GOP Bill To Outlaw EPA 'Secret Science' That Is Not Transparent, Reproducible
Hugh Pickens DOT Com writes "Fox News reports that Republican lawmakers in the House are pushing legislation that would prohibit the EPA from proposing new regulations based on science that is not transparent or not reproducible. The bill introduced by Rep. David Schweikert, R-Ariz., would bar the agency from proposing or finalizing rules without first disclosing all "scientific and technical information" relied on to support its proposed action. "Public policy should come from public data, not based on the whims of far-left environmental groups," says Schweikert. "For far too long, the EPA has approved regulations that have placed a crippling financial burden on economic growth in this country with no public evidence to justify their actions." The bill, dubbed the Secret Science Reform Act of 2014 (HR 4012), would prohibit the EPA's administrator from proposing or finalizing any rules unless he or she also discloses "all scientific and technical information" relied on by the agency in the regulations' development including all data, materials and computer models. According to Schweikert's press release a 2013 poll from the Institute of Energy Research found that 90 percent of Americans agree that studies and data used to make federal government decisions should be made public. "Provisions in the bill are consistent with the White House's scientific integrity policy, the President's Executive Order 13563, data access provisions of major scientific journals, the Bipartisan Policy Center and the recommendations of the Obama administration's top science advisors.""
Sorry EPA, but the studies sponsored by the [insert industry] industry couldn't reproduce the findings.
You cannot regulate them.
This will be one GIANT loophole for industry.
This is a bill coming from the GOP??? and its pro transparent science?? Color me skeptical, but this looks like a good idea to me
have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
90% of the Americans think it's a good idea so we should do it? Ask them about their opinion about bailouts, I guess you get a similar result for NO FUCKIN' WAY.
But aside of that, wouldn't that make it kinda hard to push intelligent design and other bull that's kinda hard to prove because "a wizard did it" isn't quite scientific?
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
Actually, I think that this should be required for ALL laws. Every law should be justified, and should not rely on secret justifications or justifications that cannot be confirmed.
Environmental policy should be based on science and common sense. I would suggest we propose a similar criteria for a bill that regulates what may be taught to children: creationism or evolution. We can teach either one as long as all "scientific and technical information" is disclosed beforehand.
Here's hoping people will look past their pet political stereotypes and commend those who defend fact-based science in pursuit of better legislation and governance.
The purpose of laws is almost always separate from the selling points used to sell it. So, even if the bill seems to have good method (i.e. making information public), the intention is purely partisan, and the use will be similarly malicious.
I have to agree that when public policy is to made, the information should be disclosed and an open period of debate and review should follow. If this review is actually performed by other qualified scientists in the field vs politicians who understand the laws of nature do not change on a whim and not by 'historical' scientists and explain the findings to the politicians in terms they can understand, it's a good thing. However, to call it a far- left agenda shows the partisan nature of the bill. Sounds like Bill NYE upset the far-rights mindset....maybe for the better this time.
The hypocrisy is astounding...
Loading...
The real purpose is to bog down the agency with these requirements so that nothing ever gets done.
When the east coast of America is under water.
This will be faux news, we warned you of global warming.
Beta is more than cosmetics or aesthetics. The new design ruins the one thing that makes /. what it is -- the commenting system. I only come here for the comments, not the 2-day old articles nor the erroneous summaries.
I do not see the changes of Beta as improvements. What is wrong with Slashdot that demands breaking its foundations? This is not change for the sake of change, but, as others have commented, an attempt to monetize /. at any any cost, and its users be damned.
Our complaints have fallen on deaf ears, and will continue to do so. Dice intends to dispose of Classic in favor of Beta, whether we like it or not. Do you know how to tell whether an executive really cares about feedback? If her CV doesn't proclaim the following "successes":
Proven track record innovating and improving iconic websites (CNET.com, Dice.com, Slashdot.org, Sourceforge.net) while protecting their voice and brand integrity
Climate change is not reproducible by its very nature (we'd be happy if we could rewind it). Likewise any permanent change is not reproducible since it it terminal.
So this bill is putting a stop to any regulation that would prevent irreversible changes.
As usual, it's not about the message. The message is a good idea. It's the constantly confrontational attitude that makes everyone roll their eyes at the GOP and not take them seriously.
"For far too long, the EPA has approved regulations that have placed a crippling financial burden on economic growth in this country with no public evidence to justify their actions."
That quote is not the same attitude that would come from someone who is looking for solid, reproducible science. I believe most of the people who are strong supporters of solid, transparent, reproducible science would actually say the EPA has been near toothless, not overbearing. For example West Virginia chemical spill that contaminated the Kanawha/Ohio/Mississippi and the drinking water for millions and yet the company was allowed to store the chemical right next to the river with nearly zero monitoring or oversight. Another would be fracking, for which there is ample evidence of ground water contamination, and it causing earthquakes, and yet "full speed ahead!".
No, this is a bureaucratic trick, often used in Washington, so let's translate:
The tactic is alive right in the promotion of the bill. The "Institute for Energy Research" turns out to be a lobbying group run by an ex-Enron director, funded by ExxonMobile and the Koch brothers. As a result I think you can see the sort of transparent, reproducible "science" that will be in play here, starting with the "2013 poll from the Institute of Energy Research" used to back up this bill.
He assumes the regulations get written the same way financial industry and other regulations get written, by think tanksand lobbyists (ALEC anyone?). My sister, an environmental engineer spends a great amount of time in the field collecting samples and then coming back to the lab and documenting the science that goes into developing regulations for the EPA.
Which is pure, verifiable bullshit. His agenda couldn't be more plain. Like laws introduced to prohibit public funding of abortions, which is already prohibited, it's more about grandstanding and politics than anything having to do with transparency, economics, or in absolutely last place, the environment.
To reduce crime, make fewer things against the law.
Beta team here really need to get 330AM abduction team, that will definitely fix them up. I forgot, beta suck!
Did you see the debate between Ken Ham and Nye?
At the end, Ham said that they were using the same evidence but that the interpretations are just different. That's all. Ham is also one of the people who say that Evolution is in conflict with Faith. So, if you want to know one of the sources of all this needless conflict from the Religious Fundamentalist who are trying to teach Creationism in science class, look to him.
Science uses ALL data to come to their conclusions. Others, cherry pick and make things up in order for their "theories" to work. In Hams case, one thing he made up to discount the criticisms of the animals eating each other on Noah's Ark, he just proclaimed that obviously they were all vegetarians back then - even the lions.
Evidence for that? Nope. But it makes his "theory" valid because the Bible is The World Of God and everything is on the table to make the stories correct. And the fundies eat it up and just think "See! Science doesn't have all the answers!"
That's the mentality we're dealing with here. Folks discount the science that is pointing to the fact that these emissions are doing a lot of damage - and forgetting that emissions also cause smog and other air quality problems. This bill - if enacted into law - would open up the doors for industry to indiscriminately pollute.
I highly suspect that this bill is NOTHING but industry trying to get the EPA off their backs so that they can go back to polluting like it was 1899 again.
Having lived in Arizona, I know how politically dysfunctional it really is. I support the spirit of the bill meaning that science should be transparent but of course, this barely educated moron has to throw in a gaff at the left. It makes what would be a solid argument and makes it sound childish.
My first thought was that this sounds eminently sensible. My second was "Just who decides what 'reproducible' means?" My third is that it sounds like a recipe for delaying and tying up in the courts anything the far right don't like, on the grounds that there's "too much conflicting evidence and opinion" for it to pass the test. Frankly - it's a trap. Don't go there. And, just to lay my cards squarely on the table, I have no direct skin in this - I'm not a US citizen.
where is the reproducible scientific proof of that?
"For far too long, the EPA has approved regulations that have placed a crippling financial burden on economic growth in this country with no public evidence to justify their actions."
Gee, it sounds like they are doing a lot of this sort of thing. Can you name some specific instances where this has occurred?
