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Next(42)
Author: Michael Crichton

"Uh-huh," Brad said, eyes narrowing.

"Instead, she goes straight through the lobby to her car. Security camera in the parking lot shows her driving away at five-seventeen p.m. Depending on traffic, the drive from the hotel to the hospital is between eleven and seventeen minutes. She doesn't show up until six-oh-five p.m. Forty-five minutes later. What was she doing during that time?"

"Injuring herself?"

"No. We've had several experts look at the pictures from the hospital, and the nurse who examined her was an experienced trauma nurse. The pictures are very clear. We think she met an accomplice who produced the injuries for her."

"You mean, some guy..."

"Yes."

"Then he would have left his DNA, right?"

"He wore a condom."

"So at least two people were involved in this."

"Actually, we think a whole team was involved," the kid said. "You were very professionally set up. Who would do this to you?"

Brad had been thinking about that while he sat in his jail cell. And he knew there was only one answer: "Rick. The boss. He's wanted me out of there ever since I started."

"And you were trying to boff his girl..."

"Hey. I wasn't trying. I was doing it."

"And now you're suspended from your job, you've got nine months, minimum, before you go to trial, and you're looking at ten to twenty if you lose in court. Nice." The kid flipped his laptop shut, and stood.

"So what happens now?"

"We'll work on the girl. If we can get a prior history, maybe some video of her on the Internet, we can press the DA to drop the charges. But if this thing goes to trial, it's not good."

"Fucking Rick."

"Yeah. You owe him, buddy." He headed for the door. "Just do yourself a favor, okay? Stay away from that soccer field."

FromScience magazine's "News of the Week":

Neanderthal Man: Too Cautious to Survive?
Scientist Finds a "Species Death Gene"

An anthropologist has extracted a gene from Neanderthal skeletons that he says explains the disappearance of this sub species. "People don't realize that Neanderthals actually had larger brains than the modern Cro-Magnon men. They were stronger and tougher than Cro-Magnons, and they made excellent tools. They survived several ice ages before the Cro-Magnons came on the scene. Why, then, did Neanderthals die out?"

The answer, according to Professor Sheldon Harmon of the University of Wisconsin, was that the Neanderthals carried a gene that led them to resist change. "Neanderthals were the first environmentalists. They created a lifestyle in harmony with nature. They limited game hunting, and they controlled tool use. But this same ethos also made them intensely conservative and resistant to change. They disapproved of the newcomer Cro-Magnons, who painted caves, made elaborately decorated tools, and who drove whole herds of animals over cliffs, causing species extinction. Today we consider the cave paintings a wondrous development. But the Neanderthals regarded them as so much graffiti. They saw it as prehistoric tagging. And they viewed the elaborate Cro-Magnon tools as wasteful and destructive of the environment. They disapproved of these innovations, and they stuck to the old ways. Eventually, they died out as a species."

However, Harmon insists that the Neanderthals bred with the modern Cro-Magnons. "They unquestionably did, because we have identified this same gene in modern human beings. This gene is clearly a Neanderthal remnant, and it promotes cautious or reactionary behavior. Many of the people who today wish to return to the glorious past, or at the very least to keep things as they are, are driven by this same Neanderthal gene." Harmon described the gene as modifying dopamine receptors in the lateral posterior cingulate gyrus and in the right frontal lobe. "There's no question about its mode of action," he said.

Harmon's claim has provoked a firestorm of criticism from academic colleagues. Not since E. O. Wilson published his sociobiology thesis two decades ago has such furious controversy erupted. According to Columbia University geneticist Vartan Gorvald, Harmon was injecting politics into what should be a purely scientific inquiry.

"Not at all," Harmon said. "The gene is present in both Neanderthals and modern humans. Its action has been confirmed in scans of brain activity. The correlation between this gene and reactionary behavior is indisputable. It's not a matter of politics, of left or right. It's a question of basic attitude - whether you are open to the future, or fearful of it. Whether you see the world as emergent, or deteriorating. We have long known that some people favor innovation and look positively toward the future, while others are frightened of change and want to halt innovation. The dividing line is genetic, and represents the presence or absence of the Neanderthal gene."

The story was picked up in theNew York Times the next day:

NEANDERTHAL GENE PROVES ENVIRONMENTAL AGENDA

Fears of 'Rampant Technology' Justified

STUTTGART, Germany - Anthropologist Sheldon Harmon's discovery of a Neanderthal gene which promotes environmental preservation "proves the need for sound environmental policy," said Greenpeace spokesperson Marsha Madsden. "The fact that Neanderthals lost the battle for the environment should serve as a warning to us all. Like the Neanderthals, we will not survive unless we take radical global action now."

And in theWall Street Journal :

CAUTION KILLED THE NEANDERTHALS

Is the 'Precautionary Principle' Lethal?

Oppose Free Markets at Your Peril, Club for Growth Notes

BYSTEVEWEINBERG

An American anthropologist has concluded that Neanderthals died from a genetic predisposition to resist change. In other words, "Neanderthals applied the Precautionary Principle so dear to illiberal, reactionary environmentalists." That was the view of Jack Smythe of the American Competitive Institute, a progressive Washington think tank. Smythe said, "The extinction of Neanderthals serves as a warning to those who would halt progress and take us back to a life that is nasty, brutish, and short."

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