The American Interest
 
 
 
February 14, 2013
 
"Team  Science" Takes on Its Left-Wing DoubtersA  Conversation with Alex 
Berezow
 
Adam Garfinkle: What are you and your co-author, Hank  Campbell, trying to 
accomplish in your new book?  
Alex Berezow: We’re both science writers, and we’ve noticed  that the 
media likes to paint a narrative of the Republican “war on science.” We  do 
agree that conservatives get a few issues wrong, most notably the members of  
the religious right-wing who reject evolution, or those who view global 
warming  or climate change as some big hoax or conspiracy. However, we do 
challenge the  idea that progressivism is the “pro-science” ideology, or that 
the 
Democratic  Party is “pro-science.” We take this opportunity to 
systematically dismantle  many of their pet positions, from their opposition to 
nuclear 
power, to  genetically modified foods, and a whole host of issues where we 
take them to  task. 
AG: I found it interesting that you go to some pains to  distinguish 
between liberal, progressive, and Democrat, on the one hand, and  libertarian 
and 
conservative, on the other. You use a two-by-two matrix, an  adaptation of 
David Nolan’s device, which is necessary but not sufficient to lay  out the 
differences. You’re basically saying that progressives not only tend  toward 
economic authoritarianism, and liberals do, too, but also toward social  
authoritarianism. I think that’s pretty accurate. 
AB: That’s right. In some ways, both conservatives and  progressives have 
an authoritarian streak. Conservatives want to tell people  what to do in the 
bedroom or what they can’t put into their bodies. But  progressives want to 
tell you how to eat, how much salt you should be allowed to  put in your 
food, whether you can smoke or have trans-fats in your Oreo cookies.  I think 
there’s a deep irony in how conservatives and progressives are similar  in 
this way. 
AG: You point out that a lot of people in the Obama  Administration, if not 
the President himself, are pushing various progressivist  agendas. You seem 
to be saying that there are as many anti-science troublemakers  on the Left 
as there are on the Right. Is that really true? Are there as many,  and do 
they have as much influence? 
AB: Well, among the political leadership, you’ll see more  anti-science 
Republicans in high-profile positions than Democrats. However—and  this is a 
very big “however”— there can be influential ideologies that don’t  come 
from Washington. Look at the anti-vaccine movement. You see it on both ends  of 
the political spectrum: Libertarians say the government shouldn’t be able 
to  force anyone to vaccinate; others, like Michele Bachmann, think vaccines 
can  cause mental disability; and people on the far Left who prefer 
homeopathic  medicine object because vaccines are unnatural. High-profile 
non-politicians on  the Left endorsed this, too, notably Bill Maher and Robert 
F. 
Kennedy, Jr., who  wrote pieces in Rolling Stone and Salon excoriating the  
pro-vaccine movement, saying vaccines cause autism. Maher’s not a politician,  
but he’s a very influential leader in progressive culture. 
Think of Whole Foods. They sell this idea that their food is healthier, 
more  nutritious, sustainable and better for the environment. None of that is 
true.  The point is that politicians don’t necessarily dictate beliefs. Memes 
and  ideology pervade the culture, and can become policy. 
AG: Early on in the book you talk about the precautionary  principle, which 
holds that technical innovations, whether in bioscience or  agriculture, 
must be determined to “do no harm” before they can be approved. As  you point 
out, this is very anti-innovative and ultimately regressive. 
It seems to me that if you look at the recent history of science, there’s  
good reason to take the precautionary principle seriously. For example, 
people  in suburban neighborhoods living amid clouds of DDT and thinking there 
was no  harm in it. You sort of excoriated Rachel Carson for The Silent 
Spring,  and there again, though her book may have been based on bad science, 
she 
was  trying to get people to think about things in a different way. People 
once  thought that cigarette smoking was healthy. There were ads in Life  
magazine during the 1950s that feature famous actresses promoting the health  
benefits of smoking. We didn’t even know that cleaning out the water in the  
1930s and 40s would produce a polio epidemic ten years later. So, there are 
a  lot of things we don’t know about science, and there are good reasons to 
pay  some respect to the precautionary principle. 
