|
Goodbye Ancient Mystery
- Seize the Day |
DIFFERENT TAKES
No. 4, Spring 2000 - A publication of
the Population and Development Program
Hampshire College, Amherst MA 01002-5001
USA phone 413/559-6046 fax 413/559-6045
Also published on ZNet
At the cusp of dot-com frenzy and the biotech century, a group of influential scientists and pundits has begun zealously promoting a new bio-engineered utopia. In the world of their visionary fervor, parents will strive to afford the latest genetic ìimprovementsî for their children. According to the advocates of this human future (or, as some term it, ìpost-humanî future), the exercise of consumer preferences for offspring options will be the prelude to a grand achievement: the technological control of human evolution.
My first close encounter with this techno-eugenic
enthusiasm was in a 1997 book written for an unconverted lay audience by
Princeton geneticist Lee M. Silver. In Remaking Eden: Cloning and
Beyond in a Brave New World (New York: Avon Books), Silver spins out scenarios
of a future in which affluent parents are as likely to arrange genetic
enhancements for their children as to send them to private school.
Silver confidently predicts that upscale
baby-making will soon take place in fertility clinics, where prospective
parents will undergo an IVF procedure to create an embryo, then select
the physical, cognitive, and behavioral traits they desire for their child-to-be.
Technicians will insert the genes said to produce those traits into the
embryo, and implant the embryo in the motherís womb. Nine
months later, a designer baby will be born. After a few centuries
of these practices, Silver believes, humanity will bifurcate into genetic
ubermenschen and untermenschenóand not long thereafter into different
species. Here is Silverís prediction for the year 2350:
"The GenRichówho account for 10 percent of the American populationóall carry synthetic genes. Genes that were created in the laboratory....The GenRich are a modern-day hereditary class of genetic aristocrats....All aspects of the economy, the media, the entertainment industry, and the knowledge industry are controlled by members of the GenRich class."
How do the other 90 percent live? Silver is quite blunt on this point as well: "Naturals work as low-paid service providers or as laborers."
That rich and poor already live in biologically disparate worlds can be argued on the basis of any number of statistical measures: life expectancy, infant mortality, access to health care. Of course, medical resources and social priorities could be assigned to narrowing those gaps. But if Silver and his cohort of designer-baby advocates have their way, precious medical talent and funds will be devoted instead to a technically dubious project whose success will be measured by the extent to which it can inscribe inequality onto the human genome. Silver pushes his vision still further:
"As time passes,...the GenRich class and the Natural class will become the GenRich humans and the Natural humans entirely separate species with no ability to cross-breed, and with as much romantic interest in each other as a current human would have for a chimpanzee."
Silver understands that such scenarios are disconcerting. He counsels realism. In other words, he celebrates the free reign of the market and perpetuates the myth that private choices have no public consequences:
"Anyone who accepts the right of affluent parents to provide their children with an expensive private school education cannot use ëunfairnessí as a reason for rejecting the use of reprogenetic technologies....There is no doubt about it...whether we like it or not, the global marketplace will reign supreme."
When I first read Silverís book, I imagined that these sorts of bizarre prognostications must be the musings of a lab researcher indulging in mad-scientist mode. I soon learned differently. They are not ravings from the margins of modern science, but emanations from its prestigious and respected core. Silver vividly and accurately represents a technical and political agenda for the human future that is shared by a disturbing number of Nobel laureate scientists, biotech entrepreneurs, social theorists, bioethicists, and journalists.
Since the late 1990s, this loose alliance has been publicly and energetically promoting the genetic technology known as ìhuman germline engineeringîó modifying the genes passed to our children by manipulating embryos at their earliest stages of development. Such genetic modifications would be replicated in all subsequent generations, providing supporters with the basis to claim that "we" are on the brink of "seizing control of human evolution." Frank about their commitments to control and ìenhancement," advocates of human germline engineering claim that the voluntary parental participation they foresee refutes any characterization of their project as "eugenic." With public conferences, popular books, scholarly articles, websites, and mainstream media appearances, they are waging an all-out campaign to win public acceptance of their techno-eugenic vision.
The promoters of a designer-baby future believe that the new human genetic and reproductive technologies are both inevitable and a boon to humanity. They exuberantly describe near-term genetic manipulationsówithin a generationóthat may increase resistance to diseases, ìoptimizeî height and weight, and boost intelligence. Further off, but within the lifetimes of todayís children, they foresee the ability to adjust personality, design new body forms, extend life expectancy, and endow hyper-intelligence. Some even predict splicing traits from other species into children: In late 1999, for example, an ABC Nightline special on human cloning speculated that genetic engineers would learn to design children with 'night vision from an owl' and 'supersensitive hearing cloned from a dog.'
How plausible are such scenarios? Because human beings are far more than the product of genesóbecause DNA is one of many factors in human developmentóthe feats of genetic manipulation eventually accomplished will almost certainly turn out to be much more modest than what the designer-baby advocates predict. But we cannot dismiss the possibility that scientists will achieve enough mastery over the human genome to wreak enormous damage - biologically and politically.
