http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/blogs/national-affairs/how-ignorance-greed-and-ideology-are-warping-science-and-hurting-democracy-20111115#ixzz1fgCiFxdc

How Ignorance, Greed and Ideology Are Warping Science and Hurting Democracy

RS Politics Daily

by: Julian Brookes


'Fool Me Twice: The Assault on Science in America' by Shawn Lawrence Otto
Rodale
"Whenever the people are well informed" an optimistic Thomas Jefferson
wrote, "they can be trusted with their own government." Sure – but
what if the people have no clue?

Most of the big challenges facing America and the world today – from
climate change to disease to population growth – revolve around
science and technology. If we – We, the People – are going to make
smart decisions on what to do about these problems, we need to have at
least a rough understanding of the basic science involved. Problem is,
we don't.

As science writer Shawn Lawrence Otto points out in a tough-minded new
book, Fool Me Twice: Fighting the Assault on Science in America, too
many Americans are either plain ignorant of science or actively
hostile to it, or both. And that's as true of political leaders and
journalists as it is of ordinary citizens (to say nothing of corporate
leaders who see action on climate change, say, as a threat to the
bottom line). We think climate change is a hoax; we're convinced
vaccines cause autism; we truly believe – as Newt Gingrich claims to –
that embryonic stem cell research involves killing children.

To go back to Jefferson's point, how can we be trusted with our own
government – how can we take on the huge challenges we face – if we're
so poorly informed? Or, as Otto puts it: "How can democracy continue
to function in a century dominated by complex science, where science
affects every aspect of life?" His short answer: it can't – unless we
make some big changes, changes in how students learn science, in how
journalists describe science, in how scientists explain themselves to
the public, in how money functions in politics.

We recently got Otto on the phone to talk about America's
dysfunctional relationship with science. Some highlights below.

How it's harder to be "well informed" than it was in Jefferson's time

Jefferson believed it required no degree of education for people to be
able to do this, but science has vastly expanded our knowledge now and
most of our big policy problems do require a great deal of education
to understand. This is going to be a problem that we are going to be
dealing with more and more as the century unfolds.

Scientific illiteracy in Congress

Look at the 94 of 100 newly elected GOP members of Congress who have
either said flat-out that they believe climate change is a vast hoax
or that they have signed pledges to oppose any mitigation efforts. And
this goes against all the evidence presented to every government
around the world, including our own. This also extends to people like
John Boehner, who has advocated in the past for teaching creationism
in science classes, and who claims to believe that climate scientists
are saying that carbon dioxide is a carcinogen.

Obama's science record

As a candidate he didn’t seem to really know very much about it, and
in fact he turned down an invitation to do science debates that would
have been broadcast nationally on PBS, in exchange for faith forums in
which he debated religion. But he seems to have changed his
perspective and he realized that science is central to most of the
major unsolved problems that the United States is facing. He's been
stymied in some of his ideas by the recession as well. He made a
political decision between climate change and health care, and he went
for health care and put climate change off until after the 2010
elections. I think that was a strategic miscalculation that has
allowed opponents of the number one science issue to coalesce in their
opposition.

Anti-science liberals

Democrats aren’t exempt from anti-science views at all. For instance,
a couple of months ago the all-Democrat San Francisco Board of
Supervisors voted 10 to 1 to require cell phone shops to post warnings
that cell phones may cause brain cancer, even though there’s no
scientific evidence whatsoever to show. Also on the Left, you see the
idea that maybe vaccines cause autism, which is not supported by any
science that we know of.

Key differences between anti-science views on the left and right

Largely on the left it seems to focus on mind-body purity. On the
right they tend to focus on either beginning of life and issues around
contraception and evolution—the things fundamentalists get all upset
about—or on climate change, particularly environmental and regulatory
issues.

The role of vested interests in promoting anti-science views

Take climate change. Simple scientific observations and scientific
evidence are challenging the vested economic interests that have grown
around the internal combustion engine and hydrocarbons. They are
looking at their entire business model being threatened by this new
knowledge we have. And as a result, in the last ten years they’ve
invested about $2 billion setting up phony think tanks, doing bogus
science, and spending money on lobbying and advertising efforts trying
to set up a smoke screen to confuse the public.

The (unhelpful) role of the news media

Something has happened with the last generation of journalists, who
have been taught the postmodern idea that there is no such thing as
objective reality. But there is such a thing as objective reality –
and we can measure it, and by measuring it we’ve doubled our lifespan,
multiplied the productivity of our farms by 35 times, and totally
changed the world. By not acknowledging that, reporters end up
creating something called, "false balance," essentially reporting on
two sides of a story and letting the audience decide what they think
is the objective truth or who is right. That’s really shirking their
responsibility to dig and inform people what’s really going on.

The difference between theory and opinion

Science is always provisional, that is just the nature of inductive
reasoning. Scientists are very, very careful not to say that something
is absolutely true. But, it’s a mistake to think that provisional
scientific knowledge is on the same level as opinion and to put
someone who is telling you real knowledge that has been measured and
tested and gone through peer review on par with somebody who is just
giving an opinion.

How to mend America's fractured relationship with science

First of all, scientists really need to reengage in our public
conversation. Most Americans, when polled, don’t even know a living
scientist. That’s got to change. Scientists need to get back out there
and talk to their neighbors, speak in churches and talk to people
where they go. People need to hear that voice in our political
discussion again. The voice of values and religion – those are an
important part of our conversation; but we need a plurality of voices
and we also need the voice of facts, and reason, and knowledge.

The other thing people can do is support an organization, a grass
roots movement started by scientists and others called
Sciencedebate.org, which is a call to get candidates for public office
to debate these issues that they don’t want to talk about, and base
their points in debates on reason and knowledge and not talking points
that they pull out of their rear end.

Why the book's titled Fool Me Twice

There’s an old saying that president Bush humorously flubbed up but
that is critically important to all of us as Americans: Fool me once,
shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me.  Most people don’t have time
to study the science of things and find out who’s telling the truth
and who’s blowing smoke.  And antiscience vested interests from
megachurch evangelists to oil and gas companies to antivaccine
activists are taking advantage of that to try to fool us while our
scientists have been busy doing science.  It's our responsibility to
not let that happen, not to let them fool us twice, but to be the
tough, hard-headed, critically minded, pro-science Americans that kept
the world safe for democracy and put a man on the moon.  Our own
economy, our own environment, our own moral legacy, and the quality of
the lives of our own children are depending on no one else but us.

http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/blogs/national-affairs/how-ignorance-greed-and-ideology-are-warping-science-and-hurting-democracy-20111115

-- 
Larry C. Lyons
web: http://www.lyonsmorris.com/lyons
LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/in/larryclyons

There is a cult of ignorance in the United States, and there always
has been. The strain of anti-intellectualism has been a constant
thread winding its way through our political and cultural life,
nurtured by the false notion that democracy means that "my ignorance
is just as good as yo

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