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Robert M. Young Online Writings
RECONSTITUTING TECHNOLOGY: CHIPS, GENES, SPARES
by Robert Young
The general public are becoming aware of areas of technology which
affect us so immediately, so intimately and so vitally that the problem of how new
products and procedures come into being may at last become an urgent social priority. The
effects of microprocessors are very immediate in the printing industry and in automation.
The promise of artificial fertilisation and implantation of human ova intimately affects
childless couples. The achievements and dangers of spare part surgery are vital to the
life prospects of the potential recipients of organ and tissue transplants. The likely
benefits of genetic engineering are very impressive indeed, extending to every area of the
food, chemical and drug industries as well as to the better-known possibilities of cloning
and other less lurid applications .
Each of these areas of science, technology and medicine is replete with
prospects and problems. I want to review some of them and to argue that they point to a
fundamentally different approach to new discoveries. My conclusion is that this approach
is likely to turn out to be essential to human survival but that it can not be taken
within the existing social and economic order.
As things now stand new discoveries and procedures come into being as a
result of forces which are not directly geared to the interests of ordinary people. Their
originators claim that they are, but it's not so. They maintain that the existing
arrangements serve all the people in the long run, even though the path to the public good
is an indirect one. That is, research and development in the industrial area are aimed at
making profits, while in the academic sector they are directed by the preoccupations of
researchers who are concerned with their own intellectual puzzles and careers. The
defenders of the present system claim that commercial investment is ultimately dictated by
consumer demand and that academic research is controlled by granting agencies which are
answerable to government and to other regulatory agencies which, in turn, have the public
interest at heart. I think that the feedback loops, through the market in goods and
services and in academic grant-getting, peer review and conferring of status, are not cast
widely or early enough in the process of deciding what questions to ask and what
technologies to create. A different system is needed: nothing short of socialism will
remove the determinant role of exchange value from social relations.
I want to try to be as concrete as possible in opposing the defence of
the status quo. My point is not that any of these new technologies are bad but that
we cannot sort out the good possibilities in them from the bad within the existing
arrangements. The pursuit of monetary capital and research or career capital are
guaranteed to define 'public welfare in terms suitable to capital.
Before turning to my argument, I want to illustrate the point with two
stark examples. In the inquest after the Harrisburg nuclear accident, one of the questions
was about the delay on the part of the company, Metropolitan Edison, in informing the
governmental Nuclear Regulatory Commission: The reply was that the company's first
responsibility was to its shareholders. They informed the authorities only when it was
inescapable (Guardian 9 April 1979). Turning to another sphere, one finds the same
sort of competitive pressures in recombinant DNA research. The techniques of genetic
manipulation are the way to 'the next paper, the next grant, the next step up the academic
totem pole. The intensity of these pressures struck foreign scientists who attended the
Asilomar conference where a temporary moratorium on such research was declared. As a
leading British molecular biologist said afterwards, "People (were) being driven hard
there. I kept hearing them use the word business. You know, as in "You'll put
me out of business with these restrictions." Many times! (Wright, 'Molecular
Politics', pp. 60-61).
I. MICROPROCESSORS
Microprocessors are amazing. It has been clear for a long time that
'computers could do wonderful things' . But the two problems of size and cost have limited
the imagination about new applications. The qualitative change has occurred with silicon
chip technology which can put 80 many items and operations on so small a chip for 80
little cost approaching a negligible fraction of a penny that it can be
worth automating almost any process which can be reduced to rules, however complicated.
The electronic circuits of a small computer can fit onto one chip a few millimetres
square. You can put more than 16, 000 units on one now; over a million are projected by
1990, and many chips can fit into a small space. By the end of the century we should have
virtually zero-cost memory and processing as far as the chips them selves are concerned.
Want to go shopping, write a letter for delivery or an article for
publication, read or broadcast something, see a film or a tele programme, make something,
experience a particular set of sensations? It's all technically feasible where ever you
are, at whatever time of day or night, by means of micro-circuitry, visual displays and
your own terminal for conveying instructions and receiving images and information.
Rather than B° into illustrative detail about future applications, I
want to revert to some of the new technologies which are already on the market. It is
worth mentioning, however, that the information and consumer sides (including shopping and
arranging holidays) are about to be deployed on existing television and telephone
facilities via the Viewdata, Prestel and Teletext systems (including Ceefax and Oracle).
The daily news (or interruptions thereof) is already full of items about machines for
information processing in the newspaper and office equipment industries. The new print
technologies eliminate 'hot metal' typesetting and, for example, allow a reporter or
columnist to typeset straight onto the presses from a machine in the editorial offices.
Typesetting as such disappears in the automated process.
In the general secretarial office setting, word processors can do
impressive things. A word processor is a microprocessor-based typing system. Not only can
they reproduce originals of standard letters, or build them up from a stock of sentences
or paragraphs all from memory. They can also eliminate all paper filing but provide
a paper print-out if you require one. They can take in a single correction or a set of
tiny ones in a long document, make the substitutions in the original version, and then
reproduce the entire text from their memory, integrating old and new in a finished
version. These machines are now being advertised on prime-time television. (The typist
without one can't cope and ends up resigning. The benefits of word processors and
automated typesetting in a law office and in preparing long articles and books are obvious
to anyone who has ever worked with drafts or proofs. The government Think Tank report on
microprocessors refers to 100% gains in productivity in comparing microprocessors with
typewriters. The next steps are voice-activated and voice synthesizing chips which can
translate easily between print and sound. This could be followed by very cheap
telecommunications, making teleconferencing' an attractive alternative to the
printed word.