Promoting a future of genetically engineered inequality legitimizes the vast existing injustices that are socially arranged and enforced. Marketing the ability to specify our childrenís appearance and abilities encourages a grotesque consumerist mentality toward children and all human life. Fostering the notion that only a 'perfect baby' is worthy of life threatens our solidarity with and support for people with disabilities, and perpetuates standards of perfection set by a market system that caters to political, economic, and cultural elites. Channeling hopes for human betterment into preoccupation with genetic fixes shrinks our already withered commitments to improving social conditions and enriching cultural and community life.
Germline engineering is now common in laboratory animals, though it remains at best an imprecise technology, requiring hundreds of attempts before a viable engineered animal is produced. Human germline manipulation has not been attempted: The only kind of human genetic procedures currently practiced involve efforts to 'fix' or substitute for the genes of somatic (body) cells in people with health problems that in some way reflect the functions of genes.
In about five hundred 'gene therapy' clinical trials since the early 1990s, doctors have tried to introduce genetic modifications to patientsí lungs, nerves, muscles, and other tissues. These efforts have been largely unsuccessful. In late 1999, their safety was also called starkly into question by the death of an 18-year-old enrolled in a clinical trial, and by ensuing revelations of almost 700 other 'serious adverse effects' that researchers and doctors had somehow failed to report to the proper regulatory authorities. Some observers have commented that gene therapy would more accurately be called "genetic experiments on human subjects."
Many people are reluctant to oppose human germline engineering because they believe that 'genetics' will deliver medical cures or treatments. But there is no reason that we cannot forgo germline engineering and still support other genetic technologies that do in fact hold promising medical potential. In fact, the medical justifications for human germline engineering are strained, while its ethical and political risks are profound.
Fortunately, the distinction between human germline engineering and other genetic technologies (including somatic genetic engineering) is a reasonably clear technical demarcation. In many countries, this demarcation is being drawn as law. Legislation that would ban human germline engineering and reproductive cloning is making its way through the Canadian parliament. Germany's Embryo Protection Act of 1990 makes human cloning and germline engineering criminal acts, and the Japanese legislature is considering establishing prison terms for human cloning. A number of other European countries forbid cloning and germline engineering indirectly by outlawing non-therapeutic research on human embryos. Twenty-two European countries have signed a Council of Europe bioethics convention that includes similar restrictions. In the United States, however, neither federal law nor policy forbids human germline engineering or cloning, though federal funds cannot be used for any kinds of human cloning experiments.
In order to bring the new human genetic
technologies under social governance, strong political pressure and a broad
social movement will be necessary. Though no such movement currently
exists, efforts to alert and engage a variety of constituencies are getting
underway.
The movement that this work aims to catalyze
will need to draw in a wide range of constituencies, and encompass a variety
of motivations. Some participants will base their opposition to a
techno-eugenic future on their commitments to equality and justice, and
to human improvement through social change rather than technical fix.
Others will be moved by the threats to human dignity and human rights,
and the horror of treating children as custom-made commodities, that germline
engineering and cloning entail. Still others will find their primary
inspiration in the precautionary principle, or their wariness of techno-scientific
hubris and a reductionist world view, or their objections to corporate
ownership of life at the molecular level, or their skepticism about the
drastic technological manipulation of the natural world.
It will be far easier to prevent a techno-eugenic
future if we act before human germline manipulation develops further, either
as technology or ideology. This is a crucial juncture: a window that
the campaign for human germline engineering is trying to slam shut.
Your participation is urgently needed.
RESOURCES
The Exploratory Initiative on the New
Human Genetic Technologies (466 Green Street, San Francisco, CA 94133,
USA, phone: 415-434-1403) is working to oppose genetic technologies especially
human germline engineering and reproductive cloning, that foster eugenic
ideologies and objectify and commodify human life. To subscribe to
its free on-line newsletter, or for other inquiries about becoming involved,
please e-mail Marcy Darnovsky at teel@adax.com
Books opposing techno-eugenics:
Andrews, Lori. The Clone Age: Adventures
in the New World of ReproductiveTechnology. New York: Henry Holt,
1999.
Appleyard, Bryan. Brave New Worlds:
Staying Human in the Genetic Future. New York: Viking, 1998.
Hubbard, Ruth and Elijah Wald. Exploding
the Gene Myth. Boston: Beacon Press, 1997.
Kimbrell, Andrew. The Human Body
Shop: The Engineering and Marketing of Life. New York: HarperCollins,
1993.
Rifkin, Jeremy. The Biotech Century:
Harnessing the Gene and Remaking the World. New York: Jeremy P. Tarcher
/ Putnam, 1998.
Books supporting techno-eugenics:
Pence, Gregory E. Whoís Afraid
of Human Cloning? Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 1998.
Silver, Lee. Remaking Eden: Cloning
and Beyond in a Brave New World. New York: Avon, 1997.
Web sites opposing techno-eugenics:
Council for Responsible Genetics http://www.gene-watch.org
>
Campaign Against Human Genetic Engineering
http://www.users.globalnet.co.uk/~cahge
Genetic Engineering and its Dangers http://online.sfsu.edu/~rone/gedanger.htm
Web sites supporting techno-eugenics:
UCLA Program on Medicine, Technology and
Society (Gregory Stock, director) http://research.mednet.ucla.edu/pmts/germline
Extropy Institute http://www.extropy.org
Marcy Darnovsky, Ph.D., works with the Exploratory Initiative on the New Human Genetic Technologies, and teaches courses in the politics of science, technology, and the environment in the Hutchins School of Liberal Studies at Sonoma State University, California.