Portrait of a young Lady by Leonardo da Vinci Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date May 30, 2020 CategoriesBioethicsHuman Exceptionalism Tagged , animal rights, animal welfare, animals, artificial intelligence, Center on Human Exceptionalism, China, COVID-19, Darwin Day in America, David Klinghoffer, Discovery Institute, evolution, Evolution News, facial recognition, Falun Gong, Human Zoos, Humanize, humans, John West, Leonardo da Vinci, Michael Egnor, quality of life, social credit, Steven J. Buri, The Biology of the Second Reich, transhumanism, triage, Uyghurs, Walter Bradley Center, Wesley Smith Why “Humanize”? A New Effort to Defend the Unique Dignity of Human Beings Wesley J. Smith May 30, 2020 Bioethics, Human Exceptionalism 6 One of the tragic trends in thinking about evolution has been to blur the distinction between humans and animals. History warns us not to regard this lightly. Read More ›
Tiananmen Square Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date June 22, 2019 CategoriesBioethics Tagged , __k-review, China, evil, Falun Gong, Israel, Italy, London, murder, NBC, organ harvesting, Spain, Taiwan, tourism, Uyghurs China Strip-Mines Political Prisoners for Organs Wesley J. Smith June 22, 2019 Bioethics 3 Several years ago, China promised it would eliminate this dark harvest. Read More ›