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  • There are tens of trillions of cells in your body.
  • Each human cell has around 6 feet of DNA. Each human has approximately 10 trillion cells (this is a low ball estimate). This would mean that each person has around 60 trillion feet or about 10 billion miles of DNA inside.
  • The mix of DNA you inherit is unique to you. You receive 50% of your DNA from each of your parents, who received 50% of theirs from each of their parents, and so on.
  • They attached nucleotides to form two long strands that spiral to create a double helix structure. If you think of the double helix structure as a ladder, the phosphate and sugar molecules would be the sides, while the bases would be the rungs.
  • Human cells contain 23 pairs of chromosomes (46 chromosomes in total). Two strands of DNA tied by hydrogen-bonds to each other formed each chromosome, making the classic DNA double helix (double-stranded DNA). So, in total, there are 46 X 2 = 92 strands of DNA in each diploid human cell.
  • RNA is a cousin of DNA.  RNA is mediatory of DNA.  RNA is the messenger.  Gene expression is how the instructions in our DNA are converted into a functional product, such as a protein. It acts as both an on/off switch to control when proteins are made, and volume control increases or decreases the number of proteins made.
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  • The nucleotide sequences that makeup DNA are a “code” for the cell to make hundreds of different types of proteins; these proteins function to control and regulate cell growth, division, communication with other cells, and most other cellular functions. This process is called protein synthesis.  All of the cells in our bodies, except red blood cells, contain a copy of our DNA. At conception, a person receives DNA from both the father and mother. We each have 23 pairs of chromosomes. One was received from each team’s father, and one was obtained from the mother.
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  • DNA is the molecule that is the hereditary material in all living cells. They made genes of DNA, and so is the genome itself. A gene comprises enough DNA to code for one protein, and a genome is simply the total of an organism’s DNADNA has two types of digital information–the genes that encode proteins, the molecular machines of life, and the gene regulatory networks that specify the genes’ behavior.  DNA is not like a C source but more like byte-compiled code for a virtual machine called the nucleus.  Nearly half of the human genome comprises transposable elements or jumping DNA.  Almost all cells carry around a full copy (‘distribution’) of the genome; a system selects out the unneeded code on the way to its destination.    Each DNA Helix is redundant in itself; you can see the genome as a twisted ladder whereby each spoke contains two bases – hence the word base-pair.  The central dogma tells us that DNA is used to make RNA and that RNA is used to make proteins.  Each DNA Helix is redundant in itself.  There are two copies of each chromosome present. Some information transfers do not fit within any of the current theories, meaning they are flawed or incomplete.  Sometimes RNA patches the DNA.  Sometimes, information flows the other way.  Sometimes, the DNA is modified by proteins created earlier.  Like computer storage, DNA (and its intermediate RNA) can corrupt.  DNA knows the concept of the ‘molecular clock.’ Some parts of the genome are actively changing, and some parts can never be changed.  These genes are fundamental to the genome’s actual storage and are of paramount importance. Any failure in this code rapidly leads to a non-functioning organism.  They can copy earlier genes or later in the cell’s reproductive process, leading to more or less favorable copying conditions.  There are elaborate signals that tell the cell where to read in DNA.  There are pieces of the genome that can be read from multiple starting points.  We can view each cell as a CPU, running its own kernel. Each cell has a copy of the entire kernel but activates only the relevant parts. It also chooses which modules or drivers it will load.
  • If a cell needs to do something (call a function), it whips up the genome’s right piece and transcribes it into RNA. The RNA is then translated into a sequence of amino acids, making up a protein the DNA coded for.  This protein is tagged with a shipping address. . There is machinery that acts on these instructions and delivers the protein.  The delivery instruction is then stripped off, and several post-processing steps are performed to activate the protein.
  •  To create a new ‘binary’ of a specimen, a living copy is required. The genome needs an elaborate toolchain to deliver a living thing. The code itself is impotent.  It appears that RNA, which is an intermediate code between DNA and a protein, may have been the ‘B’ for DNA. This begs the question of where RNA came from.
  • The Homeobox genes.  . Cells must be copied and assigned a purpose. ‘HOX’ genes only trigger things in other genes and don’t materially build things themselves.
  • Illustration of a DNA molecule.
  • DNA is a vast network of information exchanges of coded information.  Biology is the science of life.  Living things reproduce.  The parents pass the story down.  The blueprint of life is coded in.   The choices are always binary; it has to be one or the other.  The location of the information within the cell is the chromosomes. Chromosomes, just like genes, only appear in pairs.  Genetic information is discrete digital information.  The three major information flow pathways within the cell are replication, transcription, and translation. These three components are the central dogma of molecular biologyAll things are triune, with binary interactives.
  •  The information encoded in DNA flows into RNA via transcription and ultimately to proteins via translation.  Note: The language of DNA is digital but not binary. However, it interacts with the triune in a binary way.  Each digit can have four values instead of 2; a DNA codon has 64 possible values, compared to a binary byte which has 256. A typical example of a DNA codon is ‘GCC,’ which encodes the amino acid Alanine.  Where binary encoding has 0 and 1 to work with (2, hence the binary), DNA has four positions, T, C, G, and A. However, they interact binarily with the triune host.   
  • Chromosomes are a threadlike structure of nucleic acids and protein found in the nucleus of most living cells that carry genetic information in the form of genes.  Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes–22 pairs of numbered chromosomes, called autosomes, and one pair of sex chromosomes, X and Y. Each parent contributes one chromosome to each team so that offspring get half of their chromosomes from their mother and a half from their father.  Linked traits are carried on the same chromosome.
  • You have 3.2 billion base pairs—or sets of genetic letters that make up your genome. There are approximately 20,000 genes in your genome.  Our genes provide cells with information on how to make proteins.  Some genes contain the code for making multiple proteins.  In your other genome, there are 37 different genes in your mitochondrial genome. Mitochondria are the cell’s power plants, and many of their genes are involved in cellular energy production.
  • Ninety-eight percent of our genome is noncoding DNA, which doesn’t contain information.  This 98% of non-coded DNA is involved in other job functions; we don’t know what.  One job that is being done is transmitting our thoughts into the global consciousness grid located off-site.
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    •  THE EVENT ORIGINATOR IS ON HIS WAY BACK.
    • THE DESIGNER/CREATOR’S PROCESS :
    • HE WROTE THE CODE; THEN HE PRODUCED THE BLUEPRINT.  HE USED AN EVOLVEMENT PROCESS TO OBTAIN THE REQUISITE RESULT.  IT is ALL JUST A BINARY SOFTWARE PROGRAM.
    • (ALL THINGS ARE TRIUNE, WITH BINARY INTERACTIVES).
    • IT is ALL ABOUT THE CODE THAT YOU START  WITH.
      • 1ST: Write the code for the upcoming big bang that will create a new universe.
      • 2nd:  Write the code for the design and evolve for all intended results as the event unfolds.
      • 3rd:  Set the event in motion. All things are triune, with binary interactives.
      • 4th:  Monitor, fine-tune, adjust, and select out, on-going.
      • 5th: Use design and evolve as the process.  Write a separate code and blueprint for the known thought entities’ consciousness. Install consciousness when it is time for it.
      • 6th: It is not the people; it is the event.
      • 7th: Harvesting a new crop of known thought entities is the intended result.
      • DARWINISM HAS BEEN REPLACING  GOD FOR OVER ONE HUNDRED YEARS.  THAT DAY IS