"Of course, some folks were hard at work trying to dispute inconvenient 
scientific facts long before conservatives began to borrow postmodernist 
rhetoric. In Merchants of Doubt (Bloomsbury Press, 2010), two historians, Naomi 
Oreskes and Erik M. Conway, have shown how the strategy of denying climate 
change and evolution can be traced all the way back to big tobacco companies, 
who recognized early on that even the most well-documented scientific claims 
(for instance, that smoking causes cancer) could be eroded by skillful 
government lobbying, bullying the news media, and pursuing a public-relations 
campaign. Sadly, that strategy has largely worked, and we today find it 
employed by the Discovery Institute, the Seattle organization advocating that 
"intelligent-design theory" be taught in the public schools as balance for the 
"holes" in evolutionary theory, and the Heartland Institute, which bills itself 
as "the world’s most prominent think tank promoting skepticism about man-made 
climate change." - See more at: 
http://m.chronicle.com/article/The-Attack-on-Truth/230631/#sthash.cc0fahpi.dpuf

Ron replies:
Thanks for pointing me at that book Dave. I found something similar at:
http://www.salon.com/2014/03/04/bible_barons_how_the_gop_uses_religion_to_keep_voters_captive_to_corporate_ideology_partner/

I had a lot more to say but I have been ill and I'm in the middle of changing 
Jobs so I lost my train of thought. When things calm down and I can concentrate 
on the subject at hand I would like to take it up again.
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