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- <text id=89TT3176>
- <title>
- Dec. 04, 1989: Profile:Jeremy Rifkin
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Dec. 04, 1989 Women Face The '90s
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 102
- The Most Hated Man In Science
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>To some "the Abominable No Man," gadfly Jeremy Rifkin warns of
- the dangers of uncontrolled experiments with new technologies
- </p>
- <p>By Dick Thompson
- </p>
- <p> The nation's foremost opponent of environmental neglect and
- genetic engineering is waving a $20 bill as he makes a bet. The
- scene happens to be a meeting of the Humane Society in Houston,
- but the wager, which is part of his script, could just as easily
- be offered to a gathering of born-again environmentalists in
- Aspen, Colo.; at the Los Angeles home of TV producer Norman
- Lear; or on a college campus. Jeremy Rifkin bets that no one can
- answer this question: "What value has emerged in the past 100
- years as our most dominant value, a value that is the key to our
- science?"
- </p>
- <p> He rarely loses, not because the answer is so obscure but
- because it's so obvious. At an easel, he writes his answer,
- leaving the word to hang like a biohazard warning sign:
- EFFICIENCY. "Everything is efficient," he says. "We're so skewed
- toward efficiency that we've lost our sense of humanity. What
- we need to do is to bring back a sense of the sacred."
- </p>
- <p> Rifkin's performance, which he delivers on average 90 times
- a year, is a mixture of Jimmy Swaggart, Phil Donahue and Werner
- Erhard. Twenty years of teaching, preaching and raising
- consciences--some would call it rabble-rousing--have refined
- this show to the point that it has a slick, thoroughly
- professional sheen. Rifkin moves through an audience as if it
- were his private party, talking, interviewing, questioning and,
- occasionally but ever so kindly, embarrassing. He will perform
- for 30 minutes or eight hours, depending on the contract. His
- basic sermon is an attack on "the Boys," as he calls Francis
- Bacon, Rene Descartes, Isaac Newton, John Locke and other
- architects of efficiency. And the Boys' great sin? To have
- created an atmosphere that allows scientists to impose untested
- new technologies on society without considering their broader
- implications. Says Rifkin: "Faster is not necessarily better."
- </p>
- <p> It's a wonderful performance, but in the sour view of many
- scientists, it is largely flimflam. To them, Rifkin is a
- Luddite, whose opposition to DNA research is based on skewed
- science and misplaced mystical zeal. Geneticist Norton Zinder
- of New York City's Rockefeller University calls him a "fool" and
- a "demagogue." In a scathing 1984 review of Algeny, one of
- Rifkin's nine books, Harvard's Stephen Jay Gould wrote that it
- was "a cleverly constructed tract of anti-intellectual
- propaganda masquerading as scholarship...I don't think I
- have ever read a shoddier work."
- </p>
- <p> To Rifkin, such criticism is merely evidence that he is on
- the right track. "My job," he says, "is to point out some of
- the problems that might arise with new technologies. Scientists
- should show us how these new technologies work. Then society,
- not scientists, should decide if it wants to use them.
- Scientists are not gods; they're just technicians. They're just
- human beings, with all the good and bad intentions of everyone
- else. If you criticize them at all, you're stopping the drive
- toward utopia. But there has to be both sides."
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, some scientists reluctantly allow that Rifkin
- does ask important questions about the ethical, economic and
- social implications of the new technologies, as indeed he does.
- The problem is that Rifkin frequently presents his case in such
- a shrill and occasionally unscrupulous manner that in the
- debates he hopes to encourage, fear and anger frequently replace
- information and reasoned judgment. As a result, the message is
- too easily discarded with the messenger. Says W. French
- Anderson, a gene-therapy researcher at the National Institutes
- of Health (and a Rifkin target): "In private, he and I agree
- almost exactly. The difference is that Jeremy is a professional
- activist, and he says and does whatever he needs to do to draw
- attention to his position."