"Provisions in the bill are consistent with the White House's scientific integrity policy, the President's Executive Order 13563, data access provisions of major scientific journals, the Bipartisan Policy Center and the recommendations of the Obama administration's top science advisors."
Are ALL or just a few of the provisions consistent with the policy? Which provisions aren't consistent with the policy?
"prohibit the EPA from proposing new regulations based on science that is not transparent or not reproducible"
So you mean that since they don't have a second planet earth to experiment on, they can't issue any rules that would relate to things like, oh, I don't know, anthropomorphic climate change?
Gee thanks, Mr. Republican, for looking out for my interests.
You guessed it... Fuck beta
Where is they "hypocrisy"? Is creationism being used to make EPA rules anywhere? Is creationism justification for any other kind of government policy?
Republicans and creationists generally don't even want public school funding, so they don't even want creationism to be taught with public funds.
Hey, your post got modded up quick! Please reconsider posting at all, slashdot is about to die unless direct action by its users is taken, did you miss something?
And if everyone is rubishing beta, what do you think happens? Or, do you think geeks are like unionized blue-collars to go on a strike and return next week/month as if nothing happened? /.
Yes, I can express my olives and fetta, but if I'm limited to only/exclusively that for more than 2-3 days, suddenly it doesn't make sense to even come on
Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
Fuck this new hipster style Slashdot. I'm going elsewhere.
If your favorite restaurant were about to go away, wouldn't you want to have a couple of last meals there? Preserving the discussion system is what the protest against beta is all about; we might as well enjoy it while we can.
I'll happily join in the "Slashcott." (I suspect I'll get more work done next week as a result.) Until then, I'll post about the story at hand, about the awfulness of beta, or about whatever else seems appropriate.
I'm suspicious you are all shills, and confused why on posting, you all get straight to "score:2".
http://www.google.com/search?q=slashdot%20karma%20bonus
The correlation between ignorance of statistics and using "correlation is not causation" as an argument is close to 1.
So long as all sides in a controversy have to use open science, this will not happen. You have nothing to fear because all real science is open.
Remember the years that the FDA was just trying make cigarette makers put warning labels on cigarette packs? The cigarette industry had plenty of studies that showed cigarettes were "safe". It's easy to find a scientist to create a study to show that what you want then to show.
And while the debates are going on about what is "real" science, industry is plowing ahead making money and harming people.
The same WILL happen with all these industries who are trying get out from under the EPA.
Industry CANNOT be trusted to do real science when it comes to their regulation and their bottom line.
It is naive think that data, truth and science will prevail.
Please post this to new articles if it hasn't been posted yet. (Copy-paste the html from here [pastebin.com] so links don't get mangled!)
On February 5, 2014, Slashdot announced through a javascript popup that they are starting to "move in to" the new Slashdot Beta design. Slashdot Beta is a trend-following attempt to give Slashdot a fresh look, an approach that has led to less space for text and an abandonment of the traditional Slashdot look. Much worse than that, Slashdot Beta fundamentally breaks the classic Slashdot discussion and moderation system.
If you haven't seen Slashdot Beta already, open this [slashdot.org] in a new tab. After seeing that, click here [slashdot.org] to return to classic Slashdot.
We should boycott stories and only discuss the abomination that is Slashdot Beta until Dice abandons the project.
We should boycott slashdot entirely during the week of Feb 10 to Feb 17 as part of the wider slashcott [slashdot.org]
Moderators - only spend mod points on comments that discuss Beta
Commentors - only discuss Beta
http://slashdot.org/recent [slashdot.org] - Vote up the Fuck Beta stories
Keep this up for a few days and we may finally get the PHBs attention.
-----=====##### LINKS #####=====-----
Discussion of Beta: http://slashdot.org/firehose.pl?op=view&id=56395415 [slashdot.org]
Discussion of where to go if Beta goes live: http://slashdot.org/firehose.pl?op=view&type=submission&id=3321441 [slashdot.org]
Alternative Slashdot: http://altslashdot.org [altslashdot.org] (thanks Okian Warrior (537106) [slashdot.org])
Is this the hypocrisy in your comment? Have you even gone here and viewed the scientific evidence? Even once? http://www.answersingenesis.or...
Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
I, for one, give people the benefit of the doubt when they say, "OK, WE HEARD YOU!" There's plenty of time for another boycott the next time they try to turn off Classic if beta still doesn't have the features we want.
Peter predicted that you would "deliberately forget" creation 2000 years ago...
The irrational hatred of conservatives here is hilarious. If it was a liberal proposing the same bill you'd be all for it, but because it's a conservative-proposed bill you're all up in arms. Throwing out references to creationism and the Bill Nye debate? That has absolutely nothing to do with it. You're just trying to find any possible way you can trash conservatives. You're pathetic.
lets impose the same restrictions on banks & churches.
so fuck the rest of you and let me get rich of raping the planet now!
Creationism is reproducible since it does not have random components to it. Evolution isn't.
Put a few apes in a cage and wait for them to evolve into humans, bonus points if they don't vote Republican. How long will you take to reproduce yourself?
I would take this bill one step farther. Unless a rule can be shown to either have no effect on job creation or to create jobs, it should be nullified.
I'm suspicious you are all shills, and confused why on posting, you all get straight to "score:2".
You must be a shill, your post went straight to score 2!!
Why single out the EPA? Perhaps Congress should stick to science too? But no this is just a way to all big industry (ie those with lots of lawyers) to damage the environment that we all share in the name of bigger profits. At least until we the consumer die from the damage that has been done to the environment.
... next move is that EPA will decide whether kids will be taught evolution, as long evolution is reproducible...
You want us to be blind to political motivations? The GOP cares not a wit about environmental protection. Time and time again the GOP has shown this to be the case. It's entirely appropriate to ask cuo bono? This is so transparently a loophole. Anytime there is a proposed regulation and the underlying science cannot be reproduced by the Heartland Foundation then that will tie the EPA's hands. Of course the Heartland Foundation would give a good faith effort to reproduce the results, right?
Btw, this is my first experience with the beta. If this stays, I go.
When they turn off Classic, that's when it will no longer be an organized boycott. Most will simply leave.
They'd call that job killing regulation.
So I guess it was written by an oil company. Maybe there should be a house transparency bill attached to this so we know where these bills originate.
Hey, your post got modded up quick! Please reconsider posting at all, slashdot is about to die unless direct action by its users is taken, did you miss something?
And if everyone is rubishing beta, what do you think happens? Or, do you think geeks are like unionized blue-collars to go on a strike and return next week/month as if nothing happened?
Yes, I can express my olives and fetta, but if I'm limited to only/exclusively that for more than 2-3 days, suddenly it doesn't make sense to even come on /.
Ok, what I hope might happen from everyone rubbishing beta, is that slashdot corps will start to realise they need to work with us, instead of the attempted dunbing down of slashdot with the hope of widening the "audience", which is what the beta is.
many of the "geeks" here are indeed trying to club together in a unionised way, so yes, they can be like that. The thinking, like any direct action or strike, is to try to make the management realise that the people they need to make their organisation actually work need to be treated respectfully, and with care. Especially if they are critical to the operation, as we slashdot users are. Unlike a usual strike though, the balance is different, and in our favour, we are not workers, our livelyhoods and families do not require us to be on slashdot to help them survive. The management need us considerably more than we actually need them. All we need is resolve, and an ability to avoid posting for "more than 2-3 days". Your seeming addiction to slashdot is what they are relying on to make the transition from geek site to meek site smooth. You will eventually move away anyway, as article complexity and depth lowers, and comments debase. But right now you can fight for something you so obviously enjoy.
In a work environment strike, I can understand those who still turn up for work. They have mouths to feed, or have made the choice they don't mind being shafted in the near future, compared to being wageless or jobless iminently. Here, I understand it less. I even imagine many of the posters are in fact Slashdot employees trying desperately to force comment. Perhaps you are not, but If you really want Slashdot, you posting here and carrying on as normal is less forgivable. You have nothing to lose by trying to keep it. Your need to post in the next 2-3 days is less important than your need to post in the next year surely?
