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VACCINE FOR VICE Nearly everyone likes a magic bullet. One can only describe penicillin, polio vaccine, and insulin for
diabetics as medications that have changed peoples’ lives. For the most part,
antidepressants used with psychotherapy are another tool that has had a major
impact on humans. Now comes a vaccine for vice. This is part of the beginning of the
next society that should follow the global information. It is called the
Bio-technical society and it promises (on balance) to improve the everyday life
of humans, animals, plants, and the efficiencies of machines. As this is being
written, it is also the thrust of the new budget to bring biotech companies to
Iowa (perhaps in a special session.) In a recent article in U.S. NEWS & WORLD REPORT (4/28/2003:54)
early studies have been able to stop heroin highs in monkeys, an animal with
very similar genes to us. Clinical trials are now being applied to cocaine and
heroin users. In other words, biochemically a “high” does not register with the
brain Looking into the future, one can conjecture that addictions and
habituations may be relieved or preempted by a drug. For millions of people
around the world, this would be miraculous. One can only imagine the careers of
David England, former president of DMACC or Larry Eustachy, coach of the Iowa State basketball team.
The first alledgedly used an illegal drug and the second abused a legal drug.
This new medication could help save or reduce the pain to the individual and
his or her job, family, and the greater society. In spite of some of the
reservations listed below this, on a balance must be considered a social
improvement for the common good. Here are the shortcomings of the drug. It depends on how it is used and the motive for the application of
the drug to the individual. There is the law of unintended consequences that
emerges in just about every euphoric vision. If the medication “works” what do you think tobacco companies,
alcoholic beverage corporations, and for that matter coffee, soda, and sugar
companies will feel about the medication? How about organized crime and drug
cartels? Perhaps they can improve sales because users know that there is a
medication available to help reduce the horrific withdrawal and craving that
follows with the use of the vaccine for vice. Did penicillin ultimately destroy
common diseases only to make these ailments stronger and more potent in the
years after it’s discovery? In the most secular sense, billions become mildly to wildly
euphoric from prayer, meditation, self-hypnosis, and even television and video
games. How might this change our world if medications impinge on natural
biochemical processes? Further, there may be entire institutions dramatically modified
because of the drug. Most now agree that the early stages of romance are
“exciting.” It is also “fun” to watch sports, movies, and related. What happens
when and if a vaccine is given to all of us in childhood? Do we become the
Prozac nation that was predicted, but did not occur at the magnitude once
described? So what should we do when Nabi and Xenova corporations introduce
this drug? If political groups try to kill it, the battle against drugs and
related will probably continue to increase. IF it blunts what society defines
as pro-social activities, what will become of us? The jury is out. However, we may find that we face a new set of
problems that are more manageable than the previous ones. We now face a
pandemic in the world that if allowed to spread will kill more than the flu of
the early 20th century. Would you like to have a drug that could prevent or
cure the disease? The biotech society will like other changes in society,
divide us and unite for reasons not entirely clear at the time. Joel C. Snell is
professor emeritus at Kirkwood College and Research Fellow for the Arlington
Institute of Arlington, Virginia, a futurist think tank. Snell would also like
to thank Mitchell E. Marsh, Pharm.D. and Clinical Pharmacist for St. Elizabeth
Regional Medical Center, Lincoln, Nebraska. Snell also teaches Sociology-Medical
by distance learning for Kirkwood. |
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