-Caveat Lector-

AEC Said Involved In
Eugenics Experiments -
'Darkness In El Dorado'
9-18-00

 http://www.sightings.com/general3/eugene.htm

To: Louise Lamphere ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) President, American Anthropological
Association

Don Brenneis ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) President -elect, American
Anthropological Association


From: Terry Turner Professor of Anthropology, Cornell University (Head of the
Special Commission of the American Anthropological Association to Investigate
the Situation of the Brazilian Yanomami, 1990-91)

Leslie Sponsel Professor of Anthropology at the University of Hawaii, Manoa
(Chair of the AAA Committee for Human Rights 1992-1996)


Re: Scandal about to be caused by publication of book By Patrick Tierney:
'Darkness in El Dorado' New York, Norton. Publication date: October 1, 2000
9-18-00


Madam President, Mr. President-elect:

We write to inform you of an impending scandal that will affect the American
Anthropological profession as a whole in the eyes of the public, and arouse
intense indignation and calls for action among members of the Association. In
its scale, ramifications, and sheer criminality and corruption it is
unparalleled in the history of Anthropology. The AAA will be called upon by
the general media and its own membership to take collective stands on the
issues it raises, as well as appropriate redressive actions. All of this will
obviously involve you as Presidents of the Association-so the sooner you know
about the story that is about to break, the better prepared you can be to
deal with it. Both of us have seen galley copies of a book by Patrick
Tierney, an investigative journalist, about the actions of anthropologists
and associated scientific researchers (notably geneticists and medical
experimenters) among the Yanomami of Venezuela over the past thirty-five
years. Because of the sensational nature of its revelations, the notoriety of
the people it exposes, and the prestige of the organs of the academic
establishment it implicates, the book is bound to be widely read both outside
and inside the profession. As both an indication and a vector of its public
impact, we have learned that The New Yorker magazine is planning to publish
an extensive excerpt, timed to coincide with the publication of the book (on
or about October 1st).

The focus of the scandal is the long-term project for study of the Yanomami
of Venezuela organized by James Neel, the human geneticist, in which Napoleon
Chagnon, Timothy Asch, and numerous other anthropologists took part. The
French anthropologist Jacques Lizot, who also works with the Yanomami but is
not part of Neel-Chagnon project, also figures in a different scandalous
capacity.

One of Tierney's more startling revelations is that the whole Yanomami
project was an outgrowth and continuation of the Atomic Energy Comissions
secret program of experiments on human subjects James Neel, the originator
and director of the project, was part of the medical and genetic research
team attached to the Atomic Energy Commission since the days of the Manhattan
Project. He was a member of the small group of researchers responsible for
studying the effects of radiation on human subjects. He personally headed the
team that investigated the effects of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki bombs on
survivors,. He was put in charge of the study of the effects of atomic bombs
at Hiroshima and Nagasaki, and later was involved in the studies of the
effects of the radioactivity from the experimental A and H bomb blasts in the
Marshall Islands on the natives (our colleague May Jo Marshall has a lot to
say about these studies in the Marshalls and Neel's role in them). The same
group also secretly carried out experiments on human subjects in the USA.
These included injecting people with radioactive plutonium without their
knowledge or permission,in some cases leading to their death or disfigurement
( Neel himself appears not to have given any of these experimental
injections). Another member of the same AEC group of human geneticists and
medical experimenters, a Venezuelan, Marcel Roche, was a close colleague of
Neel's and spent some time at his AEC-funded center for Human Genetics at Ann
Arbor. He returned to Venezuela after the war and did a study of the Yanomami
that involved administering doses of a radioactive isotope of iodine and
analyzing samples of blood for genetic data. Roche and his project were
apparently the connection that led Neel to choose the Yanomami for his big
study of the genetics of "leadership" and differential rates of reproduction
among dominant and sub-dominant males in a genetically "isolated" human
population. There is thus a genealogical connection between the the human
experiments carried out by the AEC, and Neel's and Chagnon's Yanomami
project, which was from the outset funded by the AEC.