The National Graphical Association (NGA), the Association of
Scientific, Technical and Managerial Staffs (ASTMS), the Association of Professional,
Executive and Computer Staff (APEX) and other unions are very ambivalent about these new
technologies. The print unions argue that 60% of jobs in Fleet Street will be eliminated,
while a recent careful study by an ASTMS researcher suggests that around 22 million
British information workers could lose their jobs by 1985, and that by 1991 the figure
could have risen to nearly 4 million. The West German trades unions predict that by 1990
two million of the country's five million secretarial jobs will be lost.
On the other hand, a recent survey by A. D. Little (which was
commissioned by several governments) forecasts one million new jobs in the microelectronic
industry itself by 1987, but 60% of those would be in the USA. The gamble is, of course,
that the new technology will generate jobs throughout the economy, and who can say what
the net effect will be. For example, another factor is that in addition to current
unemployment in Britain, there is the prospect of two million extra workers looking for
jobs by 1990 because of the rising birth rate.
There is no doubt at all, however, that the new technology will produce
massive changes in employment patterns. The British Labour governments commitment of
£100 million from the National Enterprise Board to three newly-created firms INMOS
(chips), INSAC (software), and NEXOS (office equipment) is part of an attempt at
national re-tooling at a level 80 fundamental as to amount to
reindustrialisation .
But the silicon chip gamble' is a desperate one an attempt to
stay in the running with the front-running nations that the countrys political
leaders and electronic industrialists feel they must make. There is already much doubt
about whether or not their technology will win out. Even if it d~ here is a partial list
of jobs most at risk: accountants, financial advisors and administrators, draughtsmen,
computer programmers, postmen, telegraph operators, printers, proof-readers, library
assistants, cashiers, meter readers, TV and phone repairmen, machinists, mechanics,
inspectors, assemblers, operatives, material handlers, warehousmen, travel agents, shop
salespersons (list adapted from Large, Guardian 2 May 1979). This list comes from
the predictions of one of the three leaders of the government-backed micro processor
enterprise, Iann Barron. Mrs. Thatcher, however, can blandly reassure us that the new
technology is really a friend of the people; it doesn't do anyone out of a job but
allows people to do things they couldnt do before' (BBC-l News, 21 April 1979).
The Secretary of the British Association for the Advancement of Science
says this about the future of work, There is a real likelihood that the workforce
will become polarised into a relatively small technological elite able to move with, and
enjoy, the advancing technologies and to adapt to the changing circumstances, and a much
larger proportion of work people whose skills have become outmoded and who lack the
education or the mental attitudes to adapt to change. A widely based initial education,
greater use of further education and retraining, and an acknowledgement by society that
people who have served well for as long as they are able to do, deserve to be well treated
in later years, are all matters that will have to be appreciated. If they are not, then
unmanageable social stresses are certain to arise and the consequences are likely to be
catastrophic.
That sort of rhetoric is being taken up by others as well. Our new
overseer of employment, James Prior, said, If we do have to face higher
unemployment, let's not despair. It may well be that in the next 10, 15 or 20 years we
will have a new philosophy toward unemployment. We may have to move away from the
Protestant work ethic (Guardian 22 March 1979). [He still got his portfolio, even
though he had contradicted Her on unemployment and even on the work ethic.] No one seems
to have thought at all clearly about these disruptions; so far, the aim seems to be to
produce euphemisms for old-fashioned unemployment but to express it so that the jobless
will be kept off the streets and out of the pubs by cradle-to-grave education'
Why this appalling gap between the potential benefits and the likely
dislocations caused by microprocessors? The answer lies in the strict criteria of
productivity and control which led to the creation of these technologies. Word processing
machines came into being because the paperwork side of production and services had become
the bottleneck in terms of time and cost to the faster circulation and
expansion of capital. It was an area of low automation and of relatively high control over
the labour process by the worker. If one compares it to other domains, the move is
something like that from craft production of automobiles to the moving assembly line
(which is itself now moving onto microprocessor automation and even assembly, thereby
further reducing worker control). At the other extreme, the construction industry remains
relatively unaffected by the process of placing the control of work in automated
machinery.
Newspapers attempt to introduce the new print technology, because it
will make them more efficient and more resistant to unions whose militancy has made the
press exquisitely vulnerable to go-slow, overmanning, work-to-rule, stoppages
and straight refusal to typeset or print certain items. That is, the owners are seeking to
gain control over the labour process of reproducing and disseminating what they want said.
Comparatively speaking, this would bring them to the sort of control which television
presenters have now. Unless particular technicians pull the plug or the camera operator
balks, what the presenter says is what ends up on the home screen. (Of course, television
has its own struggle with new technologies. The compact Electronic News Gathering
equipment used by reporters in other countries allows direct transmission by satellite and
requires only one operator at the scene of the action. British television news trades
unionists have 80 far successfully resisted its introduction.) Since newspapers have such
narrow profit margins, the proprietors are determined to gain control over the labour
process even if it requires an old-fashioned lock-out, as it did in the case of the Times and its associated publications.
Similarly, the installation of word processors in offices can reduce
the areas of relative autonomy enjoyed by secretaries. Work, speed, time spent not
typing-_ all can be monitored by the machine itself, keeping a record of everything the
secretary types, including mistakes. Getting up to do filing, have a smoke or a chat can
be monitored or eliminated.
