"Scientists."
Searching around information about the interaction between on of my heroes, the liberal Nobel Laureate Hans Bethe, and one of the organizations for which I have almost zero respect, "The Union of Concerned Scientists," I came across this precious tidbit from Richard Wilson, who is the Mallicrodt professor of Physics at Harvard University. The Context is the following letter to the editor of of The American Physical Society which can be found here:
http://phys4.harvard.edu/~wilson/publications/pp884.html"I must disagree most strongly with the implication by Professor Salpeter in your April issue that Hans Bethe was being a moderate liberal scientist in his discussions of nuclear bombs but not being a moderate liberal scientist when he supported the development of nuclear electric power and disagreed with the positions taken on nuclear power by the Union of Concerned Scientists from 1973 on. It is an interesting paradox that in the 1960s it was liberals, usually Democrats, who supported nuclear power development and Republicans who were reluctant. Now liberals, although mostly not liberal scientists, have rejected nuclear power and by default the globe may be warming somewhat faster! To many of us, the Union of Concerned Scientists was, in 1973, incorrect and counterproductive. By taking a very public position against nuclear power, UCS deflected attention from their important position of opposition to the arms race. Bethe remained consistent...
...
Hans was a conciliator. When in 1988 half a dozen liberal Nobel laureates were upset with the Union of Concerned Scientists for using their names (as they had used Hans' name) in a position paper against nuclear power, and one was threatening legal action, it was Hans who calmed them down..."
Italics are mine.
I cannot help but to point up
the long term existence of pronuke liberal
scientists like myself.