- </p>
- <p> In the field of public policy, no one is better than Rifkin
- in the martial arts of social activism: lawsuits, petitions,
- debates, lectures and media manipulations. Each year the three
- attorneys on the staff of his Washington-based Foundation on
- Economic Trends file about six lawsuits and threaten more. Among
- other causes, he has battled surrogate motherhood, animal
- patenting and agricultural experiments involving open-air use
- of genetically altered bacteria. He tried to delay the launch
- of the Galileo spacecraft by warning that a shuttle explosion
- could rain plutonium on Florida. In Wisconsin he has helped
- start a boycott of dairy products from cows that are being fed
- a genetically engineered growth hormone. Indeed, Rifkin's
- success at blocking research projects led one biotech newsletter
- to label him "the Abominable No Man."
- </p>
- <p> In fact, Rifkin probably loses in court more often than he
- wins. Nonetheless, he has forced the Government to establish
- regulatory pathways for some genetically engineered products
- and clarify practices for others. In the world of technological
- regulation, says NIH researcher Anderson with grudging respect,
- "it takes some sort of catastrophe or threatened catastrophe to
- get things to happen, and Jeremy is constantly threatening
- catastrophe."
- </p>
- <p> A self-described economist, philosopher and teacher, Rifkin
- grew up in Chicago, the son of a plastic-bag manufacturer. It
- was in the late 1960s that Rifkin--then a student at the
- Wharton School of Finance, where he was locally famed as both
- party animal and class president--decided to become a
- professional protester. His conversion to the antiwar movement
- wasn't triggered by emotionalism or peer pressure. He immersed
- himself in the history of Viet Nam and emerged convinced that
- America's leaders were dangerously ignorant about Southeast
- Asia. Did it strike him as odd that he claimed to be better
- informed than the President? "Yeah," says Rifkin, "I always
- thought that was weird." Then as now he rarely doubted that he
- was right.
- </p>
- <p> Rifkin helped organize demonstrations at the U.N. and the
- Pentagon, and haunted bars near military bases to find soldiers
- who would testify about U.S. crimes. After the war Rifkin worked
- in Harlem as a VISTA volunteer and in 1976 organized a
- so-called People's Bicentennial to celebrate what he considered
- the real national virtue: not patriotism but civil disobedience.
- </p>
- <p> By the early 1980s, a new Rifkin cause was aborning. The
- Reagan Administration had begun to unshackle American industry
- by dismantling regulatory standards and environmental
- protections. At the same time, researchers were refining the new
- tools of molecular biology, which enabled them to redraw the
- blueprints of life. Genetic-engineering companies were launched
- in this era of deregulation with glowing prospectuses that
- promised both medical elixirs and vast profits from applications
- of the new technology.
- </p>
- <p> Rifkin, who has no real science background, has been deeply
- distrustful of scientists since he visited Dachau in the late
- 1960s. "The Nazis could have just slaughtered people, but look
- at the manner in which they did it," he says. "It was detached,
- rational. It was scientific. The Holocaust represents the dark
- side of the modern age."
- </p>
- <p> Is genetic engineering equivalent to mass murder? Not even
- Rifkin goes that far, but he does argue that the technology
- represents a grave danger, both environmentally and
- philosophically. He fears that society, inspired by science,
- will take a diminished view of human life as no more than a few
- strands of DNA. "This is a new technology that goes to the heart
- of our values," he says. "The end result could very well be a
- brave new world, very damaging to our human spirit." Says Andrew
- Kimbrell, an attorney for Rifkin's foundation: "Everything
- that's living has a meaning and is owed reverence and care.
- There must be a balance between efficiency and empathy. We see
- ourselves as helping to provide that balance."
