Anyone actually want to live forever? or at least until you've had enough? and stay 22-24 indefinately? I'm a hardware designer. Biology was never my strong suit. If you are considering a new career please check into this. All we need is a way to deliver this to every cell in the human body.
I don't want to die (wow, that just struck me-I've been depressed off and on my whole life, so it's not a given). What I mainly want is to make a positive impact on the world, e.g. reducing corruption in government long-term, righting injustices, etc. I haven't gotten to watching that video yet, but if we can get telomeres worked out (autocorrect says omelettes? come on, give me some credit) and solve the oxidation problem then yes, we could stop aging, though we would still have to figure out things like Alzheimer's, cancer, Parkinson's, etc.
Also, I think it would be unethical to turn someone of questionable morality immortal, and I really think we should find a way to reduce the need for food before agelessness becomes common.
Oh, I also wanted to mention that while again, I haven't viewed the video yet, the gene-editing tool CRISPr might be helpful, since telomeres are basically genes and lengthening them is basically editing.
@RussMaughan I think lies can hold things together better than the truth sometimes, though obviously in most cases the truth comes out eventually. That said, problems like corruption do primarily involve lies ("If elected, I will enact the will of the people!"-takes bribes, public's support for ideas has no effect on vote). What we really need is benevolence and wisdom together.