When an industry, a newspaper or a particular office is faced with the
imminent installation of such equipment, the workers are placed in a very difficult
situation. There is no doubt at all that the new technologies are more efficient, easier
to operate, etc. The defensive options open to the workers all look bad and have little
prospect of long-term success. Their opposition strikes the general public as committing a
cardinal sin of being against progress. They appear to be Luddites or to be
fighting a delaying action merely to protect their livelihoods. . But what else can they
do in the short run? Few would argue that being a typist is deeply rewarding work, and the
boss-secretary relationship is one of the most patriarchal going. But the non-patriarchal
and very real subordination to a word processor is not much better and involves
considerable deskilling. While protecting the craft element in some jobs in the printing
industry is one argument against the new technologies, the benefits to be gained from such
machines are undoubted. Indeed, a contradictory situation has arisen, whereby a small
radical magazine (The Leveller) arguing the case of the Times newspaper print workers can get printed more cheaply and quickly because the journal's
anarchist typesetters (Bread & Roses) have installed a machine embodying some of the
new technology.
I am not going to say that print workers and secretaries should do X
instead of Y. When faced with the machines being wheeled in, there is very little else one
can do other than hold out for jobs and/or compensation. But how do you compensate the
working class for a lost job? Here we come up against the system which can expect
overmanning if the alternative is unemployment. What I want to say about this
(and the other technologies Im considering here) is what the local said to the
tourist asking directions in a labyrinth: I wouldn't start from this point.
When confronted with a completed, highly integrated piece of technology at the point of application, one wants to go back down the line to the point of origination and to constitute it
along different lines for different purposes. Instead of opposing only the uses (or
abuses) of existing technologies, we need to reconstitute them. Only then can
we avoid the trap wherein we are opposing the obviously useful machine because it has dire
consequences for our jobs. We can only tease apart those aspects if we
literally go back to the drawing board. In doing so, we would seek to design
technologies which did not de-skill the operator or increase her/his subordination to the
machine. And our priorities in choosing which machines to set out to design would not be
dictated solely by the narrow criteria of improved efficiency and profitability,
regardless of social consequences.
All of this may seem impossibly utopian, 80 I had better give a
concrete example of what I mean by reconstituting technology. When Lucas Aerospace lost
some of its markets and began talking about redundancies, the Combine Shop Stewards
Committee decided that it was time they had a go at planning for the future of the firm
and set about making a Corporate Plan. Their approach was to save jobs by making different
products ones which were socially useful. They invited the general public and
various organisations concerned with social responsibility in science and alternative
technology to suggest new products. Among those which came in were solar heating systems,
a gas turbine, kidney machines, invalid vehicles and medical appliances. The management at
Lucas were not prepared to consider the Plan--for very good reason fundamental issues were
at stake. Here was the work force-.or a portion of it (and internal. divisions arose here,
too)--not merely selling labour power and going away when declining markets dictated that
capital should flow elsewhere. Instead, the workers were usurping management prerogatives
and proposing what should be manufactured by the firm. Worker directors would have been
bad enough, but this was an overall strategy for the future of the plants and, most
importantly, their social purpose moving away from military technology to
constructive, socially useful products. After a very long and fruit less struggle and
eventual television coverage, the management was brought to discuss some of the issues by
the intervention of the Department of Industry.
Notice that the ambiguous we which slipped into my
description of reconstituting technology now becomes the workers themselves. The issue
then becomes, Who decides in what technologies society's energies and resources
should be in vested? This is a terrain which I think the owners of the means of
production are extremely unlikely to concede under capitalism or those in power in any
other hierarchical and authoritarian social order.
The Lucas Combine has not been content to rest at the point of
confrontation with management over redundancies and over the question of what products to
make. They have taken part in the establishment of a Centre for Alternative Industrial and
Technological Systems (CAITS) in association with North East London Polytechnic, with
funding from the Joseph Rowntree Trust. At CAITS they are beginning to address another of
the problems mentioned above deskilling. They are looking closely at the insides of
technologies and at the interface between the worker and the machine, and attempting to
ensure that the machine does not de-skill and mystify the labour process. Many new
technologies reverse the relationship between worker and tool so that the worker is merely
a servant or tender, doing what he or she is told by-the machine. The Lucas group are
pursuing a principle they call telechirics', literally hands at a
distance. The point is that if you want to have a machine which tightens nuts at a
distance or in a hostile environment, the worker performs a motion which is like
tightening a nut. That may seem silly, but the principle is fundamental that the
interface be worker-controlled, familiar, recognisable. The project is attempting to tease
apart the workers role and social usefulness on one hand, from control,
subordination and deskilling on the other. Combine this approach with the principle that
new technologies should not be constituted so as to produce redundancies without
compensating with new employment, and you have a socially responsible policy for research
and development.
What we are talking about here is the conversion of machines
fixed capital back into the social relations which they embody. In capitalism,
machines are designed to convert relations between people, and between people and raw
materials, into relations between things; that is a definition of reification
('thingification'). The design of technologies like the design of cities and houses
is the shaping of what can happen to people and things and in the interactions
between them, in what sorts of spaces and times. Technologies can be more or less
accessible, fixed, permissive. The relations between inputs, parts and processes and
outputs are the factors which the designers conceive and bring into being; the designs
constitute and objectify the relations, but the designers' tasks are, in
turn, constituted by the social relations of capitalism. The Lucas project aims to retain
control for the operator so that the machine is still a tool for a craftsperson rather
than having control fixed inaccessibly in the mystifying structure and logic of the
machine. By the same token, it is important that servicing and repairs should not be a
closed domain whereby out side service agencies breeze in, replace an expensive closed
box, and breeze out.
The project of reconstituting technologies requires, as a first step,
the demystification of the machine not in the abstract but a particular machine
to disassemble the social relations it embodies. Then comes the process an
evaluative and deeply political one of deciding what purposes one wants it to serve
and designing it accordingly. In our present arrangements this setting of goals comes from
above, from the designer's boss, who got his orders from further up the line, and so on.