AB: We don’t make the case for throwing out precaution. We  like the idea 
of having a regulatory bureaucracy to make sure our products are  safe. And 
for the most part, they do. Take the example of genetically modified  crops. 
Products have to make it past certain bureaucratic obstacles and earn  some 
sort of FDA approval in order to make it to market. The policy is called  “
substantial equivalence.” If the modified food can be shown to be essentially 
 the same as the non-modified food, the FDA chooses not to regulate it. But 
to  plant it in the first place, you need to get permission from the USDA 
and the  EPA. These are not insignificant hurdles, and I think having the 
basic safety  check in place is a good thing. We’re not arguing to just get rid 
of that. 
Rather, we’re going after the principle that until you can prove something 
is  safe, it can’t possibly be marketed. We see that as not only inherently  
anti-innovative, but also anti-scientific. We can prove that a certain 
chemical  causes cancer, but we can’t prove that a chemical is safe—it’s far 
too  open-ended to be a scientific question. 
I agree with you that Rachel Carson brought about a change in mindset. Of  
course we couldn’t spray pesticides willy-nilly all around the countryside 
and  expect no harm to come from that. We brought her up because she went 
about this  in a very unscientific way. 
AG: But no one would have read the book if it had been  perfectly 
scientific. 
AB: Right, but as someone who has training in science, I am  a little 
offended by someone who was willing to twist the science to create  political 
propaganda. Scientists don’t talk like that; we don’t sensationalize.  We look 
at the pros and cons and make a reasonable decision from there. Anyone  who 
tries to hype things up upsets me, and that’s why we criticize her in the  
book. 
AG: Wherever there are tradeoffs, wherever things are  slightly ambiguous, 
which is almost all the time in a political system, you’re  going to get 
people trying to manipulate both sides of the bell-shaped curve of  ambiguity. 
That’s just the way life is. Some of your examples of this show that  you 
take the precautionary principle seriously yourself. Farmers feeding  
antibiotics to animals, for instance. They do this not just to protect them but 
 
also to fatten them up. 
AB: Even doing it to protect them is a bad idea. 
AG: Right, so you’re not against sensible regulation, but  you show how, 
time after time, politics trumps “team science”, as you call it.  For 
example, you discuss how the FDA wanted to do the right thing—for instance,  
banning certain antibiotics from being fed to animals—but were stopped by the  
pharmaceutical companies that profit from selling the drugs, and the dairy and  
cattle people that profit from fattening up livestock. So you point to 
various  examples of corporate or plutocratic influence pushing politics in a 
direction  team science doesn’t like. 
That being so, it seems to me that you have to trust agribusiness quite a 
lot  to say that there aren’t chemical pollutants that can be scientifically 
proven  dangerous, though we might not yet know the dangers for a variety of 
reasons. I  agree with you that organic food might not be more nutritious, 
but I do think it  might prove in the long run to be safer. 
AB: First, I trust agribusiness, not because I believe in  business blindly 
but because it is part of the scientific community. If  agribusiness is 
trying to pull the wool over the eyes of the scientific  community and is doing 
something unsafe, eventually it won’t get away with it.  Other scientists 
in academia or in government bureaucracies will catch on.  That’s partially 
what happened with DDT after Rachel Carson came along. The  hammer came down 
on Monsanto after scientists raised the alarm. I trust science  in general, 
and that includes industry scientists. My mentor worked for  Bristol-Meyers 
Squibb for twenty years, and I considered going into industry,  myself. 
As for organic foods, a new meta-analysis came out showing that they do 
have  fewer pesticides than conventional foods, but both meet the FDA’s 
threshold for  safety. So to say that organic food is safe is sort of like 
saying 
that an SUV  is safer than a sedan. Meanwhile, a new Stanford study, a 
forty-year  meta-analysis, showed that there’s no significant difference in 
nutritional  value. 