I agree that simply restricting EPA's regulation is an "end of pipe" solution to the problems at EPA (restricting the power to restrict). But while I think the environment is the most important legacy our generation will leave (or not), there are many problems at EPA. A pile of lead silicate in the sunshine at a mining site is governed by 1872 laws and the cleanup paid by Superfund. Try collecting a stack of leaded silicate at a recycling operation. Outdated EPA codes discourage innovation or investment. In 1960 the USA had 7 secondary (recycling) copper smelters, by 2001 there were 0, because EPA enforcement of "waste" (scrap raw material, defined as "waste") is stronger than enforcement of "extraction" (mined raw material, defined as a "commodity") codes. The codes on EPA books were influenced by property value, making resources extracted from populace more difficult. 14/15 of the largest Superfund sites are at hard rock mining sites EPA can't figure out how to regulate... so they double down regulating recyclers, in a perverse "pecking order" show of strength. Visit this EPA Calculator to see EPA's attempt to put their Codes into legal interpretation, and run virgin leaded ore through it (follow "specific exclusions" path for mined ore, defined under "commodity" exclusion) http://www.epa.gov/osw/hazard/...
I really liked my colleagues (state env regulatory agency) and hate to sound like a jerk. But that social group-think, and "reverence of the environment", doesn't belong in scientific method, and is part of the problem. There is kind of pseudo-religious hostility towards rewriting environmental regulations, which become ossified and subject to work-arounds. Too many environmental regulators seem spoiled by the knee-jerk support of environmentalists, who fetishize the environmental codes, opposing rewrites and sunsetting of old EPA rules (again, out of justifiable but cynical suspicion the RCRA and CERCLA laws won't be replaced by new ones). Resistance to identified problems with EPA testing methods (like TCLP tests applied to vitrified solids, hah!) feeds the backlash at the GOP over continued use of the old code. How many of the comments here simply dismiss the idea in the article because it comes from the GOP? And how often are Democrats willing to sunset an old code before implementing a new one? It's a vicious intractable political cycle.
All I can think of is to put USGS.gov (US Geological Survey) or NASA in charge of EPA, as the problems at EPA are entrenched officials who don't know how to steer their ocean liner to catch the sunset. RCRA and CERCLA are broken, EPA officials know it, but they are too afraid that if they are removed they won't be able to get replacement law enacted, and won't be able to hire the type of people that would write good regulations out of the new laws. Or if it's a coding problem, maybe a software engineer can fix it.
Gently reply
I, for one, give people the benefit of the doubt when they say, "OK, WE HEARD YOU!"
Words are not actions, and corporations are certainly not people. Perhaps that was the disconnect?
Besides, whatever the large banner print gaveth, the corporate doublespeak took away. You did read the message to "the audience" that the banner linked to, right?
Have you ever worked for a company large enough to have an HR department? If so, then you will know how to translate what they said into what they actually mean. They don't want a community like we have, they want an audience they can monetize. The Beta is designed to make that shift happen. They have been ignoring the feedback for months. If they were going to heed it they would have done so by now.
Here's an allegory: did you ever see the website JumpTheShark.com? It was a Wiki-type online community that rated when various television shows had reached their inflection point (a reference to the infamous Happy Days episode where Fonzi jumped over a shark lagoon on waterskis). Anyhow, it was acquired by TV Guide after a few years. It was "monetized" by ripping it apart, throwing away everything related to the community, and turning it into an Entertainment Tonight blog type clone complete with "Shark Bites" news updates. That is the type of future that Dice envisions for Slashdot.
We may not be able to divert the inexorable fate of this community being ground into dust by corporate managers at Dice (or whoever they pawn this site off to in the future), but a boycott will at least be retaliation in the only form they can understand: reduced revenue. This boycott will let them observe how committed this community is, or whether we can be safely flushed away like they were planning to do anyway.
Not a great analogy since Big Pharma are not government agencies. Now if you'd said the FDA then I'd agree.
God saving us seems to be the rationale for trashing the planet.
By the time statistics and averaging catches up, it will be too late.
We told you so. Always remember that!
Captcha: preempts
Another agency does, which is why Americans complain that it takes too long for a new drug to get to market. But the point is well taken. Consider how the EPA are going ballistic over cigars on the basis of cigarette and chewing tobacco data.. Has anybody ever seen school kids hanging around with fat stogies? Have you seen anybody with a cigar lately? A few old men smoke them but the EPA will spend hundreds of millions of tax dollars to fight this terrible blight. How dare old men enjoy something that they like and believe they are mature and have the right to accept the risk. The EPA is indeed managed by some fanatics, regardless of which wing.
We let motorcyclists ride without helmets (oops, different agency), but old men can't have cigar in peace?
If it's not in the bible then it's CRAP! -- Ken Ham(paraphrased)
SLASHDOT AS YOU KNEW IT IS FINISHED.....IT IS OVER.....One look at the slashdotmedia.com webpage will confirm that for you.
If you cannot stomach the BETA redsign, if you really love the classic site layout so much, YOU MUST fork the site code and start another site such as what "AltSlashdot" are attempting to do....no if's or but's about this anymore !!!!! Personally speaking, I think it may be a good idea if Joel Spolsky (co-founder of StackOverflow) got involved.
I hope they realize they are outlawing the teaching of Creationism and intelligent design as well.
There's plenty of time for another boycott the next time they try to turn off Classic if beta still doesn't have the features we want.
What company directs 25% of its users to a partially-working, not-ready-for-production website? Please realize that Beta will not have the features that we want, because it goes against Dice's plans for Slashdot. To their advertisers, Dice presents Slashdot as a "Social Media for B2B Technology" platform. B2B - that's the reason Beta looks like a generic wordpress-based news site. A large precentage of the current userbase might be in IT, but /. is most certainly not a B2B site.
Nevertheless, Dice is desperate to make money off of Slashdot, since it has not lived up to their financial expectations, a fact that they have revealed in a press release detailing their performance in 2013:
Slashdot Media was acquired to provide content and services that are important to technology professionals in their everyday work lives and to leverage that reach into the global technology community benefiting user engagement on the Dice.com site. The expected benefits have started to be realized at Dice.com. However, advertising revenue has declined over the past year and there is no improvement expected in the future financial performance of Slashdot Media's underlying advertising business. Therefore, $7.2 million of intangible assets and $6.3 million of goodwill related to Slashdot Media were reduced to zero.
Beta is not a cosmetic change. It is a new design that deliberately ruins the one thing that makes /. what it is today -- the commenting system. There is nothing wrong with Slashdot, from the users' perspective, that demands breaking its foundations. As others have commented, this is an attempt to monetize /. at any any cost, and its users be damned. Dice views its users, the ones who create the site, as a passive audience. As such, it is interchangeable with its intended B2B crowd. We, the current users of Slashdot, are an obstacle in Dice's way.
That is why they ignore the detailed feedback they have received in the months since they first revealed Beta. That is also why they now disregard our grievances. Their claims of hearing us are a deliberate snow job. It is only pretense, since at the same time they openly admit that Classic will be cancelled soon:
"Most importantly, we want you to know that Classic Slashdot isn't going away until we're confident that the new site is ready.
Don't hold your breath waiting for Dice to fix Beta. Their vision of Slashdot is a crippled shadow of the site as it is today. Don't let them pull the wool over your eyes. Dice doesn't need us, and it wants us out.
Slashdice delenda est!
Because I don't care about your "slashcot". If Dice decides to implement the beta in anything like its current form, that will be time enough to stop coming to slashdot. You appear to want me to stop enjoying slashdot while it is in a form I like, because they have talked about changing it to a form I do not like. If Dice decides that the beta is more valuable to them than my participation in slashdot, I will respect their wishes and leave. Until then I will continue to enjoy slashdot.
