Posted on 10/16/2005 10:07:15 PM PDT by Termite_Commander
While official Washington has been poring over Harriet Miers long-ago doings on the Dallas City Council and parsing the Byzantine comings and goings of the Fitzgerald grand jury, relatively unnoticed was perhaps the most momentous event of our lifetime what is left of it, as I shall explain. It was announced that American scientists have just created a living, killing copy of the 1918 Spanish flu.
This is big. Very big.
First, it is a scientific achievement of staggering proportions. The Spanish flu has not been seen on this blue planet for 85 years. Its re-creation is a story of enterprise, ingenuity, serendipity, hard work and sheer brilliance. It involves finding deep in the bowels of a military hospital in Washington a couple of tissue samples from the lungs of soldiers who died in 1918 (in an autopsy collection first ordered into existence by Abraham Lincoln), and the disinterment of an Alaskan Eskimo who died of the flu and whose remains had been preserved by the permafrost. Then, using slicing and dicing techniques only Michael Crichton could imagine, they pulled off a microbiological Jurassic Park: the first ever resurrection of an ancient pathogen. And not just any ancient pathogen, explained virologist Eddie Holmes, but the agent of the most important disease pandemic in human history.
Which brings us to the second element of this story: Beyond the brilliance lies the sheer terror. We have quite literally brought back to life an agent of near-biblical destruction. It killed more people in six months than were killed in the four years of the First World War. It killed more humans than any other disease of similar duration in the history of the world, says Alfred W. Crosby, who wrote a history of the 1918 pandemic. And, notes The New Scientist, when the re-created virus was given to mice in heavily quarantined laboratories in Atlanta, it killed the mice more quickly than any other flu virus ever tested.
Now that I have your attention, consider, with appropriate trepidation, the third element of this story: What to do with this knowledge? Not only has the virus been physically re-created. But its entire genome has now been published for the whole world, good people and very bad, to see.
The decision to publish was a very close and terrifying call.
On the one hand, we need the knowledge disseminated. Weve learned from this research that the 1918 flu was bird flu, the most bird-like of all mammalian flu viruses, says Jeffery Taubenberger, lead researcher in unraveling the genome. There is a bird flu epidemic right now in Asia that has infected 117 people and killed 60. It has already developed a few of the genomic changes that permit transmission to humans. Therefore, you want to put out the knowledge of the structure of the 1918 flu, which made the full jump from birds to humans, so that every researcher in the world can immediately start looking for ways to anticipate, monitor, prevent and counteract similar changes in todays bird flu.
We are essentially in a life-and-death race with the bird flu. Can we figure out how to pre-empt it before it figures out how to evolve into a transmittable form with 1918 lethality that will decimate humanity? To run that race we need the genetic sequence universally known not just to inform and guide but to galvanize new research.
On the other hand, resurrection of the virus and publication of its structure opens the gates of hell. Anybody, bad guys included, can now create it. Biological knowledge is far easier to acquire for Osama and friends than nuclear knowledge. And if you cant make this stuff yourself, you can simply order up DNA sequences from commercial laboratories around the world that will make it and ship it to you on demand. Taubenberger himself admits that the technology is available.
And if the bad guys cant make the flu themselves, they could try to steal it. Thats not easy. But the incentive to do so from a secure facility could not be greater. Nature, which published the full genome sequence, cites Rutgers bacteriologist Richard Ebright as warning that there is a significant risk verging on inevitability of accidental release into the human population or of theft by a disgruntled, disturbed or extremist laboratory employee.
One batch of 1918 flu has the capacity for mass destruction that no Bond villain could ever dream of. Why try to steal loose nukes in Russia? A nuke can only destroy a city. The flu virus, properly evolved, is potentially a destroyer of civilizations.
We might have just given it to our enemies.
Have a nice day.
"My sediments exactly..."
Shale yeah! :D
Dittos to your comments. :)
Yeah it's at least as stupid as teaching your children to strap explosives to themselves for the purpose of killing others.
Why would people who do that, have a second of hesitation at unleashing a deadly virus on the world?
Stupid, yes, but they WILL do it if they get the chance.
I don't think the people "running the show" are such martyrs as you think. Of course, one can't assume anything about particular individuals and their warped thinking. I think the guys in charge are gutless wimps and that's why they get the little peons to be the suicide bombers. You'lll never see Bin Laden or Zarquawi or these types doing the dirty deeds. A bunch of cowards!
The folks in charge unfortunately never become martyrs. But that said, OBL and Zarq have limits to their control. If some mad Muslim finds a way I would doubt the ability of OBL to stop em if he wanted to. To this point they have done nothing but inspire more attacks, whenever, wherever, however. Holding back is not in their credo. It is also a real possibility that they may think they are safe in a self imposed quarantine away from the rest of the world.
Myself, Im convinced that the only thing stopping them is their lack of imagination. The bad news is that the boys at homeland security also have a very serious lack of imagination. I base that on the fact that I still have to take my shoes off at the Airport. Lets face it, the horse it out of the barn. Closing the door at this point is rather stupid. The door that must be closed is at the border.
What kills us will kill them equally dead.
Besides which, the 1918 flu was 5% fatal. That is bad, but tell you the truth, it's not as bad as bubonic plague, which killed 33% of humanity.
Add to that, modern technology and counter-agents and actions, and it's a fear, but not one that keeps me up late at night.
And there are NOOOOOO fundamental mooselimbs in university labs are there Nimrod????
Personally, no. But, believe it or not, I have seen pictures of gas masks on German horses in WWI. I guess Der Fuehrer had other things he wanted to dedicate resources to than horse protective masks.
This is incredibly stupid to do.
It's like publishing plans for nuclear weapons if nukes could use lead as fissile material.
Don't worry, they've done worse, like the CDC shipping live, potentially nasty (but not Spanish flu), influenza viruses to various labs for certification testing. This was immediately followed by a notice to the effect of "please destroy culture such 'n such under level 3 conditions" or something like that. My wife, who know entirely too much about such things was NOT AMUSED.
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