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Junking Science

By Richard Wolinsky, AlterNet. Posted October 10, 2005.


From Terry Schiavo to global warming, the author of 'The Republican War on Science' explains how conservatives undermine science by whipping up controversy and manipulating the media.
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[This is an edited transcript of an interview with Chris Mooney from Cover to Cover, a radio show that airs on KPFA Radio in Berkeley. The full audio of the story is available here.]

Richard Wolinsky: Chris Mooney is the author of The Republican War on Science, which deals with the way Republicans, the Republican party in particular, but also individual Republicans, as well as the Republican government, have dealt with science, scientific issues, and controversies involved with science. And my take on this is that the reason it's a war on science is because these people are, they couldn't get economics as an argument, they couldn't get ideology as an argument, so they figured, why not just go after the science? Is that about it?

Chris Mooney: There is a lot of that to it. The "war on science" that I'm describing does have this opportunistic element in which you find that interest groups, whether industry or on the religious right, who want to achieve a particular political end, are using science as their means of doing so and abusing science in the process. And they're not up front, they don't say "We oppose embryonic stem cell research for moral reasons," they want to say, "No, adult cells are better, so we don't need to do embryonic stem cell research." And that's where science is abused and distorted. And I'm detecting that across a wide range of issues. And so is the scientific community.

RW: Well, the history of politicization of science goes way back. To some degree certainly we can go back to Galileo, but what we've got here over the past 20 years is something else again.

CM:That's what I would argue. I would say that to some extent every political interest politicizes science or uses science politically in the sense of selectively using information to back up your point of view. I think that with the Republican Party today, there's something very different. And the reason it's very different is because the party is committed to catering to two key constituencies, big business and the religious right, who are often coming into conflict with the mainstream scientific view on issues like evolution for the religious right or global climate change for the fossil fuel industry. So you have a systematic attempt by Republican political leaders to appease these interests on the scientific issues that matter to them. And so you get in combination a kind of perfect storm of catering to special interests on science, again and again and again, systematically, throughout the Bush government.

RW: Well, it actually started before then, and as I was reading your book, I saw that there's something called the OTA, the Office of Technology Assessment, a congressional committee, a congressional office, I'm not sure how you want to call it. The OTA came out of Congress, it's been around since when?

CM:It was founded in 1972, I believe, and it lasted until 1995, when the Gingrich Congress came in, Republicans had not controlled Congress for decades, and they pretty promptly did away with it.

RW: Ok, prior to 1972, how did Congress learn about science?

CM: Well, they would have to call hearings, and they would have to bring in experts to testify. But in the 70s, there were a growing number of scientific controversies about things like nuclear energy or the super-sonic transport, and Congress felt that they couldn't always trust the executive branch to provide them unbiased information, cause the executive branch is serving the president. So they thought that they would have their own source of information. And they founded OTA, '72, and it struggled at first, but it ultimately became a world-renowned scientific advisory body. The Europeans built their own scientific advisory bodies based on OTA.

RW: And who selected OTA, the people in it?

CM: The staff? Well, it served at the pleasure of Congress, so it actually had an executive board of six Democrats and six Republicans, but then the staff was of course scientists.

RW: One thing, before we go further, is that you make a clear point in your book that science is not a he-said she-said affair. It's something called scientific consensus. What is scientific consensus?

CM: Scientific consensus is something that's achieved when an issue or question has been studied quite extensively, and studies have been published repeatedly in scientific journals that are coming to or bolstering the same central conclusion. So, evolution happened, would be a very good one. You have mounds of evidence, and at some point the scientific community is able to say, well, we think we've got a pretty good take on this one, we think that it stood the test of time. And that doesn't mean that it will never, ever be challenged by new data, but it does mean that a lot of evidence has built up to support a particular conclusion. And when that happens, it doesn't happen all the time, but when it does it's something very powerful. Because it's the best scientific knowledge that the scientific community can give us.

RW: So the OTA basically dealt with scientific consensus?

CM: They would be asked by Congress to investigate a question. They would study it carefully based on the work that had already been done, sometimes they would do new research, and then they would pull it all together in an expert report.


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Richard Wolinsky is the host of Cover To Cover, which airs on KPFA Pacifica Radio.

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Consequences?
Posted by: Dylan F. on Oct 10, 2005 5:20 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
As a scientist who has dropped-out, I have sensed this lack of respect for science and for higher education on the part of the Republican Party since Reagan was governor of California.

The long-reaching consequences are horrendous. Everyone wants a cure for diabetes, heart disease, Alzheimer disease, for example. However, not only are we losing the opportunity to develop future treatments that might come about through stem cell research, we have already lost future generations of critically-thinking scientists and with them, their contributions to research and to education.