The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
You heard Peter say that?
Loading...
I guess your comments also apply to the Democrats since Obama's stated policy is the same? The bill would give that policy the force law.
It isn't reproducible at all... lol. Unless you are the great bearded Wizard I the sky.
Loading...
Just trying to keep track...
- EPA: science good
- School Curriculums: science bad
- Families: good
- Families for lgbt: bad
- government handouts for high income and corporations: good
- government handouts for low income who can't afford food: bad
- no abortions: good
- giving people affordable healthcare for pre and post natal care: bad
Might be easier to attract voters to a party if it supported just one side of any issue.
Multiple personality much?
No one is talking about reproducing the climate. It's about reproducing the STUDY or experiment. One guy working for Solyndra says these tree rings have a certain attribute? Fine, let someone else look at the tree rings too. Nobody else in the world can see the same thing in those tree rings? Then it's not science, it's tea reading.
How do we switch back to classic mode again?
italics
Bold
Link
Holy crap, the space to type the capcha is two characters long and don't show up as you type. What a mess (Windows 7, IE 10, not going to risk using my real browser).
I, for one, give people the benefit of the doubt when they say, "OK, WE HEARD YOU!" There's plenty of time for another boycott the next time they try to turn off Classic if beta still doesn't have the features we want.
giving the benefit of the doubt is indeed a useful tool to own. but we must use it with discernment, not just because someone uses some of the right words.
"OK, WE HEARD YOU", is indeed a great start to a statement backtracking a little, being humble, suggesting that we actually work together, realizing they got it wrong, and that they will change tack.
Unfortunately the actual statement following "OK, WE HEARD YOU" was full of lack of understanding, describing us as an audience, clearly stating the beta will go ahead anyway, and that a bit of tweaking will fix it, and also revealing that we, the contributers and community, are not really target anymore anyway. It also smacked of "PR speak", and did nothing to explain how on earth they would actually improve the situation. They are the people with the power, so for them to prove good intent would not be too difficult, they could put a pause on their current plans immediately, and set up a system for us to really explain what we need and why, they could set up a meaningful poll, with an outline of what the results would dictate But so far their words remain hollow and cloying.
To me the conclusion is that benefit of the doubt in this case is definitely not appropriate, and certainly not useful in trying to save /. from a fate worse that lolcats
(sliceoflife - out of Karma)
The bill will only serve to allow companies to fight EPA regulations in court by failing to reproduce the results.
The conspiracy goes deeper than the GOP. The National Academy of Science is also involved - http://www.nytimes.com/gwire/2.... How dare they criticize the science of these holy warriors? A pox upon both of their houses.
Sie ist tunbar!
There are natural limits to our ability to instrument and reproduce cause and effect at a global scale. This seems to suggest that because that limitation exists we should err on the side of making a few bucks rather than objectively considering the massive amounts of smaller scale scientific evidence that can be correlated, if not completely proven as a whole. If you can't absolutely prove today that there will be a consequence tomorrow, it must not be true ... right?
As a whole, capitalism and commercialization are good and beneficial to all. The adage, "the market will right itself" is largely true. But, sometimes the negative impacts which result before the market self-adjusts are irreversible or out of proportion to the assumed benefits. That is why regulatory bodies exist.
Nothing in this bill will require federally funded research to be public access, nor will it fund archival efforts for the raw data. Rather it requires that the EPA ignore any science that isn't open access, after the GOP spent years of fighting against open access.
Perhaps if the EPA weren't so busy with reading tea leaves, they'd have more of their resources devoted to doing their f___ing job - like keeping an eye on the use and transport of dangerous chemicals.
No sir. Not one bit. Nobody doing shady things other than those mean old nasty ignorant rethuggggggggglicans. http://thefederalist.com/2014/...
is it that bad seein a hot chick again? if i see a hot chick walkin down the hall i dont say "repost"
OMG, the source of all bad code has been discovered! The Bible clearly has no mention of computer science or programming. I haven't seen one passage written in binary or hex. Clearly, God did not intend for us to advance in this direction :-)
I wonder how many of the comments saying this bill is just to provide loopholes for industry wouldn't be here if there was a D before the state the congress-critter was from.
So, Creationists have conducted an experiment were, in one test, there is a God, and in the second test, there is NOT a God, and all other conditions are identical, and in the first, life appears, and in the second, it does not?
Or, even more simply, given a population with a mix of genetic traits, and selective pressure applied to make one trait more beneficial, they have shown that the proportion of the population with the selected-for trait does not change over time?
Because, really, that second paragraph is it. That's what would disprove "the theory of evolution by natural selection", which, boiled down, is simply that "changes in species over time are due to the selection of favorable traits". That life on Earth changed over time isn't a subject of theory; it's a direct observation. The theory of evolution provides a causative mechanism for the observed fact of change. To use another example, "People get diseases" is an observed fact. "Diseases are cause by germs" is the theory used to explain this observation, otherwise known as "the germ theory of disease". It makes the prediction that "For a given disease, we will find a given germ.", a prediction that has been well tested. (Not all health issues are diseases, of course.)
Ok thanks for the info on "score 2" start off. wondered if that was the case, nonetheless, there is still room for some suspicious modding and shilling going on.
Thanks for replying. I get your analogy, and yes, in the circumstances you describe, yes, of course I'd go for a last meal, even if the owner was selling out, it's his resource.
The situation here is imho, quite different. The restaurant here is community based, we do alot of the work, washing up, even getting some of the ingredients in. Its quite the rage, its worked out well for ages. The owner however has plans, and is staying, and cashing in on the cache we have created. He's got in some people who've explained he can make much more money if he gets rid of these lovely big tables and chairs that work so well, and get ugly cool stools and fashionable bars in. He's gonna blare out some god awful pop, and serve cheap preprepared food, from freeze-is-us. We told him that's not what "chez slashdot" is all about, nobody wants that here, he said he'd listen. but did it all anyway, but still expected us to be there as we were what kinda made it cool, and he still needs the washing up done. Go back for a last meal and shake his hand, and do the cooking,while he orders his new lexus? No thanks.
(sliceoflife - no karma left)
captcha=jerking!
Hundreds of millions?
You mean the hundreds of millions spent with people on oxygen tanks who are unable to work, on Medicare and are forcing me to pay for the sickness of their habit.
LOL does that means that 1) they finaly recognize the theory of evolution by natural selection as it is evidence based, 2) drop all their economics policy not grounded in solide evidence , like trickle down ? 3) do I believe in unicorn ?
It isn't science if it isn't transparent and reproducible.
End of discussion.
I've decided to stop wasting my time responding to AC trolls/sockpuppets... so if you want a response from me... login.
You're forgetting grade school science. The experiment, study, or calculations should be reproducible one person does should be able to be done by other scientists. If someone working for Chicago Solar claims that tree rings indicate that ... and therefore San Francisco will be underwater by the year 2000, other scientists should be able to look at those same tree ring photos, do the same calculations, and end up with the same result.
If a student at TTI runs an analysis of the dihydrogen monoxide levels published by the national weather service, any scientist running the same calculations on the same data should get the same result. THAT'S reproducibility, it's a basic foundation of science and it was on the test in about 4th grade.
If the data is kept secret and the calculations are kept secret, that's not reproducible. That's not science, that's mysticism - tea reading.
How many things that you know have you personally observed or heard first-hand?
"Those who consume the bulk of goods are those who make them. We must never forget this secret of our prosperity."
When did the EPA start regulating personal beliefs about the origin of the universe? or school curriculums?
Your hypocrisy is astounding.
"Those who consume the bulk of goods are those who make them. We must never forget this secret of our prosperity."
Your entire post is a logical fallacy. "Black and White". You know this.
"Where two alternative states are presented as the only possibilities, when in fact more possibilities exist.
Whilst rallying support for his plan to fundamentally undermine citizens’ rights, the Supreme Leader told the people they were either on his side, or on the side of the enemy."