Tierney presents convincing evidence that Neel and Chagnon, on their trip to
the Yanomami in 1968, greatly exacerbated, and probably started, the epidemic
of measles that killed "hundreds, perhaps thousands" (Tierney's language-the
exact figure will never be known) of Yanomami. The epidemic appears to have
been caused, or at least worsened and more widely spread, by a campaign of
vaccination carried out by the research team, which used a virulent vaccine
(Edmonson B) that had been counter-indicated by medical experts for use on
isolated populations with no prior exposure to measles (exactly the Yanomami
situation). Even among populations with prior contact and consequent partial
genetic immunity to measles, the vaccine was supposed to be used only with
supportive injections of gamma globulin.

It was known to produce effects virtually indistinguishable from the disease
of measles itself. Medical experts, when informed that Neel and his group
used the vaccine in question on the Yanomami, typically refuse to believe it
at first, then say that it is incredible that they could have done it, and
are at a loss to explain why they would have chosen such an inappropriate and
dangerous vaccine. There is no record that Neel sought any medical advice
before applying the vaccine. He never informed the appropriate organs of the
Venezuelan government that his group was planning to carry out a vaccination
campaign, as he was legally required to do. Neither he nor any other member
of the expedition, including Chagnon and the other anthropologists, has ever
explained why that vaccine was used, despite the evidence that it actually
caused or at a minimum greatly exacerbated the fatal epidemic.

Once the measles epidemic took off, closely following the vaccinations with
Edmonson B, the members of the research team refused to provide any medical
assistance to the sick and dying Yanomami, on explicit orders from Neel. He
insisted to his colleagues that they were only there to observe and record
the epidemic, and that they must stick strictly to their roles as scientists,
not provide medical help.

All this is bad enough, but the probable truth that emerges, by implication,
from Tierney's documentation is more chilling. There was, it turns out, a
compelling theoretical motive for Neel to want to observe an epidemic of
measles, or comparable "contact" disease, or at least an outbreak virtually
indistinguishable from the real thing-precisely the effect that the vaccine
he chose was known to cause-and to produce one for this purpose if necessary.
This motive emerges from Teirney's documentation of Neel's extreme eugenic
theories and his documented statements about what he was hoping to find among
the Yanomami, interpreted against the background of his long association with
the Atomic Energy Commission's secret experiments on human subjects. Neel
believed that "natural" human society (as it existed everywhere before the
advent of large-scale a gricultural societies and contemporary states with
their vast populations) consisted of small, genetically isolated groups, in
which, according to his eugenically slanted genetic theories, dominant genes
(specifically, a gene he believed existed for "leadership" or "innate
ability") would have a selective advantage, because male carriers of this
gene could gain access to a disproportionate share of the available females,
thus reproducing their own superior genes more frequently than less "innately
able" males. The result, supposedly, would be the continual upgrading of the
human genetic stock. Modern mass societies, by contrast, consist of vast
genetically entropic "herds" in which, he theorized, recessive genes could
not be eliminated by selective competition and superior leadership genes
would be swamped by mass genetic mediocrity. The political implication of
this fascistic eugenics is clearly that society should be reorganized into
small breeding isolates in which genetically superior males could emerge into
dominance, eliminating or subordinating the male losers in the competition
for leadership and women, and amassing harems of brood females.

