To be honest, I don't think you can. As I was saying earlier, you have other things that you need to be doing.
On this idea of trying to track what the economic, social and cultural impacts of some piece of scientific research will be a decade down the road, nobody knows that, but nobody needs to know it. Scientists are curious people. They will do fundamental research. It isn't something you have to be concerned with. If it turns out to have commercial applications, companies will take advantage of that. There will be useful collaborations. All kinds of things happen under a system of spontaneous liberty that do not happen under a system of political control.
I think having the federal government trying to put a committee on top of three committees to tell scientists what they ought to be doing in the interest of the economy is to misunderstand what you're capable of and what the situation actually requires. If scientists are given jobs, they will go and do research. They want to know what the heck's going on in the lab.
The other thing—