Current:Home > MyAs the Culture Wars Flare Amid the Pandemic, a Call to Speak ‘Science to Power’ -FundConnect
As the Culture Wars Flare Amid the Pandemic, a Call to Speak ‘Science to Power’
View
Date:2025-04-19 22:18:55
More than a thousand of the nation’s top scientists say it’s time to speak “science to power,” as Covid-19 deaths top 141,000 nationally and cases continue to rise in 43 states. The scientists are calling on policymakers to restore evidence-based decision-making—especially when it comes to managing life-and-death challenges like the global pandemic and climate change.
More than 1,240 National Academy of Science members have now registered their personal concern about the Trump administration’s denigration of science.
The effort began when 375 academy members signed an open letter in 2016 warning that then-candidate Trump’s threatened withdrawal from the Paris climate agreement would harm American credibility and leadership. Hundreds more added their signatures to a statement posted online in 2018, after President Trump set the withdrawal in motion.
And several hundreds more members have signed the statement in recent weeks, speaking out as public health experts warning about surging Covid-19 cases have been attacked for perpetrating a “hoax” and overstating the seriousness of the disease.
Climate scientist Benjamin D. Santer helped initiate the open letter in 2016 and fielded signatures this spring as the scientific community grew increasingly alarmed about the Trump administration’s handling of climate change and the pandemic.
At a time when a cohesive and science-based approach is crucial, Santer said, the Trump White House has doubled down on attacking the government’s most prominent infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, over his advice to respond more aggressively to Covid-19.
“It’s a teachable moment,” said Santer, who works at the Lawrence Livermore Laboratory, one of the nation’s 17 national laboratories. “And the hope is that the lesson learned from the last few months is that science matters. Ignore it at your peril.”
The “Statement to Restore Science-Based Policy in Government” was posted by NAS members calling themselves Scientists for Science-Based Policy in 2018. Now, the signatures represent 43 percent of academy members, all of whom emphasize they are speaking for themselves and not for NAS or their institutions.
The online statement notes that the United States is the only nation to have left the Paris Agreement.
“The decision to withdraw is symptomatic of a larger problem: the Trump Administration’s denigration of scientific expertise and harassment of scientists,” the statement says. “The dismissal of scientific evidence in policy formulation has affected wide areas of the social, biological, environmental and physical sciences.”
Since then, the trend has accelerated. At the Environmental Protection Agency, for instance, a new “scientific transparency” policy threatens to undermine the foundational studies supporting health-based air-pollution regulations. And across government, in agency policies, documents and web pages, mentions of climate change have been scratched.
The White House and its office of Science and Technology Policy did not respond to requests for comment.
Observing the nation’s disorganized pandemic response, scientists have grown increasingly concerned about attacks from the Trump administration.
There have been reports about advice from epidemiologists being overridden, and infectious disease professionals have been fired. In recent days, Fauci became the subject of a right-wing cartoon shared by a presidential adviser and of a denigrating newspaper commentary by Trump trade adviser Peter Navarro, who said Fauci was “wrong about everything.”
Santer said infectious disease scientists trying to cope with the coronavirus pandemic are now facing attacks similar to those familiar to climate scientists. He pointed to the recent Covid-19 modeling study from Columbia University that President Trump condemned as coming from a “disgraceful institution.” The research suggested that as many as 36,000 lives could have been saved by earlier and more decisive action in dealing with Covid-19.
The consequences of such anti-science attitudes “are painfully obvious to all of us and, sadly, will become even more obvious over the next few months or so, and to many future generations with climate change,” Santer said.
Charles S. Manski, a Northwestern University economist who helped organize the statement, said scientists have played an important role in advising government leaders on public policy since President Abraham Lincoln created the National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine in 1863.
A kind of cross-discipline scientific brain trust for policy making, national academies members represent a who’s who list of esteemed scientists. Applicants must apply for membership and be elected by fellow members in one of 31 discipline categories. The science academy’s 2,900 members include nearly 190 Nobel prizewinners, including John Holdren, who served as White House science advisor throughout President Barack Obama’s term.
