LongeCity Newsletter 
November 2013  

LongeCity 2013 science fundraiser -- success!! 

We are incredibly pleased, excited and proud that the 2013 science fundraiser in support of the 'MitoSENS' team in pursuit of an innovative gene therapy methods to cure mitochondrial aging has come to a successful close weeks before its scheduled deadline! 

Looking back at the journey and the donor list, there are some interesting observations:  Brilliantly launched with a generous donation by Reason, the supporters came in, with small donations and large ones - over 70 of us pooled resources and made it happen! We have see many anonymous donations- many donors don't seem to care about publicity. It's great to see on average larger donations than we have had in the past. Perhaps this was the 'right project', perhaps some LongeCity members who joined us as students now have more disposable income to channel to the best causes or perhaps the community appreciate the ever fiercer urgency to 'stop talking and get moving'. But amongst a few $1000 donations we still see many $10 ones - and these are also highly valued an meaningful - they show that even those who have to be very thrifty in these tough economic times are engaged and want to make a difference. Lastly, the largest donation that brought the fundraiser to an eagerly anticipated end is also interesting: it came from the Methuselah Foundation - itself a non-profit organisation that does incredibly important work in supporting life extension research. In fact, Methuselah Foundation and SENS foundation that supports MitoSENS where once much closer aligned. Given this background, it is so wonderful to see that the members of the Methuselah Foundation are firmly resisting the in-fighting and rivalry that has so often plagued the life extension movement in the past -instead they saw a good project and a great opportunity to make an effective impact and they acted! 
Thanks to them, thanks to you, the wonderful members and friends who supported and promoted the initiative we have reached this goal together! 

What's next? 

Well, Dr. 'Oki' O'Connor and his team are eager to start! You can listen to Oki discuss the research plans in our recent LongeCity Podcast.  The team will provide updates on the research to the community throughout the project. 

This research will present a small but distinct and potentially very important step in the research  aimed at tackling age-related mitochondrial dysfunction. It may also demonstrate that this route, on balance, is not the most promising. LongeCity members are mature enough to appreciate that good science, done properly, never 'disappoints' - you may not always get the results that you were hoping for but at least you have learned something, at least you have tried. And it is in the trying, in the fierce determination to keep trying, with drive, and ambition but without hype or grandiose claims that uniquely unites the LongeCity community. And this brings me to another point :

LongeCity has been doing 'crowdfunding' since before 'kickstarter' and other platforms where even conceived. Meanwhile other life extension projects have used that route and with great success. This is a great development! In comparison, we still think that LongeCity brings something extra to the table that advocates of 'effective altruism' will appreciate: 
Firstly, we are very careful about the projects we promote. They are reviewed internally, by the community and scientifically. As we also had to find out, this cannot be an absolute safeguard, but it provides a greater measure of quality assurance to the community. 
And this, our community, is the second important feature: In contrast to 'pure' fundraising sites, the fact that the project is linked to the community on an on-going basis and in a hands-on manner means more interactivity, communication, cross-fertilization of ideas and better scrutiny. If they were not before, the research team are now a part of that community and over time this will strength the network of protagonists in life extension research immeasurably.       

Nonetheless the rising popularity of crowdsourced research financing should give us pause for though: Could we now move on to a different, neglected aspect of life extension research support that requires attention, and where LongeCity's -- in comparison-- very limited community funds could make an even greater impact? 

Thus, "Research Fundraisers - what's next for 2014?" is also a question we are asking ourselves - all Members are invited to share their views in the internal forum!   


MONTHLY FORUM FEATURE: 

Slightly unhappy topic this month: A reminder of reasons to get banned

MONTHLY COLUMN
:  
Franco Cortese tackles "Three Specters of Immortality": overpopulation, unnaturalness and selfishness. 

Caliban

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