A big problem for this program, however, was the tendency, generally
recognized by virtually all qualified population geneticists and
epidemiologists, for small breeding isolates to lack genetic resistance to
diseases incubated in other groups, and their consequent vulnerability to
contact epidemics. For Neel, this meant that the emergence of genetically
superior males in small breeding isolates would tend to be undercut and
neutralized by epidemic diseases to which they would be genetically
vulnerable, while the supposedly genetically entropic mass societies of
modern democratic states, the antitheses of Neel's ideal alpha-male-dominated
groups, would be better adapted for developing genetic immunity to such
"contact" diseases. It is known that Neel, virtually alone among contemporary
geneticists, rejected the genetic (and historical) evidence for the
vulnerability of genetically isolated groups to diseases introduced through
contact from other populations. It is possible that he thought that
genetically superior members of such groups might prove to have differential
levels of immunity and thus higher rates of survival to imported diseases. In
such a case, such exogenous epidemics, despite the enormous losses of general
population they inflict, might actually be shown to increase the relative
proportion of genetically superior individuals to the total population, and
thus be consistent with Neel's eugenic program. However this may have been,
Tierney's well-documented account, in its entirety, strongly supports the
conclusion that the epidemic was in all probabilty deliberately caused as an
experiment designed to produce scientific support for Neel's eugenic theory.
This remains only an inference in the present state of our knowledge: there
is no "smoking gun" in the form of a written text or recorded speech by Neel.
It is nevertheless the only explanation that makes sense of a number of
otherwise inexplicable facts, including Neel's known interest in observing an
epidemic in a small isolated group for which detailed records of genetic and
genealogical relations were available, his otherwise inexplicable selection
of a virulent vaccine known to produce effects virtually identical with the
disease itself, his behavior once the epidemic had started (insisting on
allowing it to run its course unhindered by medical assistance while
meticulously documenting its progress and the genealogical relations of those
who perished and those who survived) and his own obdurate silence, until his
death in February, as to why he carried out the vaccination program in the
first place, and above all with the lethally dangerous vaccine.

The same conclusion is reinforced by considering the objectives of the
anthropological research carried out by Chagnon under Neel's initial
direction and continued support. Chagnon's work has been consistently
directed toward portraying Yanomami society as exactly the kind of originary
human society envisioned by Neel, with dominant males (the most frequent
killers) having the most wives or sexual partners and offspring. If this
pristine, eugenically optimal society could be shown to survive a contact
epidemic with its structure of dominant male polygynists essentially intact,
regardless of quantitatively serious population losses, Neel might plausibly
be able to argue that his eugenic social vision was vindicated. If the
epidemic was indeed produced as an experiment, either wholly or in part, the
genetic studies on the correlation of blood group samples and genealogies
carried out by Chagnon and some of his students thus formed integral parts of
this massive, and massively fatal, human experiment.

As another reader of Tierney's ms commented, Mr. Tierney's analysis is a case
study of the dangers in science of the uncontrolled ego, of lack of respect
for life, and of greed and self-indulgence. It is a further extraordinary
revelation of malicious and perverted work conducted under the aegis of the
Atomic Energy Commission.

Tierney's revelations begin, but do not end, with the 1968 epidemic. There
are many more episodes and sub-plots, almost equally awful, to his narrative
of the antics of anthropologists among the Yanomami. Enough has been said by
this time, however, for you to see that the Association is going to have to
make some collective response to this book, both to the facts it documents
and the probable conclusions it implies.There will be a storm in the media,
and another in the general scholarly community, and no doubt several within
anthropology itself. We must be ready. Tierney devotes much of the book to a
critique of Napoleon Chagnon's work (and actions). He makes clear Chagnon has
faithfully striven, in his ethnographic and theoretical accounts of the
Yanomami, to represent them as conforming to Neel's ideas about the Hobbesian
savagery of "natural" human societies , and how this constitutes the natural
selective context for the rise to social dominance and reproductive advantage
of males with the gene for "leadership" or "innate ability" (thus Chagnon's
emphasis on Yanomami "fierceness" and propensity for chronic warfare, and the
supposed statistical tendency for men who kill more enemies to have more
female sexual/reproductive partners). He documents how all these aspects of
Chagnon's account of the Yanomami are based on false, non-existent or
misinterpreted data. In other words, Chagnon's main claims about Yanomami
society, the ones that have been so much heralded by sociobiologists and
other partisans of his work, namely that men who kill more reproduce more and
have more female partners, and that such men become the dominant leaders of
their communities, are simply not true. Thirdly and most troublingly, he
reports that Chagnon has not stopped with cooking and re-cooking his data on
conflict but has actually attempted to manufacture the phenomenon itself,
actually fomenting conflicts between Yanomami communities, not once but
repeatedly.

