Cautionary Tales with Tim Harford - What if Terrorists Could Weaponize Covid?
Episode Date: April 7, 2023Cautionary Conversation: In 1990, a small extremist group launched a nerve gas attack on passengers riding the Tokyo subway. Thousands of people were hurt, more than a dozen died. At the time, such us...e of a chemical weapon seemed new and uniquely terrifying. But advances in biology mean that today it's possible such a group could create a virus like Covid... with the potential to kill millions. What are the dangers and what can we do to combat them? Tim Harford talks to writer Michael Specter about his new book Higher Animals: Vaccines, Synthetic Biology and the Future of Life. (Higher Animals: Vaccines, Synthetic Biology and the Future of Life is is available now at Pushkin.fm, Audible, or wherever audiobooks are sold.)Â See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Do you want to know what it's like to hang out with MS-13 Nelsabrador?
How the Russian Mafia fought battles all over Brooklyn in the 1990s?
What about that time I got lost in the Burmese jungle hunt in the world's biggest MF lab?
Why the Japanese Yakuza have all those crazy dragons at those?
I'm Sean Williams.
And I'm Danny Goldz.
And we're the host of the Underworld podcast.
We're journalists that have traveled all over, reporting on dangers people in places.
And every week we'll be bringing you a new story about organized crime from all over
the world. We know this stuff because we've been there we've seen it and we've
got the near misses and embarrassing tales to go with it. We'll mix in
reporting with our own experiences in the field and we'll throw in some bad
jokes while we're at it. The only world podcast explores the criminal
underworld that affect all of our lives whether we we know it or not. Available wherever you get your podcasts.
Pushkin
Japan is one of the safest countries in the world, which only made it more shocking.
During morning rush hour on the 20th of March 1995, five men stepped onto five different trains
on the Tokyo Metro. Each of them had the same mission, to draw up a couple of plastic bags wrapped
in newspaper on the floor, to puncture those bags with a specially sharpened umbrella
and then to get off the train and make a getaway.
Each bag contained almost a pint of liquid siren, a chemical developed by Nazi scientists
in the 1940s.
Siren vapor can be breathed in or absorbed to the skin.
Even in small doses, it blocks the body's ability
to control its muscles. The symptoms of seren exposure are nausea and
drooling, followed by vomiting, twitching, and self-soiling as the bladder and
bowels open, followed by death from asphyxiation. Those who survive can suffer
permanent nerve damage. It's not a chemical you want to have drifting through a busy subway carriage, but since Sarin
evaporates very quickly, that's what happened.
The result was carnage.
Twelve people died almost immediately, and thousands were injured, with two later dying
of those injuries.
The attack was the work of a cult named Om Shinrykyo, which had just a few thousand members.
A small number of unhinged extremists had caused dreadful harm.
Still, it could have been worse.
The Tokyo Metro attack killed 14 people.
At the Tokyo Metro attack killed 14 people. COVID killed many millions.
Imagine the Omshin Rikio cult had released not nerve gas,
but a killer coronavirus that might infect the entire world.
I'm Tim Harford, and you're listening to cautionary tales. This is another of our occasional cautionary conversations, in which we explore a mistake
at anything from a mishap to a catastrophe, and try to learn the lessons with the help
of an expert guest.
This time I'm joined by Michael Specter.
Michael is an award-winning star-fwriter at the New Yorker, where his subjects
have ranged widely, everything from P. Diddy to Dr. Oz, but often focusing on science and public
health. And his new audiobook is Higher Animals, Vaccines, Synthetic Biology, and the Future of Life.
It's published by Pushkin Industries, which Full disclosure also produces cautionary
tales. Michael, welcome. Thank you, I'm happy to be here.
I'm very happy that you are here, and let's circle back to the Sarrin attack later, because
I first wanted to discuss something, which, first sight, it seems a world away. It's
a city council meeting in Cambridge, Massachusetts Massachusetts in 1976, which really caught my attention in your book.
Tell us about that.
It was an unusual city council meeting, probably the most unusual of its kind to that point in the
history of the United States. It was a meeting about whether Harvard University would have the right to
build a biological laboratory to work with Reombinant DNA, which had just recently
been discovered.
And recombinant DNA means you can basically mix the genes of two species.
And that is something that every lab in the world does right now.
But at the time, it sort of invoked every type of fear of creating monsters, in destroying
the world that you could possibly imagine
or that has been written about over the last 300 years.
