In the Last Three Weeks of the SENS Rejuvenation Research Fundraiser, Donations are Tripled by Matching Until the End of the Year

This year's SENS rejuvenation research fundraiser has three weeks to go, and there are now two challenge funds with money left to match your charitable donations: the $150,000 fund established by Michael Greve's Forever Healthy Foundation, and today Josh Triplett has added another $20,000 above and beyond his generous donations earlier in the year. Thus donations to the SENS Research Foundation made now will be matched twice. Give $100 and a total of $300 will go towards expanding the SENS research programs aimed at bringing an end to age-related disease, frailty, and mortality, an end to the suffering and pain that accompanies aging today. In addition there are still matching dollars left to encourage people to become SENS Patrons. Sign up as a monthly donor to the SENS Research Foundation before December 31st, and Josh Triplett, Christophe and Dominique Cornuejols, and Fight Aging! will match the next year of your donations. If you know someone who hasn't yet decided on the charity he or she will support this year, then point out the good work of the SENS Research Foundation.

As 2016 winds to a close, drawing a line under a tremendous amount of progress towards the first viable rejuvenation therapies based on clearance of senescent cells, I encourage you to reread the SENS materials and the overview of the research programs that the SENS Research Foundation has organized and funded using years of donations from people like you and I. Consider for a moment how fortunate we are to live in an age in which we have the opportunity to help make the end of aging a reality. That there is a good enough understanding of the biochemistry of old tissues to identify the metabolic wastes, the cross-links in the extracellular matrix, the damage to mitochondrial DNA, the senescent cells, and other causes of aging. Further, that biotechnology is moving rapidly enough for the therapies repair and reverse these root causes of aging to be plausible and achievable. That observers such as I can assemble forecasts based on present ongoing work in the scientific and biotechnology communities and order the likely near future clinical availability of various approaches to human rejuvenation. All that remains is to persuade people and to raise the funds needed to make it happen, and in that we are so very much further ahead than we were even a decade ago.

Yet there is so very much left to accomplish! From here it might seem a mountain of work, to go from a world in which next to nothing can be done about aging to a world in which aging is controlled and defeated, but in reality small differences today are all that lie between (a) a future in which aging is, by increments, brought under medical control soon enough to save our lives and those of our children and (b) a future in which aging continues to destroy the lives of everyone. These small differences are the choices made by a handful of people today, choices that will snowball in the years ahead to create significant change: the choices made by researchers, advocates, and everyday philanthropists. If you are one of the modest community whose members read Fight Aging! from time to time, then you are one of those people, knowing enough and seeing far enough ahead to understand that the world can be changed for the better. That aging is not set in stone, and its causes can be repaired. All great and sweeping change starts small, with a few small decisions: the decision to tell a friend about the SENS Research Foundation and the likely prospects for the future; the decision to donate as you can to help the research take place; the decision to learn more about the underlying science.

A golden future lies ahead of us, if we just reach for it. So donate to the SENS Research Foundation, an organization doing a great deal to create that future, removing roadblocks from research and development, and giving rise to serious commercial efforts to produce cost-effective, widely available rejuvenation therapies.

Comments

A big thank you to the donators who generously contributed to the matching funds. I'm a bit cash-strapped but I will see what I can scrap to make use of it and help the SENS Research Foundation further our common goals.

Posted by: Spede at December 12th, 2016 8:27 PM

The notice under "Make a single donation" at http://www.sens.org/donate says "You can donate by credit or debit card by clicking the PayPal button, even if you do not have a PayPal account." That's not correct. It appears that you have to create a PayPal account in order to donate anything. I'd like to donate to SENS with a credit card but I don't want a PayPal account.

Posted by: mike at December 12th, 2016 11:07 PM

Where is the visual aid target bar with a percentage raised? I do think simple visual metaphors like this help a bit.

Also I think this should be tied to a specific project. I know that this can be tough as money generally raised to be spent on anything is better. But a specific project/task fires people's imaginations. even if the SENS foundation was planning to carry out the piece of research anyway, it might pay to tie the fundraiser to that specific project. e.g. SENS end of year 150k fundraiser to try and get another mitochondrial gene allotopically expressed in the next 3 years.

Posted by: Jim at December 13th, 2016 3:36 AM

I'm quite cash-strapped too, but I'll try to donate something.

Posted by: Antonio at December 13th, 2016 5:35 AM

@mike: You can donate via PayPal with a credit card without creating an account - that option is there on the PayPal page, just not as obvious.

Posted by: Reason at December 13th, 2016 6:55 AM

@ Mike : No, it works well for me. If I click on the logo it will redirect me on a Paypal page. Then on the bottom of this page there's a grey button named "Pay without opening an account". Click on it and it will offer you to insert your credit card details.

@ Jim : Agreed, it would be better if the target bar currently located on the landing page was also put on the donation page. Else if you give the http://sens.org/donate link to people, they won't have any sense of how the campaign's going and how they can help achieve it.

I also agree that providing a tentative allocation of the gathered funds to a roadmap would further incentivise people to donate. (At least by mentionning the seven damage targets which SENS wants to address.) It underlines that the SRF has a clear view of where it is heading.

Posted by: Spede at December 13th, 2016 7:05 AM
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