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When Molecules Fly (Is Government Repeating the 'Space Program' Mistake?)
Tech Central Station ^ | 5/15/2003 | Clyde Wayne Crews Jr.

Posted on 05/19/2003 2:22:50 PM PDT by anymouse

Should the federal government fund scientific research with taxpayer dollars? Boondoggles like the Superconducting Supercollider, the space station, energy research programs, the Supersonic Transport plane, and numerous other examples of corporate and scientific pork argue for leaving such efforts to free enterprise.

Eight years ago Congress seemed to agree. Upon the release of the "Contract With America" to reduce the size of government in Washington, the first Republican Congress in 40 years proposed sweeping reforms like privatizing national laboratories and government research programs. There was even legislation to create a Corporate Subsidy Reform Commission, an attempt, modeled on the military base closing commission, to curb billions in handouts to private companies, i.e., business welfare.

But now Republican advocacy of science pork is back. Exhibit A for 2003 is nanotechnology, the cutting-edge science of direct manipulation of matter at the molecular level. Government wants to get involved in a big way, despite companies such as IBM, Hewlett Packard and Intel - and numerous venture capitalists - already taking the lead. Promised applications include smaller and cheaper computer chips, nano-scale "punch cards" to boost computer storage, stronger-than-steel carbon "nanotubes" with myriad applications, and new materials and coatings including responsive clothing.

The field sports its share of hype: Surely, promised "nanobots" to attack cancers and other human ailments - or even repair cellular damage and revive cryogenically frozen human beings - remain in the far-distant future. Similarly, the proposed "Starlight Express" carbon-nanotube elevator to outer space - from a NASA-funded outfit called Highlift Systems - belongs to the realm of science fiction.

Perhaps more representative are today's uses in cosmetics and sunscreens, and "NanoTitanium" fishing rods that incorporate nano-particle titanium and carbon fiber.

Regardless, the little technology has clearly reached the big time. Michael Crichton's best-selling novel Prey, the story of destructive, out-of-control nanobots is surely only the latest in pop culture's speculations on the dark side of micro-engineering. Meanwhile, the ETC Group, while alarmed about the potential hazards of unrestrained nanotechnology, points out that yearly scientific citations to "nano" have grown nearly 40-fold, the number of nano-related patents is surging, and nine nanotechnology-related Nobel prizes have been awarded since 1990.

To many in Congress, what's needed is not a free hand for technology entrepreneurs to explore this blossoming field, but government money. President Bush's proposed 2004 fiscal year budget for the National Nanotechnology Initiative (NNI) is $847 million, a 9.5 percent increase over 2003. The NNI was created by the Bush administration in 2001. In addition, the House Science Committee just authorized a $2.4 billion funding program for nanotechnology, and the full House is likely to approve it. That's not huge by Washington standards, but such programs only grow.

Politicians have no innate ability to pick among competing technologies, whether nano, macro or otherwise. If they did, they'd be entrepreneurs themselves. And they're particularly bad at the job when using taxpayer money. Politicians can merely transfer wealth, which automatically invites wasteful pork-barreling to propel funds to one's home state. Scientific merit need not carry the day. But even if it did, taxpayers should get to decide for themselves which technologies to invest in.

Nanotechnology is plainly viable on its own, moving forward on fronts too numerous to catalog, all seeking to make breakthroughs before others. Nanotech venture capitalist Josh Wolfe told Wired magazine that most business proposals he sees now have "nano" in the title. Venture capitalists have plowed in hundreds of millions of dollars over the past five years. And according to the National Science Foundation, the market in nanotech products could be $1 trillion a year by 2015. That's nearly 10 percent the size of today's gross domestic product.

The vigorous calls for government research seem in part a reaction to the technology market downturn. But we ought not look for a technology savior in emergent biotech or nanotech spawned in government labs. Forthcoming technologies should be products of capitalism and entrepreneurship, not central planning, government R&D, and pork barrel. Tomorrow's nanotechnology markets have too much potential and are too important be creatures of government.

