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Crispr, which is being used for a lot of stuff, is actually an engineered virus.
We have cloned sheep. The only reason we haven't cloned people is scientists decided that that would be unethical. It is certainly possible to do.
Fully vat-grown chicken nuggets (as in no animal involved) have been taste tested in San Francisco.
We have made significant progress on simulating a C Elegans at the cellular level.
In 2021 or so we will be bringing the first exascale computer online, putting us at the lower end of the estimated computing power required to simulate a human brain.
We have the technology to modify animals such that genetic traits are carried to their offspring relatively unconditionally, and are in the process of determining if it would be a good idea to deploy this in Africa to make flies go extinct.
Even if we say that the coronavirus wasn't engineered, there's lots of non-engineered viruses and such in labs all the time. Really dangerous ones, even.
I don't believe the Coronavirus came from a lab. But we could make something like it in a lab if we wanted, and for that reason I'm not derogatory toward people who believe that we did. I think it's stupid, but it's not the kind of stupid that's being uninformed about science, it's the kind of stupid that is failing to follow the reasoning chain as far as you need to. The reasons I absolutely believe the coronavirus isn't from a lab:
1. It's too ineffective. If it was from a lab it'd be deadlier;
2. It takes more resources to run a program like this than it takes to build a nuke, and is thus beyond the resources of all terrorists;
3. Even someone like North Korea wouldn't play with it because it is 100% impossible to aim, since we can't just program it to only detect insert-country-here people, so if you ever use it it's also guaranteed to kill your side off.
One of my relatively more likely concerns, however, is that 10 years from now we will have the knowledge to do this quickly and with few resources: for the most part the equipment you need for this is already on hand at even small universities, we don't classify any of the science related to it because it's i.e. the same stuff as vaccines, and the computing power required to run the simulations for this stuff is coming down in price incredibly rapidly (plus, quantum computers may shift the algorithmic complexity of simulating biological processes, for those who understand what algorithmic complexity is).
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