http://desmog.ca/2013/05/24/rebels-cause-scientists-fight-back-war-science

Rebels With a Cause: Scientists Fight Back in the War on Science





It has been called “Stephen Harper’s war on science” in Canada and
just plain "war on science" in the US. But whatever you call it,
scientists everywhere are frustrated with how scientific research is
treated in North America. With the American sequester cuts looming on
the horizon and the Canadian government openly admitting that it is no
longer interested in funding "discovery science," scientists are
feeling accused, cut-off and shut-up.

It is becoming a trend in the United States and Canada to treat
scientists like nay-sayers or rebels without a cause instead of like
respected public figures. In cases where scientific evidence doesn't
support industry, governments in both countries have allowed
corporations and oil companies to cast doubts on research.

By dirt digging into scientists’ private lives and creating false
parallel science, the pursuit of doing good science has become a
complicated job. Character defamation and false research has not only
offered enough leeway to proceed on potentially dangerous projects, it
has done endless damage to the reputation of the scientific community.

Though President Obama promised otherwise when he “told scientists,
engineers and doctors that his goal is to reach for a public and
private research and development investment that we haven’t seen since
the space race.”

The reality is, the 2013 sequester is expected to be devastating to
many non-defense agencies. The National Institutes of Health will
sustain funding cuts of around $1.6 billion, the National Science
Foundation is losing $283 million, and the American Association of
Science is looking at a cut of about $9.3 billion.

Similarly, the Canadian scientific research and development agency,
the National Research Council (NRC), said earlier this month that they
intent to perform only research that has “social or economic gain.”
They announced this as a departure from “discovery science,” which
“comes from what scientists think is important,” to a focus on
“innovation.” John McDougal, President of the NRC, said “scientific
discovery is not valuable unless it has commercial value.”

The attack doesn’t stop at funding, however. For years, government
scientists in Canada, working in areas such as Natural Resources, have
“need[ed] permission from their minister’s office before they can go
to the media with their results. [The ministry] then has say over
whether they can talk to the media or not.”

The complaint that Government has been “muzzling” scientists has
prompted the federal commissioner’s office to launch a full-scale
investigation into "Stephen Harper’s War on Science." Since April this
year, Suzanne Legault’s office has been looking into “the systematic
efforts of the government of Canada to obstruct the right of the
media—and through them, the Canadian public—to timely access to
government scientists.”  Seven federal departments and agencies, from
Environment Canada to the National Research Council of Canada will be
investigated.

Scientists too are taking matters into their own hands and they are
doing so by banding together against suppression. The Union of
Concerned Scientists (UCS) at the Center for Science and Democracy, in
the US and PublicScience.ca in Canada are hard-working organizations
that aim to help the public to “distinguish evidence from political
positioning.”



Image from the Union of Concerned Scientists anti-science cartoon competition.

Biologist Jeff Hutchings spoke out against the "muzzling" of
scientists at the Death of Evidence demonstration on parliament hill
last July.

He said: “When you inhibit the communication of science, you inhibit
science. When you inhibit science, you inhibit the acquisition of
knowledge. Government control over the ability of society to acquire
knowledge has alarming precedence. An iron curtain is being drawn
between science and society."

It’s not a good time to cut funding to scientific research.

“The challenges are only increasing,” Andrew Rosenberg of the UCS said
in a recent interview. ”It’s not as if the issues of trying to
maintain the health of the oceans is diminishing." The UCS has
established a campaign to draw attention to scientific research in
fields like Global Warming, Food and Agriculture, and Scientific
Integrity.

Their tagline is: “Strengthening American Democracy by advancing the
essential role of science, evidence-based decision making, and
constructive debate as a means to improve the health, security and
prosperity of all people.”

Image Credit: Union of Concerned Scientists cartoon competition via coExist
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