The designer is not normally forbidden to originate projects, but is basically supposed to
operate nearer the 'hand' end of the separation of head and hand which is characteristic
of the authority system of modern industry. So it is a very important new departure to
reintroduce the setting of purposes into the design process.
The next step is to bring a wider community into this process At
present that relationship is so highly mediated as to;be relatively useless, or, rather,
what counts as 'useful' is arrived at by a process which is difficult to defend, given the
tricks advertisers get up to in trying to persuade us about what we need. The consumer
movement tries to improve on this highly biased mediation but is on the whole restricted
to product-testing and comparison and the identification of the rankest abuses, as Ralph
Nader has done, for example, with automobiles in America. At the other end of the scale we
find tobacco advertising and the cosmetics industry where, for example, shampoo, bubble
bath and washing-up liquid are the same thing, except for dilution with water, colouring,
perfume, packaging, and a pinch of salt to make the bath bubbles linger. The consumer
movement has not yet made the crucial move from monitoring technical standards to
initiating design and production. That part of the feedback loop is missing. The
initiation of knowledge, technologies and products is left to the initiative of
'individual' entrepreneurs, whether they be scientists, technologists or manufacturers or
all three at once (it's hard to stretch the idea of creative 'individuals' to vast
multinationals IBM, ICI, ITT, Unilever, Texas Instruments, Motorola).
I want to mention in passing a potentially useful sort of institution
for strengthening the weak side of the feedback loop. In Holland, 'science shops' have
been set up in various cities, where any individual or group can walk in off the street to
call for research on problems or new products. The shop acts as a clearing house and
brings the requests to the attention of researchers in science and technology. This scheme
is fraught with contradictions and potential for co-optation. But it has its progressive
moment and like the Lucas Stewards' Plan needs very careful consideration as
a possible area of transitional struggle for stimulating a new sense of initiative on the
part of the working class.
But there is a fundamental contradiction in the development of
microelectronic technology under capitalism. Economists point out that the entrepreneurial
control of 'wealth production' has no justification if it cannot maintain and increase the
availability of jobs. The new technology generates its profits by eliminating jobs and
giving greater control over those that remain. It does so with a rate of cycles of
technological innovation and risk of falling profit rates that justifies the direst
marxist predictions about the fate of economies geared to such fierce competition (Mandel,
Chapters 6 and 8). It is the triumph of exchange value and fixed capital
experienced by the working class as real subordination over the labour process. It
is also a genuine technological revolution on a par with steam power, the factory system
and the moving assembly line. But it is one in which the ratio of dead labour (machines)
to living labour is very high. This ratio, the organic composition of capital',
produces a form of Russian roulette in which only the most agile companies and economies
survive. Since in the long run profits can be derived only from living
labour, a stark prospect is ahead. The interests which always get subordinated in this
sort of risk taking are those of the workforce. The entrepreneurial control of wealth
production looks likely to lose what little justification it had, while a few firms and a
shrinking elite of affluent consumers will reap dramatic short-term benefits.
II. GENETIC ENGINEERING
Which brings me to the second example I want to discuss genetic
engineering. I'll let it jump the queue in front of artificial fertilisation and
implantation, because the role of capital is starker here. It is almost impossible to
exaggerate the potential benefits of genetic engineering. I've heard it said that the
patent on the basic system (an attenuated strain of the bacterium E. coli which can
survive only in a narrow band of 'safe' conditions but would perish outside it and so
couldn't run wild) is potentially the most lucrative in history. Nearly everything that is
now done in the chemical, pharmaceutical, energy and food industries could, in principle,
be done by a suitably altered biological system. There is scope for virtually unlimited
artificial protein, plastics, wall coverings, paper, building materials, drugs, fuels. Put
in its broadest terms, any thing that nature has produced by biochemical means we might
produce at our own discretion from simple materials. The sorcerer's apprentice has found
the philosophers stone; it cannot (as far as I know) turn base metals into gold, but
it can do the biological equivalent. This productive potential of genetic manipulation has
not received the publicity which has been given to the more filmic possibilities of
cloning Einsteins, Thatchers, 'The Boys From Brazil or the alphas, betas and gammas
of Brave New World. This possibility, of course, has drawn attention to the awesome
responsibilities of a true Prometheus making humans and other beasts to order, in addition
to humankind's existing creative powers and our difficulties in exercising them
responsibly.
It was a group of scientists who drew attention to the potential
dangers from genetic manipulation, e. g., rogue bacteria or viruses escaping down the sink
and into the water supply of a defenceless populace. Or worse governments
designing even more lethal infective agents than they have already in their chemical and
biological warfare research.
A remarkable and rapidly accelerating change has occurred since the
original alarm was sounded. The scientists met and deliberated and told the public that
they could, after all, handle the responsibility. But when the public continued to be
aroused and wanted to monitor and control genetic manipulation, the scientists took fright
and moved onto the offensive. One group of major American universities, normally in
receipt of very large grants from the US government, dubbed themselves the Friends
of DNA' and hired a Washington lobbyist. This representative of Harvard, Stanford,
Princeton and Washington Universities wanted to 'avoid setting a dangerous precedent for
demands for community involvement in other areas of university activity' (Dickson, Nature 20 April 1979, p. 664). And in the week before I drafted this essay there was an item
in the New Scientist under the marvellously positivistic headline, 'Scientific
Evidence Damns Control of Genetic Engineering', as though the criteria for control are
obviously to be generated from inside the lab and not by social priorities in the wider
community, taking due note of scientific evidence and opinion
'British scientists consider that restrictions imposed on many genetic
engineering experiments in the UK are too severe; they also believe that although the
Genetic Engineering Advisory Group (GMAG) provides ". . . a flexible contribution to
safe work in this area", it is sadly deficient in relevant scientific expertise.