And the mayor of Cambridge was a very contancress
and someone intelligent man who understood politics.
His constituency was working class Cambridge
and he was going to go after the elites at Harvard
for ignoring
what he thought were the risks. And this city council meeting was an ethical event in the
history of molecular biology because it sort of pitted the future against citizens who
had not really asked questions in the past. And it really set the tone for almost every
kind of meeting that came afterwards.
Yeah, I mean, Mayor Valuci, he was very politically savvy
and you had some wonderful tape in your audio booklet.
I mean, let's listen to a small extract
of his remarks at this meeting.
When I was a little boy, I used to fish in the child rubber
and I woke up one morning and found millions of fish dead
in the child rubber river, and you
tonight tell me the cute dump chemicals into the sewer system again.
Now the sewer system all flows into the child's.
Was he right to be so worried?
The image of millions of dead fish were those concerns over blown at the time?
Yes, they were overblown at the time, but they weren't completely ridiculous.
And what's really interesting, if you go back and listen to that conversation in those debates,
it's not overblown now. Those questions were crazy at the time. He was asking whether
entirely new species could be created in that lab, and that was something that could never have happened.
It's not a crazy question now. So those inflammatory debates were kind of necessary, and I think it's worth pointing out
that Cambridge Massachusetts is now the absolute center of biotechnological innovation in the world.
There are dozens, if not hundreds of labs there, that use that kind of recombinant DNA technology with the blessing of the city council and with the participation of members of the city council.
So we've come a long way.
As we said, was 1976. What was the kind of background? Why did the steak seem so high and why was people so worried?
Because a guy named Paul Berg, who was a professor at Stanford, had recently
figured out a way to take a virus called SV11, which caused cancer and hamsters,
and inserted it into a very common bacterium, E. coli. And that was the first time that humans had ever been able to
mix species of any kind. And while it showed a great deal of promise, it was a very scary
step because it also meant maybe some things would be created that we couldn't control.
So that was the background. I mean, immediately when you say that, I think if I undercook my sausage, I could catch cancer from it.
No. I mean, that's what it sounds like.
Well, I know it sounds like that, but first of all, this is something that happened in a lab,
in the cancer viruses, not one that's common or that infects humans. It's just that
that's common or that infects humans. It's just that we didn't know at the time whether or not it was going to be possible for that to mutate into something that somebody could sneeze and catch.
I mean, we had no idea. It had never been done before. And even Paul Berg was quite upfront
about saying there are tremendous dangers to this. He could see the promise, all biologists and many other people could,
but the dangers were evident too.
And they were evident and also unknown.
We didn't know what might happen.
Yeah. We've got a little bit more tape from the council meeting.
If you listen to some of the questions that have come in,
you could really get a sense that the fears are palpable.
For the benefit of all of members of the City Council, I would like to inject this statement of
questions not to be answered at this time, but for the benefit of members of the City Council,
who may want to ask these questions. We're recombinant, DNA experience be safer if they were done in a maximum security lab
Question is a truth that in the history of science mistakes have been made to know to happen question to scientists
ever exercise or judgment
Question do they ever have accidents?
Classic politician isn't he? He's a classic politician and they were inflammatory questions, but
you can't deny that they even now have some application in real life.
And I mean, there were other things going on at the time.
So I think Ford Motor Company had put out this car, the Pinto,
which they knew was unsafe and they just decided it was cheaper
to deal with the legal claims from these exploding fuel tanks and it was to redesign or withdraw
the car. And this had come out. And so there was this real palpable sense of mistrust of
corporations and overshadowing all of this for the previous 30 years had been the atomic bomb and the sense that
scientists could potentially create something uncontrollable. There's a moment in that book where
David Baltimore, who's a Nobel Prize-winning biologist, said the reason people were so afraid was
it wasn't so far from World War II and they were worried whether there was an atomic bombing biology. And at the time that seemed like a crazy fear. Again, it's not now. But these
things seemed palpable at a time when we were learning so much about how corporations
lied to us. That was the, it was two years after Richard Nixon had resigned, the first president ever to resign
in the United States in disgrace. There had been a lot going on previously, a few years previously,
one of the great lakes caught fire because of all the pollution that had been emitted into it.
So there was a sense that you couldn't really trust the institutions you used to believe in anymore.
And when scientists started to come along and say,
Hey, we've created a new form of life that could do all sorts of cool things.