There are plenty of alternatives. Like, I don't know, Allowing the EPA to regulate based on common sense (storage tanks in west virginia should be checked out once a year. Good science? I don't know. But it's common sense.) and known science (yes, formaldehyde is bad for people). Basically, shut up and let the EPA do it's job.
I can't believe we're having this discussion barely a month out from the West Virgiania debacle.
I can't believe we're even having this debate barely a month after the debacle in West Virginia. A company didn't inspect their own tanks, the EPA regs were LAX, not tight, and 300,000 people couldn't even wash their hands in their water for a week, let alone drink it. It's not even ancient history. It happened THIS YEAR, and it's FEBRUARY!
At best, this would just be used as a stall tactic while companies tied up the EPA with further appeals. They already do that. This is just another tactic to use.
Everyone here should be quite aware that the EPA does a needed and useful job. I like not having lead in my kids' toys, formaldehyde in my milk, and chlorine gas in my air. Regulations are IMPORTANT. They keep us safe. Remember, it's way cheaper to not be safe.
The purpose of the bill and the reporting being done on it from GOPNews is to frame policy debate within the myth that what the EPA is doing isn't ALREADY TRANSPARENT. At least it's sufficiently transparent to those who understand the science. It will always be opaque to those who are ill-informed about science. I've been researching proposed regulations in drinking water. An enormous volume of scientific documentation regarding the studies and methods that are being used were freely available at http://epa.gov./ Schedules for periods of public comment and dissenting opinion documentation are posted there also. So how much more do they have to do to be transparent in the eyes of clueless people.
thus your "colleages" in the regulatory system whom you look down at from your perch of "innovation".
"Reverence for the environment" is an extension of the reverence for nature. There's nothing unscientific about that, and it marks you as an antagonist. It sounds to me like you are using a strawman ('knee-jerk environmentalists') to undermine ecology (which is a science, BTW, though no one could have guessed from your rant).
You want 'outdated' (says who?) regulations re-written because you know that corporate lobbyists are the ones who hold sway in legislatures these days.
Agreed - now, apply the same thing to everything taught in schools, including creationism.
And some day you'll "force" somebody else to pay for something they will allege you didn't decide correctly. That line of reasoning is dangerous and gives an open door to regulation of personal freedom, of which we have entirely too much already. Smoking bans, unrealistic drinking ages, the war on drugs--all regulation of personal behavior that were relatively easy to get passed simply by demonizing people who aren't necessarily mainstream voters.
Of course, regulating corporate behavior that is actually dangerous to lots of people, well, that's just job killing pseudo science and we can't possibly have that. Ever notice how hard it is to properly regulate large corporations vs. individual behavior? Logic like yours is a huge part of the problem.
You are entirely missing the point. I don't have to rely on hearsay with science. I can simply test the resul myself if I wanted to. Reproducible results.
I don't have to take the word of the latest translation of the latest compilation of books translated from Aramaic to market Greek to Latin to English supposedly by a guy who repeatedly denied Jesus but becomes an authority on the creation of the universe...
Loading...
"on Medicare and are forcing me to pay for the sickness"
You are stuck on the well-predicted slippery slope: acceptance of socialized-welfare programs leads to pressure to micromanage people's lives (to minimize cost of said social-welfare programs). The former leads inexorably to the latter. If you don't like the intrusion of the state into your body, perhaps you shouldn't support nanny medicare-like programs either.
As part of the discussion on this bill, can the GOP point to any of this secret science that has become EPA regulations? Or, is this another of those GOP fixes for a problem that doesn't exist (like votor fraud).
Then why haven't you? Lol.
Loading...
Are you aware that Genesis contradicts itself?
Loading...
Did the researchers throw some numbers into an Excel spreadsheet at some point to check something? Is that spreadsheet included? It wasn't saved? This regulation is overturned.
fencepost
just a little off
The behind closed doors, "locked closed doors" (Porter Goss 19950106 on the floor of the US house of Reps - look it up) creation of so-called legislation created through flat out bribery is the meat-and-potatoes of the legislative process under the control of the "Democratic" party for 40 years prior to 1995. Did the "Republican" party do any better?
I dare say yes, but that changes VERY quickly.
NOW, the "Republicrats" are all one anti-liberty organization of meat-puppets who use the IRS code as their primary weapon of choice to "[erect] a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers to harass our people, and eat out their substance."
I walked away from a budding career over twenty years ago as a PE EE because the EPA, NRC, DOE political appointees used it to KILL what they could not personally understand, and have given up any hope of ever finding any kind of "career" ever since.
Sadly, while I agree that reproducible science is the gold standard, it's often not possible. How can a cosmologist repeat a supernova to make sure things happened as they believe? More to the point, how can a climatologist repeat a particular climate event? It's just not possible. That doesn't mean we don't have a pretty good idea what's going on, just that the researchers had to work a lot harder and have to rely on lots of corroborating evidence from different sources to make their claims.
Rather like macroeconomics in a way, except with less self-serving philosophy and a lot more actual science.
And this bill seems a pretty obvious attempt to use that difficulty to shut down any attempt to mitigate climate change, which is flat out stupid. Are we 100% certain that we know everything about it? Absolutely not. But when you discover a dragon at your door you don't spend over 50 years counting it's teeth and arguing over whether it's actually a chihuahua while it establishes an unbreachable lair.
--- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.
You are just a sore loser. His point is valid and his expertise (if true) makes it even stronger so then you smear his point simply because 95% of lawyers are scum?
Besides, you seriously think the people who constantly campaign on how they want to completely kill the EPA are going to put forward something that would improve it? Most their party works around fucking things up and then campaigning against the messes they help create in an idiotic cycle that should be obvious to a competent citizenry.
Democracy Now! - uncensored, anti-establishment news
I haven't heard anything about the EPA and cigars but nothing surprises me. As for kids and cigars, ever hear of a blunt? That is where kids (teens) hollow a cigar out and put weed in it to either conceal the smell of the pot while smoking or to enhance the buzz a bit by the tobacco nicotine.
And no, I don't really have a problem with either separate or combined. Neither is my cup of tea either but to each their own.
The FDA point is somewhat more important here then anything. I bet you have been conditioned from the no smoking laws and all the reports being threaded to the public that if you look at a cigarette you will get cancer and die a horrible death 3 days ago. And if you ever see someone smoking, your eyes will fall out, you will have a heart attach and die on the spot from cancer.
The fact of the matter is that less than 10 percent of life long smokers ever get cancer and only about 30 percent of all cancer deaths are attributed to smoking. Granted, your risk of cancer does increase and certain types of cancer do increase if you smoke, but it's not the death nail in the coffin it is made out to be.
What? NO scientific or medical cites? Or anything else that is actually credible?
It's a proven fact that cigarette smoking causes lung cancer, emphysema, heart disease, throat cancer and many other diseases and ailments.
If you don't get one those you will get another. Cigarette smoking is a health hazard for the smoker and everyone around them.
Using legal citations is NOT proof of ANY science because the standards of proof are completely different. And the Heartland Institute is just a "think tank" that is pretty much a propaganda machine for industry and corporate America. Tobacco.org is a front for the tobacco industry - more corporate propaganda and lies.
Everything else in your post is just cheap high school level rhetoric, exaggeration and lies.
If we all stop using SlashDot classic in "protest", there will be no one to upset with the change, and they will move forward with the Beta site. Once the users are lost there's no incentive for them to keep it around.
If you want classic to stay around you need to boycott the beta, and use the crap out of classic.
The environmentalist position is that opponents should prove that taxes are not the solution. The scientific method is that environmentalists should prove that taxes are the solution.
It would be impossible to trust the EPA even if it was the last agency on earth.
Instead of: "Public policy should come from public data, not based on the whims of far-left environmental groups," says Schweikert. "For far too long, the EPA has approved regulations that have placed a crippling financial burden on economic growth in this country with no public evidence to justify their actions."