These were the principal points made by the Association of University Teachers (AUT) when
it gave evidence last week to the House of Commons Select Committee on Science and
Technology.
The committee, which for the past two weeks has been taking
evasive and often blundering evidence from civil servants at the Department of Education
and Science and the Department of Health and Social Security, found itself facing a group
of assertive witnesses. The AUT contingent, clearly believing that as scientists, they,
unlike all previous witnesses, really knew what they were talking about, rarely waited to
be asked for their views their forthright presentation occasionally approached the
point of hectoring. '
But when challenged, the AUT representatives turned out to be very
unclear about guidelines in other countries, especially the USA, where the issue has been
most heatedly and publicly debated. Their authoritatively presented reactions seemed to
rely on impressions, conjectures and intuitions. Indeed, the columnists comment
ended up undermining the scientistic presumption of the headline:
'The AUT presentation illustrated clearly the dilemma that genetic
engineers find themselves in at the moment. They genuinely believe that the hazards
associated with genetic engineering are much less than was once conjectured. Although
there are some facts to back up this position, it is based mainly on intuition
the intuition may prove to have been sound, but so far the evidence is too slender
to substantiate it. The weakness of the scientists argument is exposed when they
suggest, as did the AUT witnesses last week, that more research needs to be done in order
to establish what the risks really are.'
But the point I most want to stress is about capital. A member of the
AUT delegation, B. W. Bainbridge, a medical geneticist, said that the UK is getting
out of step with the international scientific community over containment levels and that
scientists were likely to act accordingly.
"'Do you mean to say that scientists would move from one country
to another in order to escape restrictions on experiments?" asked Frank Hooley MP,
rising from his seat in indignation as he did so. "That doesn't seem very socially
responsible to me," he snapped. Bainbridge defended the scientific community by
arguing that "If a scientist believes hazards are out of line with controls imposed
on them, he would feel justified in going elsewhere; this is not socially
irresponsible."'
Scientific research and career capital are becoming as internationally
mobile as the assets of multinationals. Moving on from the threat of brain drain of
scientific capital to the role of money capital, I want to reflect on the fact that
genetic engineering has crossed the threshold and is becoming big business.
I am not claiming (as one might do in a long, abstruse analysis) that
science is here a mediation of the needs of capital. On the contrary, it's scientists
making capital out of science quite literally. Two firms have been set up by
scientists in California to exploit the commercial potential of genetic engineering and
other biochemical processes. One of them, Genentech (get it? genetic engineering
technology) has made human insulin. The other, Cetus Corporation, has been capitalised at
$45 million, of which $10.5 million came from Standard Oil of Indiana and $8 million from
National Distillers Corporation. The following British and European corporations have
invested in recombinant DNA research: ICI, Glaxo, Unilever, Hoechst UK, G. D. Searle (UK);
and at least three British university laboratories have important financial links with
industrial firms to do such research. Some leading British scientists belong to a research
consultancy collective, Biogene, set up to market their expertise.
In these circumstances, what are we to think when mandarin scientists
like Lord Todd in his Presidential Address to the Royal Society, argue that science should
have unrestricted right of search in nature and that the work of scientists should not be
subject to any ideological control: I am wholly opposed to any attempt
to regulate or control the direction of scientific enquiry and I believe that in saying so
I speak for the Royal Society'? This is the lovely traditional argument for academic
freedom in the liberal tradition. The claim for 'unrestricted right of search was
most eloquently made by John Tyndall in his Presidential Address to the British
Association in 1874. But his Belfast Address was a defence against religious
obscurantism, and many layers of mediation lay between science and government and science
and industry. That situation no longer prevails: almost the opposite is the case. Genetic
engineering has led inevitably to the setting up of firms whose interests are no more or
less ideological than those of a pharmaceutical company, i. e., 100% capitalist ideology.
The entrepreneurs are scientists, and they employ a number of Nobel Laureates in an
actively consultative capacity. The research, I should add, is not even for the purpose of
publication within the community of scientists. There are areas of the Cetus
plant which are high security, not just to avoid biological accidents but to prevent
industrial espionage. The owners do not even intend to patent certain processes, lest
their competitors gain access to them. The logic of profit is at the foundations of the
process of the research just as surely as it is in microprocessors research, where
research resources are concentrated on the components which are patentable.
I am not denying that genetic engineering could be a boon to humankind.
I think it is likely to be of enormous benefit, but I am very struck by the
scientists claim that they should be left to police their own house. I was about to
write that the commercial pressures are too great to allow this, but its not outside
commercial pressures impinging on a pure Martin Arrowsmith; its straight opportunism
on the part of scientific entrepreneurs. Less than a decade has elapsed since I saw the
French World War II underground hero and Nobel Prize winner, Jacques Monod, intone
portentously at the conference on The Social Impact of Modern Biology, that
there were some developments from molecular biology which were so worrying that
responsible scientists would voluntarily refrain from pursuing them. In the meantime the
autonomy of the Pasteur Institute, which he directed, was threatened: their independence
was based on commercial sales, and they could not produce and market enough vaccines and
other biomedical products to save the Institute from state control. More recently still,
Monod has died, and the very genetic engineering about which he made such an eloquent,
individualist, existentialist warning is proceeding apace at the Pasteur Institute.
Attempts to segregate the work in a secure bunker have failed as have attempts to get
genetic manipulation researchers too wear special badges. They did not want to be
sequestered or labelled lest it hurt their career prospects .