AG: Well, at least when it comes to feeding infants and  small children, it 
might be reasonable to be more concerned with the marginal  difference 
between organic and conventional foods. As I said, there are things  science 
hasn
’t discovered yet. 
One of the things that’s really fascinating about the intersection between  
culture and science is what scientists choose to study, and which become 
popular  fields. Improvements in scientific methodology and instrumentation 
have really  widened the options, but the various funding mechanisms drive 
scientists into  researching some problems more than others. So there are many 
things we don’t  know much about, because we don’t study them until they 
bite us in the ass. 
AB: There is definitely a bias toward medical application,  and there was a 
time after 9/11 and after the anthrax attacks when if you could  tie your 
paper into bioterrorism you’d have a much easier time getting funding.  So 
yes, we always need to be investing in basic research, because we never know  
what will come out of that. 
A perfect example is the discovery of a bacterium that lives in hot springs 
 in Yellowstone Park, called Thermus aquaticus. The enzyme that  replicates 
its DNA is now one of the primary enzymes used in all molecular  biology 
for PCR—polymerase chain reaction. It’s also one of the main enzymes  used in 
gene sequencing. That came from basic research, from just sticking a  
finger in a lake to see what was there. That led to the genetics revolution. 
AG: There’s a lot of fortuity in science. A lot of people  have the 
view­ that first there’s a scientific breakthrough, and then it’s  extended 
into some more specific understanding of natural forces. And then come  
engineers and technologists who create applications for it. Just as often, if  
not 
more often, it works the other way around. 
AB: There are researchers who stumble onto something  unexpected, and then 
boom—they’re off into the biotech sector to start a new  company. 
AG: The point of this is that all the good scientists I’ve  ever met are 
humble people. They know how much they don’t know. We don’t know  enough, 
really, to make categorical pronouncements about what’s safe or isn’t  safe. 
AB: That’s why scientists will say, “We think it’s like  this, at this time
” or “the evidence seems to be pointing in this direction.”  That’s not 
how politicians talk. They say, “This is going to kill you!” 
AG: In the book you try to identify the essence of the  progressive idea, 
and you have four criteria. One is the notion that everything  natural is 
good; everything unnatural is bad. 
AB: That’s kind of the root of the organic food  movement. 
AG: Another criterion is the relativist idea that a  scientist’s view is 
worth no more or less than anyone else’s on a given subject.  That seems to 
contradict the insistence of progressives that theirs is the party  of 
science. How can you invoke the authority of science and at the same time  
relativize it? 
AB: I would love to see a poll that examines whether  liberals or 
progressives are more likely to use alternative medicine. It’s  interesting 
because 
Western medicine has a pretty solid, proven track record. We  do 
evidence-based medicine, we find disease, we use Koch’s postulates, we see  
what causes 
the disease and we create a vaccine. That’s how small pox was  eliminated. 
Alternative medicine practitioners aren’t interested in evidence.  They’re 
more interested in how the person feels after treatment. They’ll say  that 
Western medicine offers one way of looking at a problem, but there’s also  
acupuncture, and hot rocks and herbal tea, or crystal pyramids. That’s an  
example of what we mean by “scientific relativism.” We see that as very  
dangerous. 
AG: A long time ago one of my professors was fond of the  phrase “uninvited 
guests.” Up until the 1950s, Americans and Western Europeans  were Whigs in 
how they thought about moral progress and material progress  walking in 
lockstep. No one thought much about the downsides of technology. But  then, all 
of a sudden, we have the “uninvited guests”: the DDT phenomenon,  
pollution, environmental degradation, the tragedy of the commons. I think the  
authority of science began to take a licking at that time. As you point out, by 
 
now it has gone way too far. It’s one thing to be humble, to say that 
science  doesn’t know everything, that it’s selective in its attention—fine. 
But 
to say  that crystal pyramids are as good as going to a cardiologist—you’d 
have to be a  nutbag to think like that. 
