127 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
127 lines
6.0 KiB
Plaintext
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PATENTING NEW FORMS OF ANIMAL LIFE:
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IS NATURE JUST A FORM OF PRIVATE PROPERTY?
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By Jeremy Rifkin
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from the NY Times
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Under a radical new policy that it adopted in April, the
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Patent and Trademark Office now will consider patenting all forms
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of animals on earth, with the exception of homo sapiens. Any
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animal engineered with characteristics not attainable through
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classical breeding techniques is now considered a "human
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invention," qualifying as "patentable subject matter."
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The social, economic and cultural consequences of this
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regulatory edict are frighteningly clear in the language the
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Patent Office uses to defend its new policy. Patent officials
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argue that, for patent purposes, all of life can now be regarded
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as a "manufacture or composition of matter." If a researcher
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implants a foreign gene into an animal's genetic code -- for
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example a human growth hormone gene into a pig -- the genetically
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altered animal is considered a human invention, like a toaster,
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automobile or tennis ball.
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In economic terms, the Patent Office decision signals the
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beginning of a long-term transition out of the age of fossil
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fuels and petrochemicals into the age of biological resources.
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The world economy is shifting from industrial technologies to
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biotechnologies and the patent Office decision provides the
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necessary government guarantee that the raw materials of the
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biotechnology age -- that is, all living things on the planet --
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can now be exploited for commercial gain by chemical,
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pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies.
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Thus, the new patent policy transforms the status of the
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blotic community from a common heritage to private preserve of
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major corporations. In years to come, multinational corporations
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will increasingly joust among themselves for ownership and
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control of the planet's gene pool, patenting everything that
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lives, breaths and moves. The battle to control the gene pool
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and the genetic age began in earnest last week.
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The new patent policy probably will have its most dramatic
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impact in agriculture. By extending patent protection to all
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forms of animals, the Patent Office has provided the chemical,
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pharmaceutical and biotechnology companies with the incentive to
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complete their takeover of American agriculture, a process that
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has been gaining momentum over the past two decades. In the past
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10 years, the chemical companies have quietly taken over the
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world's seed companies, guaranteeing them a lock on the
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domesticated plants of the planet. Now, they are in position to
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take over animal husbandry.
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For hog farmers, dairymen, sheep ranchers and cattlemen,
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this week's decision is likely to touch off a bitter struggle
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with the big corporations, with the survival of the family farm
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hanging in the balance. Will farmers be forced to buy patented
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animals from the multinational corporations in the years ahead?
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Will they have to pay a royalty for every piglet and calf they
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birth? Will they have to make special arrangements with the
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corporations everytime they want to sell part of their herd?
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A new and insidious form of tenant farming looms on the
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horizon. This time around, however, the new farmers of the
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Genetic Age will be leasing their plants an animals as well as
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their land.
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The shock with which last week's decision was received shows
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that the policy has touched a raw nerve. Patenting all forms of
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life! For many of us, this decision is a harbinger of a brave
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new future where pigs and primates, dogs and cats, birds and
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beasts are suddenly reclassified, stripped of their species
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integrity, robbed of their special biological bonds and reduced
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to the level of chemical compositions.
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The specter of the new policy is haunting, indeed,
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mindboggling. A handful of non-elected bureaucrats in a
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Government agency, sealed off and isolated from public
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participation, have taken it upon themselves to reduce all living
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things to a new lowly status of "manufactured processes."
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Even human genetic traits are now patentable, according to
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the new ruling. Any number of human genes can now be transferred
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to other animals. The engineered animals, with human genes
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functioning in their genetic code , can then be patented. Of
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course, patent officials were quick to point out this week that,
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for now constitutional safeguards prevent homo sapiens from
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becoming patentable subject matter.
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The genetic engineering revolution has been growing
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exponentially for over a decade, and as it has, two issues have
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surfaced repeatedly: One, the need to facilitate rapid
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commercial exploitation of genetically engineered processes and
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products, and two, the ethical and social considerations in
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engineering and redesigning the genetic code. Now, these two
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issues are joined in direct and open confrontation. Is all life
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to be redefined as a manufactured process subject to patenting
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and ownership by private companies? Or are living things to be
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spared this ultimate form of technological reductionism?
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The resolution of these issues will affect generations to
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come, establishing the context for how our children's children
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will define life. Will future generations come to perceive life
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as mere chemical, manufactured processes or inventions of no
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greater value than industrial products? Or will we act to
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respect life, by resisting the ultimate temptation to turn living
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things into pure utility?
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Ultimately, the patenting question will be decided by
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Congress. Will our elected officials meekly accept the edict
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handed down by the Patent Office? Or will ethical concerns
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override commercial pressures, leading Congress to prohibit the
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patenting of animals? The American public will be watching
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carefully to see how they respond to this historic issue.
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*****
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Jeremy Rifkin is president of the Foundation on Economic
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Trends.
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---------------------------------------------------------------
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in is president of the Foundation on Economic
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Trends.
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