Similarly, it is not so long ago that Lord Rothschild advocated a
closer 'customer-contract' basis for the funding of scientific research. The cries which
answered him on behalf of academic freedom ring very hollow these days with the increasing
integration of science into industry. Indeed, it is the declared policy of British
granting agencies to give priority to projects geared to the needs of industry, while most
scientific and technological departments are clambering for industrial contracts. In this
context, the defence of academic freedom claims based on the separation of academic
work from the marketplace serve as rationalisations for the sort of free market
philosophy which is considered very right wing when it is advocated in the general
political arena by Sir Keith Joseph.
So what about controls? The debate is still going on, but as with the
introduction of microprocessors, the pressures and needs of capital to circulate and
expand are relentless. There was a brief period when the scientists policed themselves,
and a later one when as in Cambridge, Massachusetts local councils could
hold up the work until they were satisfied about its safety. Since then, however, there
has developed a general consensus that the dangers have been greatly exaggerated. Which
dangers? I have no informed reason to suppose that the dangers from a terrible viral or
bacterial plague are any greater than the molecular biologists assure us they are, i. e.,
that many are as safe as eating dinner, and that the risks involved in others are likely
to be amenable to assessment and control. The situation is reminiscent of that in nuclear
engineering and nuclear waste disposal experts differ and the general public has the
greatest difficulty in deciding whom if anyone to trust, much less what to
do about it. Their official representatives are not always reliable or entirely candid.
'Quantitative risk assessment', adapted from nuclear research and chemical engineering, is
a very impressive and reassuring method. Yet one cannot be totally confident about it in
the light of the recent documentary film on how hard it was for interested laypeople to
show that safety on water-cooled nuclear reactors was far from complete; they eventually
succeeded after a very long fight in which it was revealed that the government had
suppressed dire warnings from its own experts. (Since I wrote that, the Harrisburg
incident and various British leaks at nuclear plants have come to light. In the realm of
biological hazards, we should recall the smallpox outbreak at Birmingham University, where
the head of the lab as well as national and international bodies knew that standard
precautions were not being taken but had not closed the lab. As in the nuclear reactor
case, we might not know this unless a non-scientist had broken the official silence (in
this case Clive Jenkins, whose ASTMS members were at risk, leaked the Shooter Report on
the incident).
There is a crucial point about how economic pressures impinge, which is
exactly analogous to the threat of brain drain capital flight mentioned above. The likely
profits are so great that any country which lays down very stringent control criteria will
lose out to one which doesn't. These pressures already exist. At an ASTMS conference on
genetic engineering in October 1978, the Research Director of Hoechst (UK) called for the
abolition of the British control body, the Genetic Manipulation Advisory Group (GMAG). I
wrote that sentence into the second draft of this article. Since then, there has been a
cascade of reactions in Britain and America aimed at diminishing controls. The Royal
Society and Cogene (representing genetic engineering researchers) convened a conference
initially declared closed to the public and press to consider the removal of
compulsory controls (Tucker). The debate has been conducted in the rhetoric of academic
freedom. As one observer put it, 'During the past five years researchers throughout the
world, but particularly in the US, UK and parts of Europe, have become entangled in a
network of safety regulations, an experience which most saw as an unwarranted intrusion
into the sanctity of academic freedom (Lewin, New Scientist 5 April 1979, p.
3). The person who drew the longest and loudest applause at the conference said, 'There is
only one thing the public deserves, and that is the truth as we see it' (Lewin, NS 12 April 1979, p. 115).
Fine words, but there are at least two other sets of issues at work on
the question of regulation. The first is about power and the second is straightforwardly
commercial. As things now stand, the trade unions have a voice in GMAG. This means that
they are in the very unusual situation for scientific workers of having a say in what
research gets done. They gained a place on GMAG because of health and safety issues, but
once there they have real power. And the bosses don't like it. Sir Gordon Wolstenholme,
Chairman of GMAG for its first two years, recently wrote, 'Unions draw their strength from
fear, whether they wish to or not. If a labourer falls on a building site the consequences
are largely imaginable and predictable, and bad enough; but if there is the remotest
chance of injury from radiation or from a new species of organism then fear of the unknown
and of the insidious creates an impossible demand for no risk at all.
'Unions also see in their legitimate participation in matters of health
and safety at work a chance to extend their influence, perhaps to the point of control, on
decision-making in relation to scientific projects. Union representatives sometimes seek
to judge the scientific merit of proposals for research The research councils and
grant-giving foundations have a difficult enough job to do this by peer review. Neither
safety committees nor GMAG are constituted to undertake any such task' (Wolstenholme, p.
1037). Eliminate GMAG and you eliminate this toehold of working class power. (The parallel
to the threat posed by the Lucas Combine is a good one.)
Scientists are also quite candid about the commercial reasons for
diminishing controls. over genetic engineering. As Sydney Brenner mentioned in 1977, 'If
there are to be economic benefits coming out of this work, it would be a tragedy if the
United Kingdom was not there to reap some of these. . . We know this has happened in the
past. It would be a great pity if in the end this country found itself paying licensing
fees and royalties to other countries for (the) end products' (Wright, 'Molecular
Politics', p. 69). In the USA, companies are challenging key sections of the National
Institutes of Health guidelines, 'claiming that compliance under present procedures could
lead to the disclosure of proprietary information to potential competitors (Dickson, Nature 29 March 1979, p. 385). Cetus plans to hold back on any experiments for
which providing full details to NIH would, they feel, prejudice their proprietary rights.
Such companies argue that if the guidelines continue to be too stringent for the desired
level of commercial secrecy, they may go to other countries 'with less stringent
requirements. Already some US corporations with interests in recombinant DNA research are
supporting the activities of foreign companies' (p. 386). The Island of Dr. Moreau could
be Britain, Japan, New Zealand, Malta, Puerto Rico, Hong Kong, Hispanola. A Jean-Claude
Duvalier or a Somoza will find the prospects attractive; a cloning republic
could be much less prone to the vicissitudes of the weather than a banana republic.
