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Salon: Thou Shalt Not Make Scientific Progress

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kskiska Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-24-04 11:21 PM
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Salon: Thou Shalt Not Make Scientific Progress
Medical research is poised to make a quantum leap that will benefit sufferers from Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, muscular dystrophy, diabetes and other diseases. But George W. Bush's religious convictions stand in its way.

Late in the afternoon on the last Friday in February, Elizabeth Blackburn received a surprise phone call from an aide in the personnel office of the White House. Since early 2002, Blackburn, a distinguished cell biologist at the University of California at San Francisco, had served on the President's Council on Bioethics, the panel President Bush convened to explore the charged boundaries between ethics and cutting-edge biomedical science. On the council, Blackburn was sometimes critical of the Bush administration's restrictive policies on embryonic stem cell research; now, the White House staffer told Blackburn, the council was letting her go. The aide gave no explanation for the decision.

Blackburn was not technically "fired" from the bioethics council -- she was just not reappointed for the council's new term. But Blackburn was one of only two members on the 17-person panel to suffer that fate -- and it turned out that the other member not asked back, William May, an emeritus professor of ethics at Southern Methodist University, had been planning to retire anyway. For Blackburn, the cause of the abrupt dismissal was obvious. "I think this is Bush stacking the council with the compliant," she told the Washington Post that afternoon, the first of many instances over the next few weeks in which she publicly accused Bush and the bioethics council of playing politics with science.

To critics of the Bush administration, Blackburn's analysis of the situation sounded unimpeachable. George W. Bush's unhappy relationship with science has been well documented. Indeed, just a week before Blackburn was let go, 60 prominent scientists -- including 20 Nobel laureates -- accused the president of routinely mangling scientific fact in the service of "partisan political ends." So just about everyone concluded that Elizabeth Blackburn was the latest victim of the Bush administration's partisan attacks on science. The story line was simple and compelling: Blackburn was a proponent of embryonic stem cell research, while Bush -- and his most ardent supporters -- was not. During a campaign stop shortly after Blackburn's dismissal, likely Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry told reporters, "A scientific panel ought to be chosen on the basis of science and on the basis of reputation, not politics."

more…
http://salon.com/tech/feature/2004/03/25/stem_cells/index.html
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Old and In the Way Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-24-04 11:25 PM
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1. Dimson never took a science course at Yale.
His most technical course was economics...and I think he got C- in that. Any wonder why we are so screwed up today? Real does seem like we entered the Dark Ages under this administration.

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Lisa Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Mar-24-04 11:35 PM
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2. pretty much so ....
Actually, I think he took a half-year each of Astronomy and Geology (for his obligatory science credits?).

http://www.americanpolitics.com/bushtranscript.html


Given that these were likely at the intro level, and he did nothing after first year -- I don't think he made much use of them, even though he went into the oil exploration business later on! He didn't have success even though he drilled dozens of wells. (He seemed to think he could just buy technical advice rather than exerting himself to learn about petroleum geology ...)

And this is the guy who is going on about flying to Mars. I don't think he knows what's involved in that. Sigh.

(compare Bush with Al Gore, who took a wide range of subjects at Harvard -- even studying global warming under one of the leading researchers in that field -- in the mid-1960s, which gives him more experience than the climatologists who examined me for my postgraduate degree last year.)
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