It didn't go down so well.
Yeah, well, as Mayor Vellucci's question was,
you know, do scientists ever exercise poor judgment?
Do they ever have accidents?
I mean, yeah. Yeah.
And Tweet My Island came along shortly afterwards.
So yeah, there are accidents.
So puts us in a strange position then,
because we're saying, well, from the point of view of 1976,
people were highly strong.
You understand why they were mistrustful,
but actually the fears were overblown.
There was nothing really to worry about.
But now, I mean, as I alluded to in the introduction, if you manufactured
a virus, you could kill tens of millions of people. You could kill more people than you
could kill at least with a single hydrogen bomb, even the largest hydrogen bomb. So it
turns out there was an atomic bomb in biology.
Oh, absolutely. More than an atomic bomb because there's one thing about biology that there
isn't even with nuclear weapons is it's exponential,
it's digital. Biology has become a sort of part of information technology. We developed
a COVID vaccine really rapidly because scientists were able to download it from the internet,
make DNA in certain into cells. That's great, that's wonderful. But it also means, you know, there used to be very
few people who could do this sort of thing. There are thousands now. And if they wanted to do it badly,
if they wanted to harm people, if they wanted to make a virus, it is in no way inconceivable that
they could. At this meeting, the council imposes a two-year moratorium on experiments with Recompetent DNA.
And looking at this, it felt like quite an old story. There was a previous episode of
cautionary tales called How to End a Pandemic, where we were discussing early smallpox
inoculations, and, funnily enough, also in Massachusetts in the Boston area. And in 1721,
as Sabdele Boylston, the doctor, he was going around in
notculating Bostonians against smallpox. He'd got this idea from Africa,
via an enslaved man called Wannisamus. And he faced huge resistance.
Partly, that seemed to be racism. Like this idea has come from Africa.
It's come from enslaved people. It's not a white idea. It's not a domestic
idea.
But also, you can die from being inoculated, inoculated people do have a dose of small
pox, they can infect other people.
In the end, the resistance went as far as people throwing hand grenades through Boyle
Stur's Window where his wife and his children were sitting.
In the end, he started visiting people at midnight and in disguise because there was just, you know, he was physically under threat for what he was doing.
Yeah, I addressed some of that in the first chapter of this book, but I think,
especially at that time, you have to remember that a smallpox inoculation
was to some degree dangerous in a way that it isn't or wouldn't be today if we got them.
Again, people don't look at the risks and rewards of these things.
They just get excited about the rewards are upset about the risks.
And the fact is, the risks of getting smallpox and dying of smallpox
were much greater than the risks of being harmed by the vaccine.
But, you know, every number has a numerator and a denominator,
and we only usually look at one or the other.
And so, yeah, it's true that those things can cause harm.
You can't ever say something's going to be 100% in biology.
But you have to figure out, is it better than the alternative? And often it's pretty clear the answer.
Coolschnry tales will be back off to the break.
Do you want to know what it's like to hang out with MS-13 Nusabrador?
How the Russian Mafia fought battles all over Brooklyn in the 1990s.
Or what about that time I got lost in the Burmese jungle hunt in the world's biggest
Meflab?
Or why the Japanese Yakuza have all those crazy dragon tattoos?
I'm Sean Williams.
And I'm Danny Goldz.
And we're the host of the Underworld podcast.
We're journalists that have traveled all over, reporting on dangers, people, and places,
and every week we'll be bringing you a new story about organized crime from all over the world.
We know this stuff because we've been there, we've seen it,
and we've got the near misses and embarrassing tales to go with it.
We'll mix in reporting with our own experiences in the field,
and we'll throw in some bad jokes while we're at it.
The Underworld podcast explores the criminal Underworlds that affect all of our lives, whether
we know it or not, available wherever you get your podcasts.
Michael, let's try and look at the rewards as well as the risks.
I've framed our whole discussion in terms of risks partly because you talk about them very eloquently in higher animals, partly because this is cautionary tales. Wouldn't be cautionary
tales if we weren't talking about something going wrong. But let's talk about the upside.
So where are we now with synthetic biology? What can we do and what should we be thankful for?
Well, I mean, first of all, the first thing we should remember is we just made a vaccine
that has been administered billions of times, and that's a synthetic biological product
that saved millions of lives. But beyond that, there are people growing things that they used
to make in plants with chemicals. They're growing all sorts of medicines. There's gonna be an opportunity to try
and make vaccines for other illnesses, not COVID,
but HIV, influenza.