If these be thought hysterical fantasies, recall the origins of such
regimes in the primary product needs of advanced countries and remember that new drugs are
tested in such countries before being marketed in the industrial nations (and are sold
there after being declared unsafe and/or restricted in the rich countries). Perhaps I
should also mention the Flixborough disaster, the result of repairs in one pipe in a
highly dangerous synthetic route designed to get round another firm's patent for a
precursor of nylon. It was recently reported that there are up to 5000 plants in Britain
where such a disaster might occur (Singer). Recall also Seveso: one escape of a chemical
whose level of deadly impurity, dioxin, was allowed to drift above the safe level (which
is zero). A large area was contaminated, and it was a long time before the public was told
of the danger. The number of malformed babies born in the area was two in 1974, the
explosion was in 1976, and the number of malformed babies born in 1978 was 157. As long as
the profit motive constitutes technologies, there can be no long-term safety. As things
now stand, the same person could (1) sit on the Royal Society committee currently
recommending relaxed guidelines for GMAG; (2) provide that committee with reassuring
probabilistic arguments for quantitative risk assessment; (3) head the lab most likely to
benefit from low or no restrictions; and (4) run at the front of the pack seeking the
basic patent for an attenuated organism for genetic engineering research and development.
In the City of London this sort of thing is called insider training'; in science it
is an example of breathtaking hubris or false consciousness cleverly disguised as
'unbiased advice'. J. R. Fryer is risibly wrong to claim that in scientific research
judgements are arrived at by many people who have neither financial nor political
bias in their decisions' (Guardian 28 March 1979).
III. SPARE PART SURGERY
If all of that seems far-fetched, I want to bring the argument even
closer to individual survival, to spare part surgery. The film 'Coma' is a thriller in
which an intrepid young woman doctor slowly discovers that unexplained comas among
low-risk surgical patients are being deliberately induced by surreptitiously adding carbon
monoxide to the anaesthetic mixture in a particular operating room. By doing research in
the computer and studying charts and the disposition of the patients, she eventually
traces them to a new federally-funded facility for long term patients, the Jefferson
Institute. This futuristic building contains many comatose patients suspended on wires
(thereby spared bedsores) in a scientifically controlled environment which minimises the
need for nursing care for people who might live indefinitely. It is a sort of
cost-conscious way of avoiding facing the question of euthanasia. But behind this facade
the heart of the mystery is a room with a word processor and visual display unit with the
beautifully chilling Elizabeth Ashley conducting an auction for a spare part heart,
kidney or liver among rich bidders in Zurich, Rome and Texas. The tissue
cross-matching is excellent in all three cases, so the bidding is brisk. It turns out that
the healthy specimens are selected, their tissues are typed, and they are either kept at
the Jefferson Institute until needed or specially ordered from the hospital. The heroine
had stumbled onto a clearing house for a world-wide market in human organs.
Aside from its brilliant plot, tension and suspense, the story is
particularly arresting, because there is nothing futuristic about it. All of the
procedures and technologies in the film are already in use except as far as I know
for their synthesis in a given institute supplied by the Chief of a major teaching
hospital. Indeed, Robin Cook, the author of the book on which the film is based is a
clinical instructor at the Harvard Medical School, and he added a note at the end. He
points out that the novel 'was conceived as an entertainment, but it is not science
fiction. 'Consider a classified advertisement that appeared in the San Gabriel
(California) Tribune, May 9, 1968, column 4: "NEED A TRANSPLANT? Man will sell
any portion of body for financial remuneration to person needing an operation. Write Box
1211-630, Corvina." The advertiser did not specify what organ, or even whose body
they were to come from.'
Dr. Robin Cook goes on to point out how intense the pressures are:
The larger problem, the danger, arises from the simple matter of scarcity. There are
thousands of people waiting for kidneys and corneas today. The reason that these two
organs are particularly coveted is because they have most frequently been transplanted
successfully. Thanks to dialysis machines, potential kidney recipients (some of
them. . . others are left to die because of shortages of dialysis machines, personnel, and
funds [remember the Lucas Combine's list of socially useful products?]) can be kept alive,
but their lives are far from normal. In many situations they border on the desperate, so
much so that kidney dialysis centres have reported a so-called "Holiday
Syndrome". What that means is that when a holiday weekend approaches, the patients'
spirits rise as they anticipate the rush of auto accidents and the victims who may supply
the eagerly awaited and desperately needed organs.'
Why not eliminate the chanciness? Dont forget that poor people
and drug addicts in major US cities already sell blood, as do peasants in many of the
worlds poor countries. Why not a kidney, a cornea, or even purpose-reared,
genetically controlled stocks on the shelf' in Taiwan or South Korea where the
labour intensive part of microprocessor etching gets done?
Dr Cooks comment once again makes the point about the
hopelessness of facing such issues at the point of application of new technologies rather
than at the point of origination: The problem of organ scarcity for transplantation
represents only one flagrant example of the failure of society in general and medicine in
particular to anticipate the social, legal and ethical ramifications of a technological
innovation. For some inexplicable reason, society waits to the very end before creating
appropriate policy to pick up the pieces and make sense out of chaos. And in the instance
of transplantation, failure to recognize mounting problems and enact appropriate solutions
will certainly open Pandora's box, with its countless unconscionable possibilities: the
Stark et al. of my fiction [his organ entrepreneurs] suggest only possible,
execrable aberrations.
