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House Panel Holds Hearing On "Politically Driven Science" - Without Scientists

sciencehabit writes: Representative Louie Gohmert (R–TX) is worried that scientists employed by the U.S. government have been running roughshod over the rights of Americans in pursuit of their personal political goals. So this week Gohmert, the chair of the oversight and investigations subpanel of the U.S. House of Representatives' Natural Resources Committee, held a hearing to explore "the consequences of politically driven science." Notably absent, however, were any scientists, including those alleged to have gone astray.

4 of 347 comments (clear)

  1. I am a Republican voting Conservative. by Needs2BeSaid · · Score: 1, Troll

    As a Republican voter, I am dismayed at those who represent the only Conservative party. They have lost their way. Although I don't think "carbon credits" will help anyone but Al Gore, I do see the need to stop polluting our water, air and land.

    This whole thing reminds me of the entire "Lead in Gasoline" fight back in the 60's.

    I wish liberals would abandon the "climate change" mantra and focus on air and water quality. It's fairly easy to prove that we are poisoning everything.

    --
    Some things need to be said...
    1. Re:I am a Republican voting Conservative. by Spy+Handler · · Score: 0, Troll

      See, this is why climate change is still such a contentious topic. You sound exactly like a religious fanatic. Anyone who does not agree with you is stupid (you said it four times in your two-sentence post). They are denialists. What you really mean is, they are heretics.

      People like you living in an echo chamber might not hear this, but there are reasonable, non-Republican, not paid by Big Oil, non-stupid people out there who harbor some level of skepticism for various reasons. Not the least of which is the religious fervor with which Climate Change (nee Global Warming) believers attack their opponents.

      For me personally, it was the history revision, deleting of hundreds of mentions of Medieval Warm period off of Wikipedia by climate crusaders. And the attempts to dismiss other historical records as garbage ramblings of primitive people. The Romans and the medieval monks and the Renaissance people were all stupid, right, because they didn't live in the enlightened age of computer models?

  2. Re:Just Like the "Liberal Media" by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1, Troll

    It is easy to say science isn't political, however it is political if you want government funding.

    I want research that says X, I get my buddies in the Y party to create a funding bill for research that says X. I can create science that says X, and get more funding, therefore I say X. If I say not X, I don't get any more funding, and have to find a new job flipping hamburgers at McD's.

    Science isn't political ... noooooo

    --
    Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
  3. One thing you guys left out by cirby · · Score: 0, Troll

    Most of the "politically driven science" isn't actually driven by scientists. It's driven by politicians and bureaucrats.

    The scientists? Hell, they're third or fourth on the list at best.

    For a quick example: DDT. Banned because of the science, right? Well... no.

    The actual EPA scientists of the time pretty much said "no, DDT isn't that bad, and all of the stuff you read in that Rachel Carson book was made up from scratch." They refused to sign off on banning the stuff.

    So the politically-driven "science bureaucrat" heading the EPA at the time banned it. And since it was from the EPA, it became "official science."

    THAT is "politically driven science."