We have terrible influenza vaccines
that we administer every year.
Now people are seriously attempting
to develop a single shot that would be universal.
And that would, I mean, influence is a really serious disease.
And people always say, oh, I got the flu.
Usually they didn't.
They had a cold.
That would be something.
But beyond that, people are using synthetic biology
to replace plastics, to engineer dies,
to make types of energy that would not
be carbon-based and not cause terrible pollution.
It has unlimited potential because it's the potential of biology.
And if we can rewrite the rules of biology, yeah, there are risks, but we can also do some
tremendous things.
And we're starting to see that.
It's early days.
And that's very clear in the later chapters of higher animals. So it is enormously exciting.
However, there's a cautionary tale. Let's talk about this risk which you cover in some detail
in the book. Fundamentally, smallpox was eradicated by better and better vaccinations.
And that's a subject we've discussed in caution details as well.
Just a few samples of smallpox in a couple of very high security laboratories, just in
case we need to study it.
And as you explain in high animals, sure, there were just a few samples
of smallpox remaining in highly secure labs,
but you can make smallpox.
And people have made smallpox, in fact, I think.
They haven't, they made horsepox.
They made a very similarpox.
Yeah, they demonstrated that they could have made smallpox
if they wanted to and that potential exists.
Cause it's the formula for, I mean, the formula, maybe that's the wrong word. The recipe for smallpox if they wanted to and that potential exists. Because it's the formula for, I mean, the formula,
maybe that's the wrong word, the recipe for smallpox.
It's no, right?
It's not a secret.
Yeah, I mean, one of the problems that we have to address
is not only is the genetic sequence,
the sort of code, the letters of smallpox all known,
they're all printed.
And so, by the way, are the recipes to make every virus
you could possibly name.
Influenza, every type of deadly influenza, COVID, SARS.
You name it, it's on the internet.
That seems bad.
Well, I mean, it used to be, it has always been,
in academics, in particular, that the incentive is
to keep your information
close and then publish it so that everyone knows you have it.
And the idea was publishing a sequence would let other scientists do research with it and
check your work.
The problem is we don't have the kind of regulations we need to have.
You know, at least with nuclear weapons, there are regulations. There are treaties.
They could be violated. They certainly are violated. But biology is different because we actually
encourage the thing that we should be preventing. And it's something that you can do for, I don't
know, 10, 20,000 dollars in a couple smart graduate students, you don't need a nation state to
develop a virus.
So let's talk about the scientists who have pushed back
against publication and those who've gone, who've gone a
long way. So first let's talk about the horsepox guy. So
what was the, what was the reaction of the scientific
community to someone just saying, Hey, I can make this virus,
I have made this virus.
I've kind of proof of concept that I could have made smallpox.
Who did that and how did people respond to that scientist?
It was a guy named David Evans and his team in Canada.
They're serious virologists.
And their position was we want you to understand that this can be done.
And there was also some sense that it would help make a
better smallpox vaccine. Though most scientists I've talked to think that's absolutely not the case.
It was pretty universally condemned because what it basically showed is that you can go make,
I mean, there's no reason to have horsepox out there. I mean, we don't need a virus, we don't need
a vaccine. It was't need a vaccine.
It was extinct in the world.
People weren't getting up in the morning and saying,
I hope I don't get horsepox.
And there was no need to bring a deadly virus
that's closely related to smallpox back to life.
It was just highly irresponsible.
Yeah, but so people criticized him.
But I mean, he didn't lose his job, we didn't go to prison, he didn't he didn't violate any any laws. There's no law. I could if I, and I'm not the smart, but if I was, I could buy the DNA online. It's not that expensive. I could get sequencing machines, I could get all the stuff I need, I could make whatever virus you tell me to make.
It's not against the law. It's not against the rules. And that has to change.
Yeah, so how many people do you think
exist in the world who could
make a dangerous virus? I mean, are we talking millions? Are we talking hundreds?
Five or six? I mean, I don't really
have a sense of the number of people who do have access to the technology and the skill.
It's a growing number. Kevin S. Valt, who teaches at MIT and who I teach a course with, I should say.
He does a lot of this kind of research. He believes there's five or 10,000 people who could do this now.
But in a few years, we're sort of in the era of biology it used to be like, if you look
at early days and computers, there was a mainframe computer that would take up a whole building.