In his film work with Asch, for example, Chagnon induced Yanomami to enact
fights and aggressive behavior for Asch's camera, sometimes building whole
artificial villages as "sets" for the purpose, which were presented as
spontaneous slices of Yanomami life unaffected by the presence of the
anthropologists. Some of these unavowedly artificial scenarios, however,
actually turned into real conflicts, partly as a result of Chagnon's policy
of giving vast amounts of presents to the villages that agreed to put on the
docu-drama, which distorted their relations with their neighbors in ways that
encouraged outbreaks of raiding. In sum, most of the Yanomami conflicts that
Chagnon documents, that are the basis of his interpretation of Yanomami
society as a neo-Hobbesian system of endemic warfare, were caused directly or
indirectly by himself: a fact he invariably neglects to report. This is not
just a matter of bad ethnography or unreflexive theorizing: Yanomami were
maimed and killed in these conflicts, and whole communities were disrupted to
the point of fission and flight.(Brian Ferguson has also documented some of
this story, but Tierney adds much new evidence). As a general point, it is
clear that Chagnon's whole Yanomami oeuvre is more radically continuous with
Neel's eugenic theories, and his unethical approach to experimentation on
human subjects, than appears simply from a reading of Chagnon's works by
themselves.

Chagnon is not the only anthropologist mentioned in Tierney's narrative. Some
of his students, like Hames and Good, are also dealt with (not so
unfavorably). The F French anthropologist, Jaques Lizot, also gets a chapter.
He has had nothing to do with Neel or Chagnon (in fact has been a trenchant
and cogent critic of their work), but he has an Achilles heel of his own in
the form of a harem of Yanomami boys that he keeps, and showers with presents
in exchange for sexual favors (he has also been known to resort to young
girls when boys were unavailable). On the sexual front, there are also
passing references to Chagnon himself demanding that villagers bring him
girls for sex.

There is still more, in the form of collusion by Neel and Chagnon with
sinister Venezuelan politicians attempting to gain control of Yanomami lands
for illegal gold mining concessions, with the anthropologists providing
"cover" for the illegal mine developer as a "naturalist" collaborating with
the anthropological researchers, in exchange for the politician's
guaranteeing continuing access to the Indians for the anthropologists.

This nightmarish story -a real anthropological heart of darkness beyond the
imagining of even a Josef Conrad (though not, perhaps, a Josef Mengele)--will
be seen (rightly in our view) by the public, as well as most anthropologists,
as putting the whole discipline on trial. As another reader of the galleys
put it, This book should shake anthropology to its very foundations. It
should cause the field to understand how the corrupt and depraved
protagonists could have spread their poison for so long while they were
accorded great respect throughout the Western World and generations of
undergraduates received their lies as the introductory substance of
anthropology. This should never be allowed to happen again.

We venture to predict that this reaction is fairly representative of the
response that will follow the publication of Tierney's book and the New
Yorker excerpt. Coming as they will less than two months before the San
Francisco meetings, these publication events virtually guarantee that the
Yanomami scandal will be at its height at the Meetings. This should give an
optimal opportunity for the Association to mobilize the membership and the
institutional structure to deal with it. The writers, both emeritus members
of the Committee for Human Rights, have arranged with Barbara Johnston, the
present chair of the CfHR, that the open Forum put on by the Committee this
year be devoted to the Yanomami case. This seemed the best way to provide a
venue for a public airing of the scandal, given that the program is of course
already closed. With Johnston's consent, we have invited Patrick Tierney to
come to the Meetings and be present at the Forum. He has accepted. He has
also agreed to have a copy of the book ms sent to Johnston, for the use of
the CfHR. We have also tentatively agreed with Barbara that the CfHR should
draft a press release, which the President (either or both of you) could (if
you and the Executive Board approve) circulate to the media. There are
obviously human rights aspects of this case that make the CfHR appropriate,
but the Ethics Committee, the Society for Latin American Anthropology, and
the Association for Latina and Latino Anthropology should also be notified
and involved, separately or jointly. These obviously do not exhaust the
possibilities--- a lot of thought and planning remains to be done. Our point
is simply that the time to start is now.

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