AB: In the last chapter of our book we list the 12 main  issues facing 
science policy in America. Regarding the uninvited guest, we ask  what kinds of 
things we can foresee that might be problematic. One of these  concerns 
bioethical implications. We could possibly clone human beings, for  example. Is 
that something we want to do? 
AG: Did you hear about the scientist at Kyoto University who  recently 
created a viable mouse egg out of stem cells, which then produced  mice? 
AB: Another good example. What happens when you take human  embryonic stem 
cells and inject them into a non-primate blastocyst? That’s a  legitimate 
scientific question. Do we want to do it? I’m not one to get my  philosophy 
from movies, but I do like the quote from Jeff Goldblum’s character  in 
Jurassic Park: “Your scientists were so preoccupied with whether or  not they 
could, they didn’t stop to think if they should.” 
AG: Well, that’s the precautionary principle again—but this  time in the 
philosophically sound sense of the phrase. 
AB: We also talk about technical ethical problems. We will  soon have the 
technology to sequence the genomes of every person on the planet.  Should we? 
Should we sequence the genomes of unborn children so that we can  abort 
them if they’re not perfect genetically? Facebook has given us the ability  to 
spy on millions of people. 
AG: There’s also the grey area rapidly emerging between  medical treatment 
and enhancement.  
AB: Right. Most people would probably say it’s okay to fix a  gene in utero 
that would cause cystic fibrosis. But what if a parent doesn’t  want the 
child to have blue eyes? 
AG: Yes, and it’s a slippery slope from legitimate  diagnostic and 
interventionist, almost cosmetic, fixes. The line between those  things is dim 
and 
getting dimmer. That’s troubling. 
AB: In chapter 12 we discuss the subject of corporations  patenting human 
genes. It’s an unresolved issue that needs further discussion.  You could 
write a whole book just on that. I don’t know where I come down on  this. I 
understand the need for intellectual property—without it I couldn’t have  
written this book. At the same time, science is a little bit different. It 
needs 
 to be more open. People need to have access to information that’s not  
proprietary, and I don’t know how to put a balance between those two. That’s  
something, I guarantee, that will occupy the courts for the next twenty or  
thirty years. 
AG: I think that American culture leads us to be too  cavalier. We can 
invent something, market and sell it, and always think about  the consequences 
later. There’s only been one example in American history when  we didn’t do 
that. That was in 1946, when the Atomic Energy Committee was  founded. Some 
people, apparently, thought nuclear energy wasn’t something we  should just 
let the market handle. I think that biotechnology today is as  portentous, 
for good or for evil, as nuclear energy was then. I think we need  some kind 
of institution to at least collect statistics about who is doing what  in 
this field. We don’t even have a database. 
AB: I would disagree in that biotechnology is very  difficult. In graduate 
school I gave a presentation on bioterrorism, and at the  time I took the 
viewpoint that if a terrorist gets a hold of a biological weapon  and modifies 
it to be deadly, we’d be in a world of hurt. But when it comes to  
modifying pathogens, nature has already done it for us. The bubonic plague,  
which 
wiped out a third of Europe’s population, is resistant to a couple of  
antibiotics, but not all of them. It depletes the body of iron; it can mask its 
 
outer membrane so that the body’s immune system can’t even see that it’s 
there.  And if you inhaled it, it could kill you within 24 hours. 
Smallpox wiped out 500 million people in the 20th century alone.  And we 
won the fight with our vaccination program. So I’m now less concerned  about 
someone getting a bug and modifying it when mother nature has shown that  she 
can do this far more efficiently than we can. 
AG: I’m not as sanguine about this as you are. There’s a  small 
probability it would happen, but if it did it would be truly  calamitous. 
AB: I am more concerned about someone finding a bug that has  been 
sequestered—say, smallpox—and then releasing it. But that’s not what  
biotechnology 
is. 