And now the computers in our watches are more powerful than that mainframe.
That's what's happening with biology.
So as that happens, people are getting access
to more powerful programs to make things like viruses.
It's gonna be graduate students,
then it's gonna be undergraduates,
and then your eighth grader's gonna come home
and say, Mommy, look what I made.
And they can make a lot of cool things,
and I think it's great,
but there have to be some guardrails. liquid I made. And they can make a lot of cool things. And I think it's great. But there
have to be some guardrails. You also in the book discuss kind of the polar opposite of
Evans making horsepox. There were scientists who discovered something very dangerous and said,
we're going to give you the broad outlines, but we're not actually going to tell you
what we did or how we did it. And so tell us about that and tell us about what reaction they received.
It's a guy named Robert Arnum in California. He was a botulinum expert.
He actually died last year.
But there were seven known botulism toxins, and they're deadly,
but we also have antidotes for all of them. He found an eighth.
So this is an incredibly poisonous substance
for which there is no antidote.
Deadly, and there was no antidote at the time.
And he said, I found this stuff.
I'll tell you about it, but I'm not gonna do
what we would always do, which is publish the information
so that my competitors and colleagues can go out
and repeat it and make sure it really is deadly.
He said, it's just, it's too dangerous to do that.
And he was roundly denounced for doing that. People said they didn't trust him.
They didn't believe him.
He was a very senior scientist and well respected, but he wasn't playing right.
The rules that were established.
And so he tried to do the right thing.
And in fact, he stuck to his guns and did the right thing.
And he was condemned for it. It's interesting. I'm trying to get my head around this. So the horse pox guy was condemned
for going too far. Right.
The eighth botulism toxin guy was condemned for not publishing what he found. So the scientists
seem to then need to make up their mind. What are we misunderstanding about this situation?
You're not misunderstanding anything, I think, in the case of the Horuspach's guy, what he
did was within the legitimate rules of biology.
That was how things worked.
It's just that people understood it shouldn't work that way.
Arnen did something different.
He said, I'm not going to do this normal, published stuff because it's wrong and it would
be dangerous, at least
until we have a universal antidote the way we do to other toxins.
And he was denounced and condemned for not adhering to the normal rules of biology.
So what this says to me is we need to change the normal rules of biology.
Yeah.
So let's talk about that.
I'm thinking again about the sour and gas attack, which is a reminder that there are groups
out there who would be very happy to unleash apocalyptic harm if they could.
We all think of various extremist groups, terrorist groups, whatever you want to call
them, who would be willing to do that. And perhaps also some state actors who would be happy to support that kind of thing.
So there's clearly a risk of biological terrorism.
So what rules do you have in mind that might help us defend against that?
Well, there are things we could do.
One of them is, let's say we tested waste water with DNA sequencers at every airport or port of entry in Europe in the United States.
That's about 300 places. You could instantly see viruses and what you would be looking for are things that were exponentially growing really fast.
You'd find very rapidly if someone was releasing something. Would it save
everyone? Maybe not. That's one thing you can do. Another thing is personal protective
equipment can be immensely better than it is. I mean, we saw in the COVID pandemic, bad equipment,
a lack of knowledge about what worked and what didn't, we can make really good PPE that people would
use that would protect them. Other things we can do is, if I want to order some DNA from one of
the sort of Amazon-like places that sell it on the internet, we should have some sort of body that
says, why do you want that sequence? Because it's coding an awful lot
like one of these viruses. Now, yeah, it's sort of like gun control. You can always get around it.
You will be able to get around it. But we ought to make an effort in there are ways to make an effort.
Another thing to do is when you print DNA, you can now print DNA at home or in your lab.
you can now print DNA at home or in your lab, but you could put barcodes into those printers so that there would be some form of regulation. It would make it seem like US currency that
has water marks, you couldn't counterfeit it, you could account for it. Those things can
be done and none of them really are.
This is blowing my mind.
I mean, this is actually more than anything else you've said, Michael.
Gives me a sense of just how advanced the technology now is that, oh, yeah, you can print
DNA at home and you can water market so you know, you know whose printer was being used.
There's more that I can't even yet go into because it's too speculative, but there are
things you can do to regulate DNA and kill viruses.
There would be really effective,
but I also have to say,
we just went through a pandemic
that name your figure across the world,
17 trillion, you know, some crazy amount of money.
