How
loathsome is the Trump administration? Let me count the ways. On
second thought, let me not—it would take too long. But one
important threat it poses to the United States and the world is to
the integrity of American science. Earlier this year, on Earth Day,
April 22, hundreds of thousands of people responded to that danger by
participating in the March for Science in Washington, D.C., and 600
other cities and towns across the country. How has American science
fared since then?
Many
right-wing politicians and public intellectuals are torn between
repugnance for Donald Trump’s truculent ignorance and exuberance at
the prospect that he can help them accomplish their goal of
“dismantling the administrative state.” Trump’s first year in
office helped advance their strategy of destroying public faith in
“big government” by discrediting it. Not only are the Trump
administration’s various agencies and cabinet offices laughably
incompetent and ethically compromised; the office of the presidency
itself has forfeited all claim to the respect of intelligent
citizens.
The
offensive against “big government” is driven by billionaire
donors who finance right-wing think tanks, political campaigns, and
media outlets. Their single-minded goal is to reduce their taxes and
roll back governmental regulation of their businesses, especially
with regard to environmental and public health protection. Their
crusade against federal regulatory powers entails going to battle
against empirical reality, rationality, knowledge, and expertise—in
short, they have declared war against science.
The
deregulation of corporate activities that have compromised the
credibility of American science did not begin with Trump. Nor was it
exclusively a Republican political project; the Carter, Clinton, and
Obama administrations all likewise furthered the deregulation agenda.
It
should not be forgotten that many of the environmental rules and
regulations Trump’s team has rescinded were only put in place by
Obama in the closing days of his eight-year tenure as president. All
they accomplished was to provide easy targets for Trump to knock
over. The tawdry assemblage of antiscience policymakers appointed by
Trump, however, amounts to a reductio
ad absurdum of
the whole process.
The
Big Three: Scott Pruitt, Rick Perry, Ryan Zinke
If
Trump is Commander-in-Chief of the war against science, its field
commanders are those he has appointed to key scientific posts. A few
examples, beginning with the Big Three of environmental and energy
policy—Scott Pruitt, Rick Perry, and Ryan Zinke—make that clear:
• Scott
Pruitt is
the very model of an administrator appointed to undermine the agency
he administers. Trump has on numerous occasions called for the
elimination of the Environmental Protection Agency. Pruitt, as
Attorney General of Oklahoma, had sued the EPA thirteen times,
challenging regulations protecting air and water quality. In choosing
Pruitt to lead the agency, Trump’s motives were transparent.
As
an opening gambit, Trump instructed Pruitt to rescind the Obama
administration’s Clean Power Plan, which regulated CO2 emissions
from coal-burning power plants. Pruitt, an outspoken climate change
denier with close ties to the fossil-fuel industries, was just the
man for the job.
Pruitt
systematically weakened the EPA’s scientific capabilities by
purging dozens of members of its scientific advisory committees. In
May 2017 he dismissed five of the 18 members of its Board of
Scientific Counselors and suggested that he might replace them with
representatives of the industries the EPA regulates—for “balance,”
of course. A spokesman for Pruitt declared, “We should have people
on this board who understand the impact of regulations on the
regulated community.” In June the agency’s 47-member Science
Advisory Board was likewise vitiated.
• Rick
Perry publicaly
proclaimed that he would dismantle the Department of Energy if he had
the authority to do so. He made that declaration in 2012 while
campaigning for a presidential nomination. In March 2017 he became
the Trump administration’s Secretary of Energy, making him head of
the department he had vowed to eliminate.
When
he accepted the position, he did not understand what it entailed. He
thought, “he was taking on a role as a global ambassador for the
American oil and gas industry.” Only later was he made aware that
as Secretary of Energy, “he would become the steward of a vast
national security complex he knew almost nothing about, caring for
the most fearsome weapons on the planet, the United States’ nuclear
arsenal” (The
New York Times,
Jan. 18, 2017).
Among
this buffoon’s responsibilities with regard to the nuclear
stockpile, he would be in charge of national laboratories that have
been called the “crown jewels of government science.” The two
previous Secretaries of Energy had been legitimate scientists: Ernest
J. Monitz, chairman of MIT’s physics department, and Steven Chu, a
Nobel laureate in physics.
Perry’s
record as a major political voice of climate change denial stems from
his extensive connections to the fossil-fuels industries, from which
as governor of Texas he took more than $14.3 million in campaign
donations. Big Oil and Big Gas were also the primary financial
backers of his two presidential campaigns. At the time of his
nomination, Perry was a member of the board of directors of Energy
Transfer Partners, the company building the controversial Dakota
Access Pipeline.