It's still early enough in this particular pork game to stop it before it goes any further. My Cato Institute colleague Tom Miller put it best when asked by technology reporter Declan McCullagh about federal nanotechnology funding: "I suggest giving them nanodollars."

Wayne Crews is director of technology policy at the Cato Institute, http://www.cato.org .


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Government; Technical
KEYWORDS: goliath; government; nanotechnology; science; space
Interesting viewpoint.
1 posted on 05/19/2003 2:22:51 PM PDT by anymouse
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To: nano; *Space
nano-ping
2 posted on 05/19/2003 2:24:54 PM PDT by anymouse
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To: anymouse
I suppose the Manhattan Project should have been privately funded too.
3 posted on 05/19/2003 2:34:47 PM PDT by My2Cents ("Well....there you go again.")
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To: biblewonk
Geek pork ping.
4 posted on 05/19/2003 2:40:25 PM PDT by newgeezer (Admit it; Amendment XIX is very much to blame.)
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To: My2Cents
Sure, that's the same.
5 posted on 05/19/2003 2:47:21 PM PDT by newgeezer (My special interest is no better than yours if they're both unconstitutional.)
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To: anymouse
Nanotechnology is plainly viable on its own, moving forward on fronts too numerous to catalog, all seeking to make breakthroughs before others.

Perhaps.

Nanotech venture capitalist Josh Wolfe told Wired magazine that most business proposals he sees now have "nano" in the title.

(rolls eyes) The guy gives money to nanotech people -- of course he sees "nano" in the title. What the hell does he expect to see -- "yummy new cookie idea?"

Venture capitalists have plowed in hundreds of millions of dollars over the past five years. And according to the National Science Foundation, the market in nanotech products could be $1 trillion a year by 2015. That's nearly 10 percent the size of today's gross domestic product.

Could be. Or not. It depends. All I notice is that our dear author doesn't seem to find space to tell us about any actual breakthroughs in nanotechnology.

These Tech Central Station articles tend to be awfully long on wind ... I'm inclined to consign them to the WND/NewsMax/Debka bin.

6 posted on 05/19/2003 2:48:30 PM PDT by r9etb
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To: anymouse
If you want to be on the cutting edge of particle physics, you have to do your experiments in Japan or Switerland (CERN). That's because the "pork" SSC project got canceled. Wow, we're really on the cutting edge now. Note that no corporation has "stepped up" to fund the research, because the outcome (being completely unknown) does not have the guarranteed return a business requires for investment.

This guy's a goof-ball. I'd rather my tax dollars went to this than to study the effect of cow flatulence on global warming...

7 posted on 05/19/2003 2:52:54 PM PDT by Charles H. (The_r0nin) (Physicists do it with force and energy!)
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To: My2Cents
the Manhattan Project

If the Cato fellows want to see how well the private sector copes with science advancement funding, they can look at the leading cities of Africa and Arabia. There's lots of top-rate mathematicians and scientists graduating from Kinshasa Polytech every year, but not enough to satisfy the private science labs in the region, so most of the graduating class at MIT and Stanford are packing their bags and heading out to the African science Nirvana. Big bucks. Right.

8 posted on 05/19/2003 3:01:08 PM PDT by RightWhale (Theorems link concepts; proofs establish links)
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To: r9etb
find space to tell us about any actual breakthroughs in nanotechnology

Sure, but it's going to be great. Some day.

9 posted on 05/19/2003 3:02:57 PM PDT by RightWhale (Theorems link concepts; proofs establish links)
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To: Charles H. (The_r0nin)
Great points. Private sector (bless its little heart) won't pay for pure science and research.
10 posted on 05/19/2003 3:24:11 PM PDT by My2Cents ("Well....there you go again.")
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To: My2Cents
Some would argue that position.

