No.
56 November/December 2007
We're One Step Closer to Creating Genetically
Enhanced Humans
A new Nobel laureate's work shows that the prospect of genetically engineering
children is controversial but no longer just a fantasy.
By Marcy Darnovsky, AlterNet Posted on October
19, 2007
It's Nobel Prize season, and the Nobel scientists are very much in the
news. James Watson, awarded the laureate in 1962 for helping to deduce
the now-iconic double-helix structure of DNA, is currently embroiled
in controversy after making a series of blatantly racist remarks in
the UK Sunday Times this month. But related views espoused by one of
this year's laureates have gone unnoticed. In early October, the Nobel
Prize for biology went to three scientists whose talent and persistence
gave us "knockout mice", the genetically engineered lab animals
widely used by researchers to model and study human diseases. In the
words of a Nobel committee member, these designer mice have "led
to penetrating new insights" in several biological fields.
The story of one of the biology winners, Mario Capecchi, was the lead
in most of the news reports about the award. Capecchi's rags-to-riches
life gave an extra mythic dimension to the fairytale-like quality that
always accompanies the Nobel announcements, with their large sums of
money and middle-of-the-night phone calls to astonished scientists.
Capecchi spent his early childhood in World War II Italy, living on
the streets and in orphanages after his mother was sent to Dachau for
anti-Fascist activities. She survived and found her son on his ninth
birthday. Together they set sail for the United States, where Capecchi
got a high-quality education and eventually reached Watson's Harvard
lab.
But there's another aspect of Capecchi's life that may sound more like
science fiction than fairy tale. The new Nobel laureate, like his former
mentor Watson, has spoken enthusiastically of using the genetic science
he's helped advance to engineer biologically enhanced children.
The prospect of a renewed, high-tech eugenics is extraordinarily controversial,
but it is not just a fantasy. It is coming ever closer to technical
plausibility, and for a disturbing number of influential scientists
and eccentric futurists, it is an agenda. At an infamous UCLA conference
in 1998, Watson, Capecchi, and other prominent scientists gathered to
strategize about how to make it "acceptable" to the public.
The event was titled Engineering the Human Germline -- a reference to
what is now more commonly called "inheritable genetic modification"
-- and covered on the front pages of the New York Times and Washington
Post.
The conferees were quite explicit. Watson -- hardly known for his shyness
or tact -- proclaimed to the audience of nearly a thousand, "If
we could make better human beings by knowing how to add genes, why shouldn't
we do it?" (As for the "better human beings" he has in
mind, he told a British film maker in 2003 that he considers ten percent
of children "stupid," and would like to see them genetically
modified. "If you really are stupid, I would call that a disease,"
Watson said. He went on to argue for using genetic techniques to prevent
the births of "ugly girls." "People say it would be terrible
if we made all girls pretty," he explained. "I think it would
be great.")
Another conference attendee, Princeton mouse biologist turned futurist
Lee Silver, has elaborated on this frankly eugenic vision. In Remaking
Eden: Cloning and Beyond in a Brave New World (William Morrow: 1997),
Silver eagerly imagines a future in which the appearance, personality,
cognitive abilities, and sensory capacities of children become products
of genetic modification. Silver acknowledges that the costs of such
procedures would limit their widespread adoption, and predicts that
over time society would segregate into castes that he dubs the "GenRich"
and the "Naturals."
In the promotion of a new eugenics, Capecchi has been less the salesman
or provocateur, and more the architect -- or, perhaps, the engineer.
His talk at the 1998 conference, called "The Genetic Engineer's
Tool Box," examined techniques "for safe, reliable germline
engineering in humans." Capecchi acknowledged concerns about the
wisdom of making permanent changes in the human genome. If inheritable
genetic modification were to begin in twenty years, he mused, "the
procedures that we'll be working out at that point will appear very
primitive fifty years from now. And those procedures, in turn, will
appear very primitive a hundred years from now." This presents
a serious problem: "[T]here's no way we should create a system
where it is a permanent record." But for a man of Capecchi's scientific
imagination, this problem is surmountable. In fact, he had already devised
a clever work-around. His proposal: Create those genetic changes in
the embryos that will become genetically enhanced children, but put
"on" and "off" switches into their genes. Newsweek
described the scheme as "an end run around the worry that it is
wrong to monkey with human evolution."
Unlike Watson and others, Capecchi seems not to have pursued advocacy
of using genetic tools in the service of a eugenic future. Perhaps he
has had second thoughts. Perhaps he has recognized the disastrous new
forms of discrimination and inequality that eugenic engineering could
so easily produce. Perhaps there's a chance he'll use the platform afforded
by his Nobel Prize to reject such dangerous applications of the science
he's helped to develop. Or is that too much of a fairy tale ending?
Marcy Darnovsky, PhD, is associate executive director at the Center
for Genetics and Society and a contributor to the blog Biopolitical
Times.
Web Link: http://www.alternet.org/story/65678/
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