• Ryan
Zinke began
his tenure as Secretary of the Interior by rolling back a federal
regulation reducing the amount of methane that vents from natural gas
wells. This was the opening shot in a campaign against what he called
“job-killing regulation that is not based on sound
science”—Orwellian doublespeak for the science-based rules that
underpin federal climate policy.
He
followed that up with an order to cancel a study of the health risks
of an environmentally destructive coal-mining practice in which the
tops of mountains are blown off. The study was being conducted by the
National Academies of Science, Engineering and Medicine. The
cancellation was condemned by public-interest environmental groups
but cheered by the National Mining Association.
Zinke
proclaimed his intention to oversee “probably the greatest
restructuring in the history of the Department of the Interior.”
His plan would reduce the DOI budget by $1.6 billion and eliminate
4000 jobs in the department. It also included transferring leading
scientists to positions where their climate-related research would
not conflict with the denialist mantra. Among them were Virginia
Burkett and Joel Clement.
Dr.
Burkett was reassigned from a position in which she had contributed
to a Nobel Peace Prize–winning report on climate change to an
office under the control of Deputy Secretary David Bernhardt, who, as
a former lobbyist, had sued the DOI. Joel Clement, who had been the
DOI’s chief climate policy expert, was also reassigned, but he did
not go quietly. Instead, he resigned and publicly challenged Zinke’s
attempt to silence and intimidate him, invoking the protections of
the whistleblower law. In his letter of resignation, Clement
declared, “If the Trump administration continues to try to silence
experts in science, health and other fields, many more Americans, and
the natural ecosystems upon which they depend, will be put at risk.”
Pruitt,
Perry, and Zinke top the list of industry hacks and global warming
deniers appointed by Trump to positions of influence over science
policy, but several more are worth noting:
• Kathleen
Hartnett White was
named head of the White House Council on Environmental Quality,
making her Trump’s senior advisor on environmental policy. She has
no scientific credentials but was a “Distinguished Senior
Fellow-in-Residence” at a crackpot libertarian think tank, the
Texas Public Policy Foundation. She once characterized the scientific
consensus on global warming as a “kind of paganism” for “secular
elites,” and denied that CO2 is a pollutant, calling it “the
gas of life on this planet.” She has also called renewable energy
“unreliable and parasitic.”
• William
Wehrum—a
man who had spent his career challenging the EPA’s clean air
protections—has been chosen to head the EPA office in charge of
ensuring clean air in the United States. As a lawyer and lobbyist
representing polluting industries, Wehrum has sued the EPA at
least 77 times on
behalf of clients such as the American Petroleum Institute, the Gas
Processors Association, and the American Chemistry Council.
It
would be a major task to list all of the potential conflicts of
interests the new director of the Office of Air and Radiation will
face as he rules on matters involving his former clients. One timely
example will have to suffice. One week before his Nov. 9 confirmation
by the Senate, Wehrum was in federal court arguing against
Occupational Safety and Health Administration standards protecting
workers from airborne silica dust. In his oral arguments, he
declared: “People are designed to deal with dust. People are in
dusty environments all the time and it doesn’t kill them.”
• Michael
Dourson,
Trump’s nominee to head the EPA’s chemical safety office, would
be an ideal poster boy for the corporatization of American
science. The New
York Timeseditorial
board explained why his nomination should be opposed: “Mr. Dourson
is a scientist for hire. A toxicologist and a professor at the
University of Cincinnati, he has a long history of consulting for
chemical companies and conducting studies paid for with industry
money. He frequently decided that the compounds he was evaluating
were safe at exposure levels that are far more dangerous to public
health than levels recommended by the E.P.A., the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention and other agencies. His nomination is
enthusiastically endorsed by the chemical industry” (The
New York Times,
Oct. 17. 2017).
The
EPA triumvirate of Pruitt, Wehrum, and Dourson constitutes a clear
and present danger to public health.
• Dr. Scott
Gottlieb,
who became head of the Food and Drug Administration in May 2017, is
yet another scientist-for-hire in charge of a science-based agency.
Having made millions of dollars consulting for and investing in Big
Pharma, he is now responsible for regulating that industry and
overseeing the research into the safety of its products.
Gottlieb
is a career wheeler-dealer in the drug and health-care industries,
where he has held seats on numerous corporate boards. GlaxoSmithKline
paid him $87,153 as a consultant from January 2016 through February
2017, a period in which he received $3 million in consulting and
retainer fees. At the time of his nomination, he was CEO of a biotech
company named Cell Biotherapy, a partner at a large venture capital
firm, New Enterprise Associates, which speculates on medical research
start-ups, and managing director of banking and brokerage firm T.R.
