If you look at the record of this administration that's not a stretch.
Time Magazine puts it even more bluntly:
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1156577,00.html

The Political Science Test
Bush said science would guide his decisions, but those in the lab see
ideology intruding on their work
By MARK THOMPSON, KAREN TUMULTY

The 3 1/2-hr. conference call brought together nearly two dozen of
the nation's best minds on the subject of air quality--and many of
them were steamed. As the scientists of the Environmental Protection
Agency's Clean Air Scientific Advisory Committee, they are rarely
overruled on their recommendations about how the government should
react to the latest and best research on the dangers of dirty air.
Seven months ago, they warned the EPA in a letter that unless it made
at least modest reductions in the amount of airborne soot, thousands
of Americans would die prematurely each year. But last December, EPA
Administrator Stephen Johnson, citing "the best available science,"
ignored their counsel. On the phone call last week, an exasperated Dr.
James Crapo, professor of medicine at Denver's National Jewish Medical
and Research Center, told his fellow scientists, "We need to write
another letter and this time take a stronger stand."

Starting when he was a presidential candidate in 2000, George W. Bush
has often assured voters that his policymaking would be guided by
"sound science." Last week, in his State of the Union address, the
President pointed to scientific research as the way to "lead the world
in opportunity and innovation for decades to come." Yet growing
numbers of researchers, both in and out of government, say their
findings--on pollution, climate change, reproductive health, stem-cell
research and other areas in which science often finds itself at odds
with religious, ideological or corporate interests--are being
discounted, distorted or quashed by Bush Administration appointees.

White House officials don't see that pattern of interference. "This
Administration has been very supportive of science," Bush's science
adviser and respected physicist John Marburger told TIME. "The
President wants us to do it right, and doesn't want us to do things
that contradict the laws of nature." But in the past two years, the
Union of Concerned Scientists has collected the signatures of more
than 8,000 scientists--including 49 Nobel laureates, 63 National Medal
of Science recipients and 171 members of the National Academies--who
accuse the Administration of an unprecedented level of political
intrusion into their world. "There have always been isolated incidents
where people have played politics with science," says Francesca Grifo,
director of the group's Scientific Integrity Program. "What's new is
its pervasive and systemic nature. We get calls every week from
federal scientists reporting stuff to us."

Rarely, however, are they willing to put their jobs and their research
grants at risk by going public with their complaints. That's why it
was so remarkable when one of the government's leading experts on
climate change, 29-year NASA veteran James Hansen, who is director of
the Goddard Institute for Space Studies, charged on the front page of
the New York Times that he has been muzzled by the agency. He accused
the agency of demanding to review his lectures, papers and postings to
the NASA website, as well as screen his media interviews.

So respected is Hansen that he has been invited to brief Vice
President Dick Cheney. The White House wanted to hear Hansen's
findings that supported its view that there are easier and cheaper
steps toward controlling global warming--reducing vehicle soot and
methane emissions, for instance--than curbing carbon dioxide, which by
some estimates would cost the energy industry $100 billion or more.
But Hansen's more recent research suggesting that global warming is
accelerating, and that time is running out to find a solution, was
less favorably received, he told TIME. "It just became so clear to me
that they were interested in those things that they were doing anyhow,
but they were not willing to consider the changes that would be needed
to reduce the most important greenhouse gas, carbon dioxide, in the
near term."

NASA officials have denied that Hansen was silenced, and insist
public-affairs officers routinely review interview requests. Hansen
himself has not stayed outside the realm of politics, having announced
in a 2004 speech at the University of Iowa that he planned to vote for
John Kerry. Still, his scientific reputation is solid enough that
Sherwood Boehlert, Republican chairman of the House Science Committee,
wrote NASA Administrator Michael Griffin last week to demand an
explanation and make clear that "good science cannot long persist in
an atmosphere of intimidation ... NASA is clearly doing something
wrong, given the sense of intimidation by Dr. Hansen and others who
work with him." By the end of the week, Griffin had e-mailed the
agency's 19,000 employees, saying public-affairs officers should not
"alter, filter or adjust" the work of NASA scientists.

Boehlert does not see a larger problem of Administration meddling and
suggests that Hansen probably fell victim to an overzealous,
middle-level bureaucrat. "I don't for a moment think that the
Administration is dictating from the White House some policy directed
to silence distinguished scientists like Dr. Hansen," he says. And he
noted that politics and science have never had an easy, hands-off
relationship in Washington. "This is a town where people like to say
they're for science-based decision making, until the scientific
consensus leads to a politically inconvenient conclusion. Then they
want to go to Plan B," he says. "That's seamless from one
Administration to another; I don't care if it's a Republican or a
Democrat."

Some who have experienced it from the inside, however, disagree. Dr.
Gerald Keusch, former director of the Fogarty International Center at
the National Institutes of Health (NIH), says he saw a marked change
in its operations as the government moved from the Clinton to the Bush
administrations. Under Clinton, Keusch says, he never encountered
resistance in appointing experts to the advisory board that conducted
peer reviews of grant proposals to the center, which focuses on
international health issues, particularly in developing countries. He
made seven nominations, and all were approved by the Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) within three weeks. Under Bush, his
first four nominations were quickly endorsed by NIH but then, says
Keusch, "it's 10 months before I hear from HHS, rejecting three of the
four, including a Nobel laureate, with no reasons given." In return,
HHS sent him the rÃ(c)sumÃ(c)s of other people, many of whom had no
expertise in infectious diseases or developing countries. Over the
next three years, Keusch recalls, he had to nominate 26 people to fill
seven vacancies and "came close to having a very dysfunctional
advisory committee. I couldn't get a quorum anymore."

Keusch, now associate dean for global health at Boston University's
School of Public Health, says ultimately he couldn't take the
"disdainful and disparaging" way in which he was treated--and adds
that he is not the only one. "People who have done extremely well in
their positions have left because they're being disregarded," he says.
But others, like Hansen, say that hostility is all the more reason to
stay and speak out about what they are convinced are growing dangers
to the world's health and environment. "I don't want my grandchildren
in the future to say, 'He understood what was going to happen, but he
didn't explain it to the people,'" Hansen says. "So I'm going to try
to explain that story."
With reporting by With reporting by Matthew Cooper/ Washington,
Christine Gorman/ New York


Copyright (c) 2006 Time Inc. All rights reserved.


On 2/7/06, G <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Not only on an individual level are there risks, but at an administrative
> level as well i'd imagine. These political hacks hold the keys to the
> agency's funding, do they not?
>
> "Hey, quit doing real science or we'll cut your money". I doubt it's a
> stretch to imagine this administration doing just that.
>

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