He should have said: "Public policy should come from public data, not based on the whims of capitalist corporations," says Schweikert. "For far too long, government agencies have approved regulations that have placed a crippling burden on the environment in this country with no public evidence to justify their actions."
I'm sure slashdot would have agreed.
The hypocrisy is strong in this discussion.
If this is well intentioned, and well done, then it should apply to all, or almost all, government agencies.
Because it singles out the EPA, I suspect a political agenda, and don't trust it.
I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
This is nothing more (or less) than business as usual in D.C. Elected officials who know little (or nothing) about science attempt to pass laws dictating what science is 'acceptable' to use for making public policy. The inherent contradiction in this approach should be obvious to everyone, not to mention the bias. I admit that I have not read the proposal (this is /. after all), but I would rather place some trust in the EPA than in a career politician whose understanding of science solely stems from the introductory science course(s) he took as an undergraduate. The EPA employs large numbers of professional scientists, most of whom take their jobs very seriously and do their very best to protect the people of the U.S.A.This regulation is not needed and, hopefully, will be rejected.
Where did this phrase come from?
TFA doesn't say anything about reproducibility. OP has added this phrase to the title, making it look worse than it is.
The EPA would not have to demonstrate reproducibility in order to propose legislation, at least as far as I see from TFA. They'd just have to cite the relevant studies. If those studies are flawed or not reputable, then the Senate gets to assess this information when considering the bill instead of just passing the bill because the EPA says it's justified.
I don't mean which congressman made it public. I mean which anti-regulation company or organization wrote the bill for the congressman.
Let's also outlaw secret courts, non-transparent legal processes, unfettered wire tapping, etc. This action against the EPA seems to be nothing more than a way to distract voters away from the government's illegal actions.
Um, God is random. He changes throughout the Bible. Read it. We *have* produced evolution in laboratory bacteria for one. Also, it's been incontrovertibly found in nature, see nylonase.
Can we amend this legislation to include similar principles to be used when a president proposes invading a foreign country?
And most republicans think Iraq attacked us on 9/11, should I give a shit what they think? We're more concerned about the elected officials.
This should get modded up. The EPA is already transparent, and the regulations are based on good science (and some common sense).
If anything, the EPA regs are far too loose. Ahem. West Virginia. Freedom Industries. Need we say more?
I'd support this if the EPA had not already been reduced to a paper tiger. This is just another blatant attempt by the GOP to redtape the EPA to (even worse) death.
Good point, there is little or no science to support most gun or drug laws. Or for that matter the need for the NSA's domestic surveillance or the TSA's random fondlings.
If EPA regulation meetings are anything like ASTM or ISO meetings, then there is honestly very little room for the purported chicanery. It takes YEARS to get anything to move, and there are interlab studies done on everything along the way. IMO this bill is designed to leave room for additional regulation stalling.
If you were not a liberal when you were young, you didn't have a heart, if you did not become a conservative when you grew up, you don't have a brain."
No citizens/politicians want dirty air or dirty water, so stop buying the lie that anyone wants that. You just delude yourself and sound like a moron. The EPA has long since passed the point of clean air/clean water. If anyone out there thinks carbon dioxide is a pollutant do the world a favor and stop producing it yourself first and let me know how that goes.
The goal of this bill is to get at the heart of the global warming fraud. The computer models that predict global warming that HAVE BEEN WRONG FOR THE PAST 10+ YEARS WORTH OF PREDICTION. The EPA is placing more and more burden on the economy and have not been right on the models over the past 10+ years. On top of that, we are losing hundreds of billions of dollars a year due to the EPA regulations while the annual ecological impact is lost in the noise of the pollution that China puts out in one hour.
All of the idiots running around with their hair on fire about global warming are the same morons who were running around in the 70s freaking about global cooling. It is time to fire them all and hire a few thermal engineers (not pseudoscience "climatologists") that actually know WTF they are doing and let policy be dictated by actual science, not the bullshit that comes out of the enviro-nutjobs. Anyone who doesn't shut up after that should have their Lear jets and 20,000 square foot homes confiscated (yes Al Gore I am looking at you) and be forced to live in a mud hut for a year and see how they like a "small carbon footprint."
This reminds me of a graphic I saw once. Let me dig it out of The Internet for y'all.
This'll do. http://whowhatwhy.com/2012/02/...
I think this sums up what's happening here quite well.
For the link averse.... "Which is more likely? Regional environmental groups and community activists... are spending their limited operating budgets... in a massive conspiracy with 90% of the global scientificl community... to create a hoax and ruin the economy? Or Oil Companies... are spending their obscene profits... to bribe anyone that they can... to protect their profits and limit any future liability that their pollution might cause?"
You know the answer.
The impact of the actions of the EPA are nearly invisible next to the impact of some other three-letter agencies' falsification of information and distortion of data to achieve a different political aim: invasion of Iraq after Sept 11.
When the CIA, NSA and DoD are required to publish ALL data that was looked at prior to requesting military actions, then we can require the same of lesser-impact agencies like EPA.
And before you suggest that those other agencies cannot release the data because the decisions are matters of "national security" I will point out that the health of our national population (FDA) and the security of our national resources (EPA) is far more integral to our nations security than anything that was happening in Iraq or Afghanistan.
I was taken by surprise too but I'm not complaining. The Beta obsession in the comments was making me think I shouldn't bother coming here any more, but suddenly slashdot is worth reading again.
Big Pharma made the crony-capitalist play and climbed into bed with Obama Reid and Pelosi. After the Dems swept into power in 2008 by huge majorities in both house and senate and Obama in the White House, Big Pharma figured the future was set and they signed-onto Obamacare and threw piles of money at Democrats. Big Pharma, the health insurers, the big wall st bankers - they all gave more to Obama than to the GOP
A zero pollution tolerance. That is, if particles are distributed or disturbed by a company, and the act does not occur naturally, it would be banned. Any emissions that alter air, water, spoil, or electromagnetic environments that last and cannot be undone with 100% certainty should not be allowed.
If a company wants to do business, it should find new ways that do not pollute, won't spill over, or leak or alter the environment. It's the new "gold standard" in finding clean perfect methods for operation, without excuses or exceptions going forward.
I mean, who gave these fuck tard companies the right to pollute or modify my living standards, after all? And what about all the other creatures that gotta live on this planet?
The Big Bang
When originally proposed by Georges Lemaitre (a physicist who was also a Catholic preist) the theory was rejected by consensus ([sarc]like all modern science is apparently done (see: AGW)[/sarc]) because the scientists of the day believed in a steady-state universe and feared that a model that had a start point would give rise to questions like "what came before?" and "what (or more-importantly who) caused the start?" It took some actual science by Mr. Hubble to support Lemaitre, overcome the scientific consensus, and begin the inversion of reality that NOW has proponents of science embracing the big bang and using it as a cudgel against religion.
So you see, "the Big Bang" (which so many science fan boyz now use against Christians and/or Creationists) was precisely the the thing you seem to think did not happen: science that was denied because it came from a creationist.
When open data is proposed by someone on the right.
This discussion thread couldn't make it more clear that it's not about the science, and never has been.
Chernobyl ring any bells?
Hanford?
