50’ could
apply to us all? But the coming longevity gap might set us up for
something else instead: a rage-filled conflagration that would make
Occupy Wall Street, the US movement against the one per cent of top
earners, pale. It could be grounds for revolution if the wealthy
lived twice as long while the poor died even younger than their
parents did.
Instead of allowing
the wealth gap to turn into a longevity gap, perhaps we’ll find a
way to use everyone’s talents and share the longevity dividend at
all levels of income. This kind of sharing could leverage the wisdom
of elders, forestall the economic collapse many have predicted when
the grey tsunami picks up speed, and avoid an all-out revolt against
the one or so per cent. We stand at the threshold of two distinct
futures – one where we have a frail, rapidly ageing population
that saps our economy, and another where everyone lives much longer
and more productive lives.
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