Once again, the technology is being applied and is part way toward
being exploited by the needs of capital before the question of a genuinely democratic
social process is mooted. Indeed, fiction and popularisation are becoming ways for
troubled doctors to make the public more aware of what may happen and what is already
happening. Michael Crichton's fictional The Terminal Man is based on an actual case
of implantation of electrodes to control behaviour. [Crighton also directed the film
Coma and went on to create Jurassic Park (a warning about genetic
engineering) and ER (a tv series about high-tech medicine).] The case went
badly wrong and became the basis for a lawsuit twelve years after the operation
(Patterson). In the introduction to his fictional version of events, Crichton laments that
publicity about 'mind control', as well as attempts by scientists to get it discussed, has
produced little effect. His story involves speculation about the creation of electrical
stimulation addicts who could get their pleasure centre' electrodes implanted in
clinics in Mexico and the Bahamas (pp. 85-81). This may seem very far-fetched indeed until
one reads about the research that the CIA has already undertaken over many years as part
of Operation Mind Control (Bowart). The combination of forms of behavioural control
and reshaping people has even become the object of a book by the Cassandra of commercial
menace, Vance Packard, who began with the Hidden Persuaders and now warns of The
People Shapers. But in spite of these warnings, the pressures of capital to circulate,
expand and control are relentless.
Spare part surgery, like microprocessors and genetic engineering, is
constituted by the highly mediated social processes of the medical industry, one which
cost Americans $180 thousand million dollars last year (i. e., 5% of the world's
population spend the equivalent of the gross national product of 20% of the worlds
population on this one item alone) and which is Britain's second largest employer. Even
granting that this has something to do with the improved alleviation of human suffering,
soaring costs surely have more to do with profits in the following industries:
construction, medical equipment, insurance, drugs, doctors. The other main constitutive
factor is medical research careerism. These incentives certainly do create benefits for
humanity, but do so in a socio-economic framework which is unlikely to complete the loop
which might reconstitute medical technology according to different priorities. Failures of
heart, kidney, liver and cornea are, of course, common, but in many parts of the world
people dont even live long enough to be in danger of inconvenience from diseases of
these organs.
IV. ARTIFICIAL FERTILISATION & IMPLANTATION
This brings me to my last example, in vitro fertilisation and
surgical implantation of human ova. I can think of few news items which have captured the
sympathetic imagination of the public as much as the birth of a healthy girl, Louise, to
Mr. and Mrs. Brown in 1978. That event gave hope to many women and men who had been unable
to conceive for all sorts of reasons. Among them are blocked fallopian tubes from
salpingitis caused by infection, especially in the poignant case of back-street abortion.
Others have blocked tubes from voluntary sterilisation, later regretted. And so on. Aside
from the need to improve the success rate and eliminate other problems, it is difficult to
imagine a more welcome medical development.
But the same conference which heard Monod warning of the dangers of
molecular biology was addressed by Dr. R. G. Edwards, the physiologist who worked with Dr.
Patrick Steptoe and who was reflecting on the social and ethical consequences of the
then as yet unsuccessful procedures, and calling for an organisation
to provide informed opinion and so assist decision-making' around them. Once again, a new
technology has been applied with no adequate social processes to assess and regulate it,
over which no genuinely public priority decisions took place at its inception.
My argument has moved from the most to the least obviously commercial
new discovery. Surely this one is not open to co-optation by capital, at least in a
country with a National Health Service available to all? (Since I wrote that sentence
there has been announced the opening next January of a test tube baby clinic
in the context of private medicine in Norfolk, Virginia Guardian 4 March
1979. It should also be stressed that the research and the new clinic of Steptoe and
Edwards are largely privately financed. )
Maybe this technology is not open to co-option by capital, but consider
the following scenario: A rich woman, who doesn't want to put her figure at risk or
interrupt her busy social life and/or career, decides to have a child. She hires another
woman to act as host to an egg taken from her ovary, fertilised by sperm taken from her
chosen partner (or AID) and implanted in the host woman's uterus. Nine months later the
baby is delivered and the host paid off or kept on as a wet nurse. She might even be
allowed to raise her own (genetic) child in the family while employed as a servant.
Implausible? There has already been a case in Britain of a man hiring a woman to have his
child; the mother reneged and succeeded in keeping the child in a court case. Now transfer
the setting to South Africa with the host plucked from a Bantustan to Johannesburg,
allowed to bring her own children, all to be well-fed and housed throughout the pregnancy
with a white embryo and perhaps afterwards. Surely there will be clinics ready to provide
these services to those who can afford them.
Capital can intervene between a foetus and its mother just as it can
between a surgeon and his operation, a typesetter and his craft, a secretary and her boss,
a genetic engineer and his E. coli. I don't see any long-term way of preventing the
constitution of these new technologies according to the purposes of capital and capital's
definitions of human needs; nor do I see any way of reconstituting them (and others to
come) unless and until progress has its projects set by social needs which are not
determined by the purposes of money or research career capital (itself a mediation of
money capital). Modern science, technology and medicine are usually seen as the jewels in
the crown of the capitalist mode of production. Yet the technologies which are now coming
to the general public's attention so deeply affect our jobs, health and survival that we
may at last learn that knowledge science and technology are social products
which necessarily take sides. The crowning glories are not above the battle for
anti-authoritarian socialism but at the heart of it, seminal. It is not just the grown up
forces of production human and mechanical which matter. The struggle has to
occur over the genesis, the coding of the eggs and sperms which make up all sorts of
technical creations soon to include workers and consumers as well.
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This paper was presented to the Annual Conference of Socialist
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Socialism, Leeds University 13-16 July 1979. Conference papers, pp. 119-28.
Copyright: The Author
Address for correspondence: 26 Freegrove Road, London N7 9RQ
robert@rmy1.demon.co.uk
10892 words
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