And in the United States,
we can't even get a billion dollars in the next budget to do some of these preparations,
these pandemic preparations, these antiviral preparations. It's just remarkable.
That is astonishing. So let's talk about what scientists should do differently.
You talked about your concerns that the norms, the rules of science were maybe not fit for these new risks.
You also, in the book, you say, look, I'm a journalist.
As a journalist, if I find something out, I'm going to publish it and scientists are the
same.
So you sort of sympathize with the urge to be transparent and to get everything out there
to be discussed and debated.
But that's not right, do you think?
I do sympathize, and I think it's a fine line.
I mean, I don't want biologists to be hemmed in and not be able to do their work, but there has to be some sort of justification like we now fund an encourage scientists to go out and find new deadly viruses take them to labs.
new deadly viruses. Take them to labs and work on them and see how deadly they are and what can be done. You know, there's an endless debate about was the Wuhan virus a lab leak or not.
Most people in the field that I talk to the most think it was not a lab leak. But their
lab leaks happen. I mean, it wouldn't be impossible for it to have been one, and there are many examples.
So the idea that we're actually encouraging scientists
to go into bat caves and bring back deadly viruses to lab
so that we can...
The rationale for that used to be,
well, if you want to make a vaccine,
you need to know what you're making a vaccine against.
So the idea that we need to have deadly
viruses everywhere so that we can build something that will contain those viruses is very
old think and it needs to be done away with.
You talk about gain of function research and dual use research and you say that actually
you don't find either of those terms to be particularly helpful. So could you explain those terms and then explain why you think that they're a little bit
good for the purposes of this discussion?
Well, gain a function in dual use are two ways of describing enhancing biological microbes
to do something other than what they do in nature. But the reason I have a problem with that is
almost everything we do with biology, whether it's make an artificial sweetener or make penicillin or make some sort of cancer drug
or anything else, a synthetic dye for clothing, enhances the original microbes.
So you know, there are more than one use.
We are going to gain function.
The question is, is it a gain of function that could
cause harm?
So, if we are going to rethink the norms of science, formulate new rules about when to
be transparent and when not to be.
Who does that? Is there a model for doing that successfully in the past?
That's a really painful question.
You could say there's a model if you look at nuclear treaties
and the attempt to regulate nuclear weapons,
but I don't think that's really a model.
And if you're talking,
this is sort of more akin to something like climate change,
a biological function that would affect the whole world.
And we're not that great at whole world of governance as far as I can tell.
So you could say the WHO could take a crack at the UN.
Maybe we need a new body, but we need to do something.
We've alluded several times in our conversation to the possible analogy between
nuclear weapons and bio weapons.
Yeah.
Where does that analogy help us and where does it lead us to stray?
Well, I think it helps us in the sense that there have been international efforts
to agree on what's dangerous and what isn't dangerous and who should control it.
And there are people who inspect places where they exist.
I think that is helpful.
It would be nice to have people who are unaligned, who could go into various labs and inspect
what's there, where it doesn't help us is, you know, I think there may be eight or nine
countries that could theoretically have a nuclear weapon at this point.
There are many thousands of groups that could have biological weapons because biology is
information now.
So ultimately, it has to be a more powerful antidote, and it has to be a more present discussion
than it is right now.
And even, I I think much more powerful
that a weapon than nuclear weapons are.
You mentioned in the book that a Moderna had basically made their vaccine before the Chinese
even admitted that the virus could spread from human to human. It was that quick, it was
that early. And yet, so this is all in January 2020.
They have vaccine wasn't actually being used
in the general population until December of 2020.
So why did it take so long?
First of all, I should point out the obvious.
Developing a vaccine in a year is infinitely faster
than this ever been done before.
The fastest vaccine previously had been mumps
and that was four years.
But it took a while because people needed to test it and they had to do big trials and
they had to make sure it was safe.
This is a new technology.
And so the idea of putting it into 14 billion arms without any testing is crazy. There are intermediary steps and we can be much, much faster
than we are and we're going to have to be. Yeah, because it isn't an example of what you were
saying, we were thinking about the benefits, thinking about the costs, but not really being able
to synthesize both of them because the costs of not injecting 14 billion people with this vaccine really
fast were huge. Obviously, there's a risk to what, using a vaccine before it's been properly
tested. Do you think we got the balance right? And how could we do better next time?
