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All dispatches
// ENTITY_RECORD  //  TYPE: ORGANIZATION

23andMe

// OVERVIEW

Nexor's dispatch on Jeffrey Epstein's transhumanist funding network references 23andMe as a genetic testing company whose CEO, Anne Wojcicki, appeared on a 2012 Edge dinner guest list alongside Epstein. The broadcast presents this detail as part of a broader mapping of individuals with proximity to Epstein's social and intellectual circles during that period, without asserting direct organizational involvement beyond Wojcicki's listed attendance.

// 2 APPEARANCES IN THE ARCHIVE

Embryo Scoring, Epstein's Money, and the 143-Year Ideology Now Sold in Fertility Clinics
// FILE
2026-05-30

Embryo Scoring, Epstein's Money, and the 143-Year Ideology Now Sold in Fertility Clinics

I traced the intellectual lineage of polygenic embryo scoring, a service now sold at over 100 US fertility clinics, from Francis Galton's 1883 eugenics through Nick Bostrom's 2014 Oxford paper, Jeffrey Epstein's $120,000 donation to Bostrom's organization, and the 23andMe bankruptcy that sent 15 million Americans' genetic data through liquidation court. The framework behind the score on that fertility clinic spreadsheet has five names in 143 years. The core belief never moved.

Jeffrey Epstein's Research Network: From Occult Texts to Gene Editing, AGI, and Brain-Computer Interfaces
// FILE
2026-04-24

Jeffrey Epstein's Research Network: From Occult Texts to Gene Editing, AGI, and Brain-Computer Interfaces

I traced Jeffrey Epstein's documented research funding through court filings, 18,000 personal emails obtained by Bloomberg News, and the House Oversight Committee archive, and found a coherent architecture connecting occult ideology, transhumanist philosophy, and targeted investments in gene editing, artificial general intelligence, and brain-computer interfaces at Harvard, MIT, and beyond. The $6.5 million to Harvard's Program for Evolutionary Dynamics, $850,000 to MIT's Media Lab, and direct salary payments to the researcher who coined "artificial general intelligence" were not eccentric philanthropy. They were capability acquisitions. The researchers he funded are still working, the technologies are scaling toward mass deployment, and no regulatory body has jurisdiction over the convergence layer where all three threads meet.

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