Why should any American spend years of hard work needed to get a PhD in the hard sciences when there are few jobs and few grants available when they finish? 'Research scientist' was recently listed as one of the 10-worst jobs in the country due to lack of rewards (like being able to feed your family) for the initial investment in time and money.

It is a little-publicized fact that physician researchers (MD-PhDs) usually do not receive the rigorous training needed to do really careful basic research. Then, once they graduate, medical research is something sandwiched into an already overcommitted life. Note the recent article showing the unreproducility of published clinical studies. Basic medical research is now the province of the pharmaceutical industry, not the independent university. As with all things Bushian, the bottom line is no longer discovering the truth but "what's in it for me?"

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» And it was 1 of our last hole-cards Posted by: Bic Pentameter
Bigscott
Posted by: Scott Griffith on Oct 10, 2005 7:00 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Lovely interview, lucid, fluent, relevant. But why did neither participant, in his criticism of journalists hoodwinked by anti-science forces, mention the obvious: money? My fear is that among journalists - editors and owners more precisely - the question of ethics is time and again swamped by the question of profit: even if it's misleading, if it sells the product, print it! That's always been so in trivial matters, like personalities' sex lives, but now the matter is no longer trivial.

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» And don't offend you advertisers! Posted by: Bic Pentameter
A theory you have not heard before...
Posted by: sgtmartin1 on Oct 10, 2005 7:02 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I know it's out there, but think about it...

Today on EWM, a scientific shocker: Study: Euthanizing Right-wing Pundits would Solve Global Warming

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Attacking Science and Government
Posted by: gogm on Oct 10, 2005 8:21 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Science has been under cultural attack for a very long time. Scientists are "nerds." Nerds are clumsy, unsocial people at the fringes of our get rich, get-the-job-done society. Our folk heros are men of action - businessmen, soldiers, and athletes. Thinkers don't figure in the American pantheon. We have had to import scientific talent down the years to meet our needs. Now that other countries are catching up economically, that supply may dry up leaving us without European physicists to develop the a-bomb, German engineers to put American boys on the moon, or a Tesla to bring Edison's lights into every home.

The Ford administration had OMB promulgate rules in the 1970s that forced Federal agencies doing research to farm the work out. The Carter administration sustained this policy. This reduces government scientists to the role of comptrollers. The Federal government had a remarkable record in science and technology in the 20th century, a record not brought forth to refute the prevailing dogma that government is bad and any social task is best done by the market economy. I believe it is not a coincidence that Airbus replaced Boeing as the major airliner supplier after American pursuit of aeronautical research languished.

In today's world, being a scientific power is prerequisite to being both an economic and military power. It follows that a nation where science is subordinated to the dogmas of a particular type of religion and capitalism faces a bleak future.

The issue of science warrants much more attention from the progressive side. The dogma of capitalism needs to be exposed for what it is - elevating a tool society can elect to use, an economic arrangement, into an unthinking, dangerous dogma.

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Invade a country & steal their brilliant scientists
Posted by: Smiggsy on Oct 10, 2005 8:52 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I always figured that if the US gov't want to excel in future science & technology, they just bull$hit the electorate, lie to the media, then invade & occupy a sovereign country & steal their brilliant scientists for their own selfish use. Doesn't need to be profitable as long as its taxpayer funded. Such an effective proven method of gov't policy.

If the above posts are correct then successive US gov't must undoubtly be expert in creating a flawless 'toilet economy'.

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Condensed Version
Posted by: Xynyx on Oct 10, 2005 10:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Republicans are strongly averse to reality. We knew that already.

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religion hates intelligence
Posted by: brasilaron on Oct 10, 2005 1:56 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is increasingly obvious that religion is opposed to education or to an educated populace (as pointed out as well by another post-er). Education usually leads to intelligence right? So qpq religion hates intelligence yet these people keep pushing "intelligent design" on us.
Marx said religion is the opiate of the masses, opiates however are not intrinsically evil. They take your pain away and give you hallucinations, the same stuff as the "visions" of the "saints". Religion, however, is evil because it coerces people into accepting greater pain now for some illusory hallucinatory unproven "paradise" later. Spirituality however does none of those things, it simply informs one to the wonders and mysteries of life and the acceptance of the state of Nature. Andeans call it Pacha Mama, the Earth Mother, and every culture has its Earth deities. Funny how the pushers of religion are almost always men yet the Earth deities are almost always female. Jamiroqai said it "when ya gonna learn"?

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abbacadabra
Posted by: gizzanizzle on Oct 10, 2005 5:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
what's up with all these scary clowns i keep seeing in the news? doesn't anyone realize that evil clowns went extinct in the 1920's? the last one was hunted down and killed in upstate new york, 1926

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» RE: abbacadabra Posted by: owleyes