Human beings are imperfect; they screw-up. They also are easily tempted (by money, power, sex, etc) to take short-cuts and to "roll the dice" taking higher-than-wise risks with the well-being of others. When you put a lot of power into the hands of a few, you are begging for (and likely to get) trouble. As a general rule, governments exempt themselves from oversight (something businesses, not being sovereign, cannot do) and therefore governments, particularly the bigger and more-totalitarian they get, tend to be the worse polluters. Your anecdote about the WV spill is valid and true, but like all such stories when in recent memory and having personal impact, it distorts perception and can be used to propagandize contrary to what's wise. As an old geek who's been paying attention for decades, I'll take the environment in the US (even BEFORE the EPA existed) over the environment of the former soviet union, east germany, China, etc ANY DAY. With corporations (even without an EPA) there is some (though admittedly not always enough) shareholder fear of liability and lawsuits as a counter argument to bad behavior, but with government bad behavior there is no such check (if bad things happen at the hands of government employees, new agencies will get created and even more tax dollars flow for even more government employees and more control over the people)
Not everything the EPA does is good, productive, or even reasonable. When the EPA uses junk science to take somebody's land, or suppress a business you may THINK there's no cost, but if it was YOUR family being harmed (perhaps being deprived of a career or a lifetime savings) you'd be at least as upset as you apparently are over a few days of polluted water. By the reasoning you deploy to attack the GOP, maybe all those "dick-cheeses" Democrats who support the EPA should be stripped of their careers and personal real estate.... and maybe we should send soldiers to do the siezures at gunpoint.
You see? If people harmed on a much larger scale by the EPA took the same attitude YOU took, you'd be pretty upset. I had a relative who invested all her money in a tract of land, only to have the EPA later declare it "wetlands" (it had NEVER had any standing water on it) killing her ability to use it and destroying its re-sale value.... she lost everything and will never economically recover. Several weeks of dirty water is bad and unfair BUT fairly minor and the company involved will be penalized (I'm betting lawsuits are already filed). If the EPA trashes you, you have no recourse and they never get penalized.
It seems to me that the purpose of the parties is to create wedge issues and then keep them going for as long as possible. One side can defend the EPA right or wrong and the other can spread FUD to paint it as immoral and outrageous, the truth being an unavoidable casualty of the war between the parties. That way both sides can use the issue to fill warchests and "the right thing" is never done to address problems in the EPA without opening the door for polluters to profit at everyone's future expense. I can see this bill getting bipartisan support for this very reason.
Nullius in verba
For anyone except an elected law maker to write a bill.
The studies and data are generally available to the public. People don't bother to READ them.
I click on RSS links and the slashdot pages appear in new tabs. What's weird is about a quarter of them come up in 'beta', and the rest come in normal. I cannot see rhyme or reason for this.
Just fyi.
I see from a few of your comments that your condescension also is reproducible. Therefore, I can objectively conclude that you are condescending, O Great Buddha. Are you going to learn from that or remain forever ignorant that it doesn't help?
This is a poe, right? Creationism isn't science because it isn't falsifiable, period, end of question. It can't be science, ever, because "God did it" isn't a testable claim.
That doesn't mean creationism is wrong it just means that it isn't science.
You're awesome. I love this thread.
Yes, Newton believe in God and wanted the Bible to be right. So did Kepler, lo those many nights he spent trying to figure out the crystal solids. Darwin was a racist, too. Yes, all those things are true, and totally irrelevant. Your ancestors were murderers and rapists, because all of our ancestors were murders and rapists. And yet, just like today we have laws which criminalize murder and rape, today science has discarded the bad ideas of the past. Well, some of them, it's an ongoing process.
I think it's a lot more likely that the title and preamble of the law are the opposite of what the law would actually do. Remember the "Clean Water Act" that made our water dirtier? Yeah, I bet it's like that.
But, sure, asking the EPA to release their science? It seems pretty good to me.
There's no such thing as proving anything. Any denier can always use special pleading to avoid conceding a fact.
Nothing in the entire universe is absolutely proven to be safe, or actually is.
People die from peanuts.
That is all.
Leave science decide it self what is worth reproducing.
Make the cumulative impact factor of the citations (corrected with a delay depending on how fundamental the study was - very fundamental studies take longer to collect citations) of previous studies a mandatory criteria for distributing big scientific money to funding institutions for a specific field. If something can not be reproduced, then it will not collect citations and will be gone soon. Given the specific wording of the dear Senator I am not sure that this turn out how he expects it.
Okay seriously. Keep your liberal hat on for a sec.
If someone from the GOP stated that the earth is spherical on Fox News, might you call them a liar?
If the head of the DNC stated that the earth was a perfect cube on MSNBC or NPR, might you call them a truthful visionary facing adversity?
Sometimes it seems that our more 'enlightened' liberal people don't have an open enough mind to sit back and consider alternate opinions, or point of views.
Consider for a moment that pretty much all of our knowledge comes from observation by the single perspective of the human race. We are fallible and often what is considered fact in one decade is disproved as incorrect in the next.
Relax...just consider the possibilities of what people say. Don't hate because others are not like you, it is diversity that makes us strong and wise beyond a single person. Diversity goes way beyond race and gender, it extends through to the intellect and character of a person. Those that only consider diversity to do with gender and race are racists and sexists. :)
What the GOP is talking about in this case should be what we all want. Share your data and back it up before we as a nation do something REALLY stupid.
Don't get me wrong here, I am not advocating poisoning the environment. I actually think we should plant more plants/trees and put buildings underground. Everywhere should be a park, not a parking garage. :)
Is all this about Agenda 21, is that why we have created a secret group as part of the EPA?
democrats complaining others are using their tactics of lie, cheat, steal(?!?!?!?) PRICELESS!!!!! Yet another reason to invite democrats, facists, socialists, communists, humanists, etc. to give up their citizenship and move to the socialist country of their choice at their own expense!
So long as the Republicans apply it to their religion, to what is taught in schools etc.
Demanding more transparency, to the extent it is not over burdensome for the regulatory agency, is not necessarily a bad idea. Maybe this justification transparency would be a good idea for all regulatory agencies.
I feel very good about this proposal, if Congress were to impose this transparency requirement on itself and all of its laws as well.
aps
i) Not all scientific research and not all scientific knowledge is based on "reproducible" laboratory experiments, nor on the scientific method. Some natural phenomena, by their nature, cannot be verified by a control/variable-style experiment. This is generally true of chaotic systems (like many aspects of the global weather system), and is the reason why some undeniably true organizations of knowledge are or were known as "theories," when they are accepted to be true beyond a reasonable doubt: the theory of gravitation (before space travel), the theory of evolution, the theory of special relativity, etc. Insisting that laws cannot be enacted on a basis of "reproducible" (presumably laboratory-type) science at the outset gives a dramatic advantage to those who oppose legislation motivated by otherwise-irrefutably good science in fields like climatology. It also ignores the basic precept that scientific knowledge and nearly certain "facts" may be inferred through methods other than the scientific method, such as statistical analyses or by demonstrating that models have consistent predictive value. This bill, as worded, would not raise a red flag only to those who are not involved in the sciences themselves. It's Glenn Beck Duck Dynasty legislation with an agenda that does nothing to advance mankind's ability to benefit from scientific research.
.
ii) What's particularly troubling is the word "all," on context to the reporting requirements of this bill. No, I haven't read the bill myself, and given /.'s track record of accurately reporting a story, I realize that this may not be part of the bill at all. If so, skip this paragraph. But if the bill is indeed characterized correctly, it has the effect of making it more difficult to enact legislation that is based on more heavily researched law. A silly hypothesis that is supported by two studies but which has not been rebutted would sail past this requirement. An overwhelmingly accepted model, such as the greenhouse-gas model of climate change, would never pass muster. Providing "all" materials would require accumulating tens of thousands of studies, reports, and publications -- decades worth! -- from almost every industrialized nation and likely every national science foundation and credible peer-reviewed journal in the world. But worse, "all," as it's cited here, might also further include unearthing all the raw data upon which every one of these efforts is based. It's simply not possible, regardless of the resources applied.
iii) To put this into perspective, what if we flipped the requirement? No law based on scientific evidence could be barred based on the contested validity of that evidence until opponents submitted "all" evidence that challenged the basis. Santorum submits a 30,000-page compendium of GCC-denier literature? Woops, sorry, you left out some articles published in an uncredited scientific journal in New Zealand in 1997. Please find the author and obtain all his raw data, thank you. Or maybe the states should be made to conform to the same standard. Should Texas be allowed to teach intelligent design in high-school science classes without first submitting *all* scientific evidence ever offered, including underlying data, to the State Legislature?
