Today's episode opens with a landmark moment in genetic medicine. MIT researchers have re-engineered the Cas9 protein at the heart of prime editing, slashing the error rate from roughly one in seven down to one in one hundred and one — a 60-fold improvement they call the vPE system. For the hundreds of inherited conditions caused by single-letter DNA errors, including sickle cell disease, certain forms of blindness, and rare metabolic disorders, this brings the gap between lab result and clinical reality significantly closer.
From the lab to the landscape, thirty thousand volunteers gathered in China's Minqin County to plant one million trees in a single campaign. Driven by a viral social media push and a reality TV show, the effort adds new momentum to a reforestation battle that locals have been fighting since the 1950s in one of the country's driest desert corridors.
In medical technology, ONWARD Medical deployed seventy ARC-EX spinal cord stimulation systems in Q1 2026, now available across more than one hundred US and European clinics — and critically, cleared for home use. Veterans Affairs patients are among those regaining movement and function outside a treatment room for the first time.
Finally, Oklahoma City launched a new podcast shining a light on twenty-five local nonprofits tackling homelessness, foster care, and community development — giving grassroots leaders a platform they didn't have before.
Progress is happening in labs, deserts, living rooms, and communities. This is what's going right today.
This episode includes AI-generated content.
Show More
Show Less