We probably got the balance close to right. I think unfortunately, the answer to better that I know of are things called challenge trials.
Challenge trials are you take a virus like the COVID virus and you take 40 people or 400
people and you give half of them the virus and half of them not the virus.
They don't know it's double blind and then you vaccinate everybody and you see what happens.
And we presumably you vaccinate them before you give them the virus, but right, right.
Why is it useful to actually deliberately infect them?
Why is that an important step?
Well, it's a very rapid way of finding out if the vaccine works or not, because if 200
people have the virus and you know they have the virus and you give them a vaccine and seven of them
get sick instead of 196, you know that the vaccine is effective. If some of them get sick and then
have terrible side effects, you know that too. The problem is it's hard to get medical officials
to agree to do something like that because the harm
could be serious.
And that's just not how it's worked in the past.
And it's very hard to get people to understand that this is a new era and we have to do things
different.
Yeah.
Painters have picture of what we might be able to achieve with these new synthetic biology technologies in 20 years.
If things go well, if we get the balance right and we avoid the risks, what sort of benefits might
we be enjoying by say 2040 or 2050? Cancer vaccines are absolutely possible autoimmune diseases diseases that have been very difficult
to treat. If you can figure out what cells are attacking your body and in what way, you can
make an mRNA or a synthetic attack to it that would probably be very, very specific, you know, until recently what we've
done with broad spectromanabiotics and with vaccines is, you know, take a big wide swing
at the body and try and protect you as broadly as you can.
The side effects of those things, particularly in cancer treatments, are evident.
What would be great is very highly targeted treatments to diseases.
And I think we'll be looking at that and I think we'll see a lot of treatments for things that
in 20, 30, 40 years that we think are terrible and permanently deadly right now.
Just thinking back to that council meeting in 1976, they voted for a moratorium. They basically
said, let's just wait for a bit, which is understandable. But let's just wait for a bit, does seem to be a
very crude response to a technology which has rewards and risks. I think there's a middle ground,
and it's something we've never done, and I'm not sure we can do.
I don't know of an example where humans have decided not to use a technology that's available to them,
but we need to start thinking about that. I'm not saying we shouldn't use synthetic biology,
but there are some things we don't want to make. There are some tools we should agree
ought not to be pursued.
And that's a conversation that's starting to happen
all around the world and biological circles.
And it hasn't happened before.
It hasn't needed to happen in the past.
You developed your technology, you did what you did,
and then if there was a problem,
you tried to fix it later.
And that can't operate like that anymore.
Is that then what we need?
We need those conversations about what we should
and shouldn't be being pursued?
And we're having, I mean, we're having them in the sense
that scientists are having them and bioethicists are having them.
And I know that's not the public, but it's a start.
And I think the COVID pandemic at least got people to think
about some of these issues. Like I now talk about mRNA and people know what I'm talking about,
you know, four years ago I was talking about mRNA and they were like, what planet is that from?
So there's a level, you know, a level of sophistication that exists now. People know about
spike proteins. They know a bit about vaccines, things they never knew of sophistication that exists now. People know about spike proteins.
They know a bit about vaccines, things they never knew before, and that's great.
Because this isn't something anymore if it ever was that scientists can just deliver to
people.
This has to be something that we all decide we want and figure out a way to get it.
Michael's back to it. Thank you very much.
Thank you. It's been a great pleasure.
Michael's audiobook, Higher Animals is available now at pushkin.fm,
audible or wherever audio books are sold. Do you want to know what it's like to hang out with MS-13 Nusavador?
How the Russian Mafia fought battles all over Brooklyn in the 1990s?
Or what about that time I got lost in the fought battles all over Brooklyn in the 1990s.
What about that time I got lost in the Burmese jungle hunt in the world's biggest Mephleb?
But why the Japanese Yakuzaev all those crazy dragon tattoos?
I'm Sean Williams.
And I'm Danny Goldz.
And we're the host of the Underworld podcast.
We're journalists that have traveled all over, reporting on dangerous people in places.
And every week we'll be bringing you a new story about organized crime from all over the world.
We know this stuff because we've been there, we've seen it and we've got the near misses and embarrassing tales to go with it.
We'll mix in reporting with our own experiences in the field and we'll throw in some bad jokes while we're at it.
The only world podcast explores the criminal underworlds that affect all of our lives, whether we know it or not,
available wherever you get your podcasts.
whether we know it or not, available wherever you get your podcasts.