Stopping pseudo-medicine: We need a cure for human nature first

Animal Rights , China , Journalism , Vietnam Aug 17, 2015 No Comments

I had not been long in Ho Chi Minh City when it was suggested by a regular at my local. We should set up a company and 3D-print rhino horn—using keratin, the stuff of which horns and fingernails are made—and flood the traditional medicine market with it in the interest of ending poaching in Africa. Soren was always coming up with weird ideas like this, but intended the vast majority of them as jokes: one of his other plans was to hold a cow hostage on Indian television and threaten to kill it unless the viewers phoned in an exorbitant ransom.

A good joke is usually funny because there’s an element of truth or logic to it. As it turns out, Soren’s was somewhat more than that: his lark—never pursued, of course—turned out to be prophetic, too. Last month, Pembient, a San Francisco-based biotech company that describes itself as “the De Beers of synthetic wildlife products,” announced that it would start 3D-printing rhino horns with a very similar end in mind.

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Read the full article at SBS News Online.

Matthew Clayfield

Matthew Clayfield is a journalist, critic and screenwriter.

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