But during war time, certainly the government has a role in ensuring private industry's capabilities are leveraged for the common defense.

Up until the 1930's most all innovation came from private financing, not government projects. Even now, private innovation often outpaces government research programs.
11 posted on 05/19/2003 3:56:50 PM PDT by anymouse
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To: Charles H. (The_r0nin)
If you want to be on the cutting edge of particle physics, you have to do your experiments in Japan or Switerland (CERN). That's because the "pork" SSC project got canceled. Wow, we're really on the cutting edge now. Note that no corporation has "stepped up" to fund the research, because the outcome (being completely unknown) does not have the guarranteed return a business requires for investment.

Well said. The SSC is in a different category from the other programs the author mentions, because the other things could in principle be supported by the Free Market, whereas even the most successful and dramatic experimental result of particle physics will not have a foreseeable economic impact (spinoffs like the World Wide Web aside).

Paradoxically, though, the SSC is also in a different category from the other named projects, because it did have an essentially guaranteed scientific return. There was almost no way it would not have worked, and if it worked, there was absolutely no way it wouldn't have made a fundamental discovery about the structure of reality. The other projects died (or have struggled) for technical reasons; the SSC was killed for strictly political reasons.

12 posted on 05/19/2003 4:21:20 PM PDT by Physicist
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To: Physicist
The SSC was interesting. The state made a bid on the project [I worked on the bid, got the hat,] and of course Texas got the award. There was a great deal of interest in the SSC until Texas got it, and then interest dried up, disappeared. A year later no one cared. For Texas it was pork, for Alaska it would have been a serious welcome to the modern world.
13 posted on 05/19/2003 4:29:41 PM PDT by RightWhale (Theorems link concepts; proofs establish links)
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To: anymouse
Nano-nano pipic!
Nano split ping!
Peanut butter and nano sandwich bump!
14 posted on 05/19/2003 5:49:32 PM PDT by tet68 (Jeremiah 51:24 ..."..Before your eyes I will repay Babylon for all the wrong they have done in Zion")
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To: anymouse
To me the best argument for privatizing science has nothing to do with "efficiency" or the tendency of governments to pork-barrel or even the lousy records they have in picking winners. It's that whenever we spend public money on science, those who hate science have an input to the process. It is, after all, their money too, so they will stop at nothing to prevent actual science from being done.

Whether we're talking about the No Nukes Greens or the anti-stem cell mullahs, it's time to lock the Luddites out by taking science private.

15 posted on 05/19/2003 6:24:31 PM PDT by BlazingArizona
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To: Physicist
The SSC is in a different category from the other programs the author mentions, because the other things could in principle be supported by the Free Market, whereas even the most successful and dramatic experimental result of particle physics will not have a foreseeable economic impact (spinoffs like the World Wide Web aside).

Interesting point. What you're looking at right now is a peripheral spinoff of CERN, the European equivalent of the SSC. The project needed a way of distributing research papers for widely scattered staff to read - and the rest was history.

16 posted on 05/19/2003 6:29:08 PM PDT by BlazingArizona
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To: Physicist

17 posted on 05/19/2003 6:44:04 PM PDT by gitmo (THEN: Give me Liberty or give me Death. NOW: Take my Liberty so I can't hurt Myself.)
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To: anymouse
Some folks in government are interested beause of the military applications of nano tech. The technology has the potential to change society in ways that we cannot really begin to comprehend, whether tomorrow or fifty or a hundred years from now. Wisdom would dictate the government's involvment in this research. Especially as other nations are already investing in researching it! This is one tech that cannot be ignored or easily dismissed.

As much as the author seems to trash government's involvment, he makes a case for the tech being viable. On that level alone, the article is just so much crap. Ya can't legitmitately trash anyone's ivolvment, government or not, with the potential this nano tech has.
18 posted on 05/20/2003 5:06:54 AM PDT by wrbones (Bones)
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