Since its creation, the national academy has convened multidisciplinary panels to advise government leaders on everything from nuclear waste to the post-Katrina supply chain and even, on Wednesday, opening schools in the fall with pandemic precautions.
Government policymakers have not tapped this expertise to help shape the comprehensive and integrated national response that the pandemic calls requires, said Manski, a critic of the federal government’s Covid-19 response.
“All of the societal effects—the effects on schooling, the effects on the economy—are just being viewed as political matters,” he lamented. “We’re not looking at the totality of these effects,” along with the health considerations.
He said the federal government should convene an interdisciplinary group of the best applied scientists to address the coronavirus, just as past presidents did in finding solutions for the Great Depression economy and mounting the national defense with the Manhattan Project.
“There’s not a hint of that happening” with the pandemic, Manski said. “Nothing at all.”
The scientists behind the open letter don’t pretend that their online statement will change the administration’s thinking on science-informed policy making. But they do hope that by standing together behind the open letter that they can make a difference.
“Scientific evidence and research should be an important component of policymaking,” the statement concludes. “We therefore call on the Federal Government to maintain scientific content on publicly accessible websites, to appoint qualified personnel to positions requiring scientific expertise, to cease censorship and intimidation of Government scientists, and to reverse the decision to withdraw the United States from the Paris Agreement.
Ray Weymann, a retired astronomer and astrophysicist, said more and more scientists are unwilling to be bystanders anymore. They want to stand up for scientists and scientific input—especially after “the abuse” Fauci has endured lately.
“These consequences really are a matter of life and death,” Weymann said. “And it isn’t short-term in terms of the pandemic. It’s the long-term consequences of climate change, for example, and toxics in the environment that are going to affect us for many years to come.”
He wonders if people on the fence who hear concern from more than a thousand respected scientists might realize that important decisions on issues like climate change and Covid-19 depend on who’s making policy. “And I hope that we will change that.”
veryGood! (2)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- Caitlin Clark faces defending WNBA champs: How to watch Indiana Fever vs. Las Vegas Aces
- George Floyd's brother says he still has nightmares about his 2020 murder
- Q&A: New Legislation in Vermont Will Make Fossil Fuel Companies Liable for Climate Impacts in the State. Here’s What That Could Look Like
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- Q&A: New Legislation in Vermont Will Make Fossil Fuel Companies Liable for Climate Impacts in the State. Here’s What That Could Look Like
- What restaurants are open Memorial Day 2024? Hours and details for McDonald's, Starbucks, more
- Sofia Richie announces birth of her first child, daughter Eloise: 'Best day of my life'
- Krispy Kreme offers a free dozen Grinch green doughnuts: When to get the deal
- Psst! Free People Is Having a Rare Memorial Day Sale, With Must-Have Summer Styles Starting at $20
Ranking
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Lenny Kravitz on a lesson he learned from daughter Zoë Kravitz
- Your Memorial Day beach plans may be less than fin-tastic: Watch for sharks, rip currents
- Sister of Israeli hostage seen in harrowing video says world needs to see it, because people are forgetting
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- Trump TV: Internet broadcaster beams the ex-president’s message directly to his MAGA faithful
- A 19th century flag disrupts leadership at an Illinois museum and prompts a state investigation
- Baltimore police fatally shoot a man who pulls gun during questioning; detective injured
Recommendation
A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
Pacers put unbeaten home playoff record on the line vs. Celtics road success in Game 3
A Debate Rages Over the Putative Environmental Benefits of the ARCH2 ‘Hydrogen Hub’ in Appalachia
How many points did Caitlin Clark score last night? Top pick hits dagger 3 to seal Fever's first win
Sam Taylor
What restaurants are open Memorial Day 2024? Hours and details for McDonald's, Starbucks, more
Fever coach, players try to block out social media hate: 'It's really sad, isn't it?'
Utah man declined $100K offer to travel to Congo on ‘security job’ that was covert coup attempt