AG: That’s true, but I think that when people worry about  weapons 
proliferation in conjunction with terrorism people almost always talk  about 
nuclear 
weapons. But those are far more difficult to build, more  expensive, harder 
to conceal and transport. Biotech, on the other hand, makes  weapons that 
are much easier to conceal and deliver. 
AB: I don’t take that perspective, though I did at one time.  I’ve been 
convinced the other way around on this. The nastiest, deadliest bugs  we can 
imagine have already been invented by mother nature. If someone gets a  hold 
of one of those and releases it, that’s a problem. But the idea that  
someone can be more clever than billions of years of evolution? I’m not buying  
it. 
AG: To move to one last question, there have been several  different 
structures devised over the years for conveying science advice to the  
President 
and the Executive Branch. A variety of advisory panels have been  created and 
disbanded, and different Presidents have used them in different  ways. 
There are science advisers all over the government, including the State  and 
Defense Departments. But as far as I know there’s no design function here.  No 
one has stepped back and noticed that the scientific environment is 
changing,  and the way that the government needs to understand and use science 
for 
the  public good is changing along with that environment. There has not been 
a  systematic evaluation of the personnel structure of scientists in the 
government  for at least half a century, or of the role of advisory committees 
in the  private sector, or of public-private partnerships. My sense is that 
there’s a  misalignment between what the government needs to do, on the one 
hand, and how  it uses scientists, on the other. So I’m interested in your 
thoughts about how  out of whack this is. 
AB: I’ve never actually thought about that. It’s a great  question. My 
political philosophy leans more toward small government. So the  idea of 
increasing bureaucracies is something I instinctively recoil from. But I  have 
been thinking that perhaps it’s time we had a Cabinet-level science and  
technology position. Maybe we could eliminate some other one we don’t need. If 
I  
were President, I could see merging the Departments of Labor and Commerce  
together, or putting Veterans’ Affairs under the aegis of Health and Human  
Services. Then you could have a Department of Science and Technology as the 
core  advisory body to the Executive Branch. The NIH, the EPA and the FDA 
could then  be under its control. As it is, they’re all scattered around. 
AG: We have what I like to call “incremental feudalism” in  the government 
structure. 
AB: Right, no one likes to give up turf. 
AG: It’s all related to congressional oversight. You can’t  get anything 
changed unless you propitiate Congress. For example, the FDA  handles drugs 
and food (all except meat, which the Department of Agriculture  does) for no 
real reason. That’s just how Teddy Roosevelt happened to have it  set up. 
This arrangement has become quite dysfunctional. 
AB: And why are there three different organizations—EPA, FDA  and USDA—
working on the same GMOs? 
AG: We’re lucky there are only three. Count the number of  spigots from 
which foreign aid comes out—there are 16 of them. And then, at the  end of the 
Bush Administration, we just created a new Undersecretary of State  position 
to manage all the spigots. The point is that there’s a connection  between 
the policies we want to be bold and innovative about, and the government  
delivery systems in place. You can’t get new policies with old structures. 
AB: Could we imagine a President making it a priority to  reorganize the 
Federal bureaucracy? 
AG: I’ve thought a lot about this since my time in  government. One way to 
go about it is to create a Cabinet-level department. The  second way is to 
create a permanent interagency group, and the third way—the  least efficient 
way—is to create a science czar, which isn’t too different from  what we 
have now. 
AB: That would be what John Holdren does, right? 
AG: Yes, but he doesn’t have budget authority. His budget  authority and 
responsibilities aren’t aligned. This President hasn’t used his  science 
adviser particularly well, and neither did the previous one. But “team  science”
 should be alarmed, because this is way off the radar; we’re not  thinking 
about it at all. 
AB: That’s a good point. Until this discussion, I had never  heard anyone 
speak at length about this issue. 
AG: Well we need scientists to help think this through. And  you’d be one 
of them, because you’re young, smart and not inured to old ways.  Anyone who 
reads the book will be able to see that—and I hope lots of people do  read 
it. Thanks.

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