Obviously, Schweikert's bill is just silly and I would hope have no chance of getting off the ground. Nobody is fooled. The only thing this bill accomplishes is: i) to help his re-election efforts with nutfringe Arizona voters (you know you're out there); and ii) give the French another valid reason to laugh at us.
Not sure they do, but if the EPA were to monitor the nuclear industry, say uranium enrichment or plutonium production, the GOP
would make the publish all the details of how to do it?
There are probably quite a few other industries that the EPA monitors that we don't want to publish details about.
But seriously...I can't see how this wouldn't have bi-partisan support. If the left fights this it means that a.) they are just hell-bent of fighting anything the right comes up with and/or b.) there's something to hide.
affordable health care act
a 2 party system isn't bad when it forces some discussion.
it gets annoying in this country when one party funds a third party simply to split the vote and win
The minute we let Congress or the local church minister tell us what is and is not science, we have given up our advantage in being a leading nation in innovation and new solutions to problems.
Science has already adequate means to self-correct errors, including being on the take from economic interests or submitting to political pressure to bias or censor results. Even if Peer Review is weakened by government intervention or payola, our competition will see the advantage in not poisoning the well and out strip us to discover and control new technology that results.
It is our advantage to lose, and like dealing with Creatiionism and other biased pseudoscience, reasoning people eventually come up with a good answer. (I'd bet with the Bible Thumpers who deny Evolution that flu epidemics are an answer to their nonsense and they don't get the flu shot because they don't accept its basis that viruses are rapidly evolving pathogens.)
Sp, let politicians and energy company propagandists speak their minds. If the GOP gets to censor climate research they will be no better than Hitler denying quantum mechanics and missing the opportunity to invent atomic energy. Someone else will get to the truth faster and it will be their advantage and not ours, and maybe they will have a case that blames us, our politicians, our business people, for the damage we are causing and have a moral cause to come after us. I'd say let science prevail, especially at correcting the failings of the human beings who do it.
Creationist is a pretty bad example. first off being a creationist, doesn't bar people from science in any field. When a creationist or anyone else sets forth data or experiments, it is put through the peer review process and tested for validity. Someone already pointed out, newton was a creationist, but his laws of motion worked just fine within their context. He also believed in alchemy. His belief in alchemy and the supernatural, had no impact on the acceptence or rejection of his physics. Nor does his brilliance in physics, give alchemy a free pass into accepted science. The assumption that all laws of physics, are subject to change at the whims of a supernatural being, of whom we cannot get to break the laws under controlled conditions because he doesn't like being tested, will not be accepeted by the scientific community, but that has no bearing over whether the scientific community will accept a testable provable claim, made by someone who holds beliefs that are untestable or flat out rediculous.
if it were a liberal proposing the same bill, instead of trying to cripple the EPA it would be to require reproducible evidence that some other country was squirreling away WMD to use against us before we put the war we're already in on the back burner so we can go to war against this new country (and put it on our high interest credit card)
Star Trek transporters are just 3d printers.
gosgog:
Every form of Government, making rules & regulations should HAVE TO GIVE FORTHRIGHT EXPLANATIONS BACKED BY ALL RESEARCH DONE TO JUSTIFY THE CONCLUSIONS REACHED....IF the evidence provided is judged to be bad, inadequate etc. Then Public Opinion should be allowed to remove said rule or regulation. Politicians passing Bills, solely based on LOBBYING and tacked onto quitely to a Major Bill about to be passed...SHOULD be Jailed, Fired & Pensions removed! Any Politician attempting to pass or advocate for a Bill, should have to PUBLICLY PROVIDE His/Her EXPERTISE JUSTIFYING REASONS for such ADVOCACY.
All that stuff that is OK'd by the FDA? Where is the transprarent and reproducible data for those claims?
Oh, commercial in confidence? Well, then, it does't count, does it!
But with the added idea that if the corporation wants to do that shifting of particles, they have to prove with transparent, open, and reproducible science that it is safe.
Want to sell cigarettes? PROVE they are safe with REAL science!
Oooh.
But biologists have created new species in the lab, remember, the definition of species you accept (i.e. "kind") is that they do not reproduce with each other. So that they are still bacteria, they are not the same kind/species.
Delete "EPA" and substitute "Federal Government".
Add the phrase "All legislation that is currently enacted that isn't scientifically supported in the manner of this bill is hereby repealed."
There is no "-1 offended" or "-1 you don't agree with me" mod options for a reason.
Ooh, can we require the same thing of religion?
My children used to try to change the subject and assert correctness rather than have a rational discussion. they grew out of it, however.
"Those who consume the bulk of goods are those who make them. We must never forget this secret of our prosperity."
>You've convinced yourself that you understand something as enormous and complex
No, I've convinced myself that a community of scientists, many of the brightest and most intellectually rigorous minds on the planet, members of whom have spent the last 50-100 years studying an alarming hypothesis and finding ever more supporting evidence, aren't totally incompetent. Meanwhile you are convinced of... what exactly? That the whole system is so far beyond human comprehension or influence that we may as well ignore it completely?
As for the oceans "making" more CO2 than humans (actually they're net absorbers IIRC, though CO2 continuously flows both ways by diffusion), I see this reasonable misunderstanding a lot, so if you'll bear with my analogy for a moment I'll try an explanation. Picture a 1,000 gallon tank of water that's being filled at one end by a well-regulated pump moving 100 gallons a second, and being emptied at the other end by another pump moving another 100 gallons of water a second. Everything stays nice and stable, right? Now imagine I add another pump bringing in only 1 gallon of water per day. You probably won't even notice the extra trickle of water in the rush, but after a day the tank now contains 1,001 gallons of water, and after a year it contains 1,365 gallons of water.
And that's basically what's happening with the atmosphere now - our ecosystem has three massive "tanks" of carbon - atmosphere, ocean, and biomass, and carbon gets pumped between them at fairly constant rates by a variety of processes so that carbon levels stay fairly constant in each tank. We also have a fourth tank, "geology", that mostly involves much smaller and pumps than the others so is usually ignored. Except humans went and rigged up our own pump from geology to atmosphere, and as you would expect the amount of carbon in the atmosphere tank is now increasing. It's a tiny, gradual increase, but the other pumps in the system haven't changed speed so it keeps building up.
That's the accepted interpretation of raw data - we can calculate pretty accurately how much carbon is in the fossil fuels we mine, and thus how much CO2 we're pumping into the atmosphere, and for as long as we've been monitoring atmospheric CO2 levels they've been climbing pretty consistently with our contribution. Now no, we don't understand every aspect of the system, but when you're pumping water into a tank at one gallon per minute, and notice that the volume of water in the tank is increasing at about one gallon per minute, you don't need to understand all the complicated plumbing attached to make the reasonable assertion that you are the one causing the change, and that if you stopped pumping the water would stop rising.
And once it's in the atmosphere we have plenty of experimental evidence of the warming properties of CO2. Double the amount of CO2 in the atmosphere, you roughly double the amount of heat it reflects back to Earth, at least at such low concentrations as we're dealing with. It's only one tiny factor in the massive exchange of heat between Earth, the sun, and space, but it's well enough understood that we can calculate roughly how much solar heat will be trapped by a single "average" atmospheric CO2 molecule over the course of the year, whether it be in a carefully controlled greenhouse or in the open air. And while I've mostly forgotten the results it works out that the CO2 produced from fossil fuels by humans last year will, this year, trap several thousands (millions?) of times more energy than will be released by all human technology combined. A staggering number, whatever it was. And it will continue to do that every year for for many decades to come until eventually it gets trapped as part of a plant or diffuses into the ocean. So add in the rest of a century of CO2 buildup and *that* is enough energy trapped every year to actually start destabilizing a planetary ecosystem.
> For one thing, if the climate were to go nuts, we'd all be dead long before that happened.
Why would yo
--- Most topics have many sides worth arguing, allow me to take one opposite you.