Transhumanist rights are the Civil Rights of the 21st Century, says futurist Zoltan Istvan

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Maitreya One, a black futurist and hip-hop artist living in Harlem, steps off the Greyhound bus on a warm morning in Montgomery, Alabama. I walk up to him and give him a hug. Maitreya is a civil rights link from the past to the future--and one of the few African-American transhumanists I know. He is stepping off one bus in Montgomery--whose roots are tied to the spectacular Freedom Riders who challenged segregation laws in the early 1960s--and onto another: the Immortality Bus, whose mission is to spread radical science and promote transhumanist rights. Like others in the burgeoning transhumanism movement, Maitreya supports becoming a cyborg in the future, and he knows the coming controversy over such aims may end up as challenging as the civil rights era battles over racism. To transhumanists--some who want to become new biological species and others who want to become machines--a new civil rights age is looming.

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