- </p>
- <p> One of Rifkin's first assaults on DNA technology was
- directed at Steven Lindow, a plant pathologist for the
- University of California, Berkeley. Lindow had discovered a way
- of snipping a particular gene from bacteria so that the
- redesigned microbes resisted frost formation down to 24 degrees
- F. Theoretically, crops sprayed with the microbes could be
- protected from cold snaps. In 1983 Lindow got permission from
- the NIH to test his bugs, which he called ice-minus, on a small
- plot of potatoes in Northern California.
- </p>
- <p> Lindow's bugs were to be the first genetically altered
- bacteria released into the environment. Although there was
- strong evidence that the microbes were benign, biologists at
- Berkeley and the NIH had failed to consider fully the
- experiment's environmental impact. The oversight allowed Rifkin
- to sue to block the experiment. The courts agreed, and, thanks
- to Rifkin, testing was postponed for three years while the NIH,
- the Department of Agriculture and the Environmental Protection
- Agency struggled to draw up rules under which genetically
- engineered products would move from the lab to the field.
- </p>
- <p> Outside the courtroom, Rifkin warned that the widespread
- use of ice-minus would lead to all sorts of natural disasters,
- including the disruption of rainfall patterns. (Lindow and his
- backers say this is hogwash. They note that the ice-fighting
- bacteria, developed into a commercial product called Frostban,
- was sprayed on a test field in 1987. As they predicted, it
- proved harmless.) Typically, Rifkin would plunge into a
- scientific setting, armed with papers from dissident
- researchers, and warn about the potentially catastrophic
- consequences of inadequately regulated research. Says geneticist
- Zinder: "The accusations are made simply, with simple words. But
- the proof is very sophisticated and often difficult to grasp."
- Rifkin acknowledges that he occasionally uses scare tactics. But
- he claims that the scientific establishment is equally guilty,
- both of excessive rhetoric and of usurping policy decisions that
- need more debate than they are being given.
- </p>
- <p> "Is there any role for the public in ethical, social or
- environmental discussions of the science and technology being
- placed into our culture?" Rifkin asks. "Is the proper role of
- the public only to applaud the claims of scientists? Is that our
- only role? Or is our role to be informed and engaged in the
- process? My impression is that the scientific establishment has
- had a free ride until recently. Even with the mistakes that we
- might make, we're opening up the process of debate around some
- of the most important things in our lives. We're opening up
- science and technology to scrutiny beyond the scientific
- establishment. If I do nothing else, that is a major plus for
- everybody."
- </p>
- <p> Rifkin is surely justified in seeking precise regulations
- for genetic research, to protect the health of the individual
- and the environment. And his call for closer public scrutiny of
- scientific deliberations is laudable, although perhaps
- impractical in a society where so few laymen have enough
- technical knowledge to comprehend what the experts are really
- doing. But there is good reason to question the fairness of
- Rifkin's angriest assaults on scientists as mad magicians and
- unethical disciples of Dr. Strangelove. When Rifkin is most
- successful, he may slow basic research, delay a medical advance,
- perhaps even damage the economy. Still, it is a small price to
- pay for the prudent utilization of the powers of science. "It's
- critical for these things to be done," he says of his work.
- "Nothing's going to stop it. They'll have to shoot me. They're
- going to have to deal with me for the next 30 years."
- </p>
- <p> Maybe longer. Rifkin, 44, enjoys most the college lectures
- that often have him flying two to four times a week. One recent
- swing took the Rifkin show to Alfred University in upstate New
- York. As usual, he charmed and joked, provoked and pleased. He
- lectured the freshman class about the need for activism at a
- time of environmental crisis brought about by misguided values.
- Afterward, dozens of students remained in the gymnasium to form
- an environmental action group. Leaving the hall, Rifkin looked
- back over his shoulder and said to a companion that these were
- the children of the antiwar generation. If they do eventually
- become Rifkin's political heirs, some would argue, the nation
- might benefit if they could deliver their messages with a bit
- more intellectual light, and maybe with a touch less partisan
- heat.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-