Wilson & Co.
On
top of all that, Gottlieb found time to ideologically justify his
policies as a Resident Fellow at a venerable right-wing think tank,
the American Enterprise Institute. In his writings, he has criticized
the agency he now runs for being too worried about drug safety,
complaining that FDA regulators “prioritize safety over speed”
and demand research studies that “take too long and cost too much.”
As
FDA director, Gottlieb will be in a position to facilitate rushing
highly profitable drugs to market. One way he aims to accomplish that
is by cutting back critical Phase III drug safety testing, the
clinical trials large enough to provide trustworthy results.
• Sam
Clovis will
not be the Department of Agriculture’s top scientist after all.
After accepting the nomination, he withdrew to avoid further scrutiny
of his involvement with Russian agents on behalf of Trump’s
presidential campaign. But the fact that a right-wing talk radio host
and Tea Party activist with no scientific credentials could even be
considered as the chief scientist overseeing the country’s food
production, food safety, and nutrition shows the disdain with which
the Trump administration regards science. It also reveals its
disregard for the law, because the position for which Clovis was
nominated is legally required to be filled by someone chosen “from
among distinguished scientists with specialized training or
significant experience in agricultural research, education, and
economics” (U.S. Congress, H.R.2419, §6971).
• Rebeckah
Adcock heads
a clandestine “deregulation team” at the Department of
Agriculture. In February 2017, Trump ordered a number of federal
agencies to set up such teams, but has resolutely refused to identify
their members. Investigative reporters for The
New York Times and ProPublica,
however, were able to confirm that, as suspected, many of them are
“former employees of industry-financed organizations that oppose
environmental regulations” (The New
York Times,
Nov. 13, 2017).
Adcock
herself was found to be among the worst of the conflict-of-interest
offenders. From 2010 to April 2017, Adcock had been a lobbyist for
the pesticide industry’s main trade group, CropLife America, which
represents agro-giants Syngenta and Monsanto, among others. By the
end of April, she was a top official at the Department of
Agriculture, and by May she was meeting behind closed doors with
CropLife and Syngenta representatives. Their joint mission was to
overturn science-based regulations previously imposed by the
Department of Agriculture to protect farm families, farmworkers, and
the public from the well-established dangers of pesticide use.
• Jim
Bridenstine has
been nominated to be the top official at one of the premier
scientific agencies of the United States, the National Aerospace and
Space Administration. Although best known for space exploration, NASA
has also played a major role in climate change research. The agency’s
budget request for 2018 projected $1.8 billion for its Earth Science
program.
NASA
launches the satellites that measure changes in the Earth’s climate
and ocean temperatures. The data they gather are used by the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and other climate researchers
all over the world. Although an estimated one-third of the American
economy relies on such data, Trump has called for deep cuts in
funding for climate research while demagogically dismissing global
warming as a “hoax.”
Unlike
previous NASA directors, Bridenstine has no qualifications,
educational or otherwise, as a scientist. As a member of the
far-right congressional Freedom Caucus, however, he has sterling
credentials as a climate change denier. Bridenstine is purely a
political hatchet man selected to oversee the reduction of NASA’s
research mission.
• Barry
Lee Myers,
a wealthy businessman, has been chosen to run the country’s
number-one climate research agency, the aforementioned National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. In addition to satellite
climate data, the NOAA also oversees fisheries, marine sanctuaries,
and endangered species. Its directors have traditionally had strong
science backgrounds.
Myers’
experience, however, has been corporate rather than scientific; he is
CEO of AccuWeather, a for-profit weather forecasting company. That
creates an obvious conflict of interest because the NOAA oversees the
National Weather Service, which provides high-quality weather
forecasts free of charge.
Myers
has clashed with the federal agency in the past, complaining that it
represents “unfair competition” to his company. He supported a
bill sponsored by Senator Rick Santorum that would have barred the
National Weather Service from offering a service “that is or could
be provided by the private sector.”
The
unionized National Weather Service employees have vigorously
protested Myers’ appointment. A union rep charged Myers with
wanting “to turn the Weather Service into a taxpayer-funded
corporate subsidy of AccuWeather.”
Myers,
like many of Trump’s choices, will oversee a shrinking agency. The
White House’s projected national budget for 2018 slashes NOAA’s
funding by 17%, with particular emphasis on reducing climate and
ocean research.
• Betsy
DeVos,
a libertarian opponent of public schools, was the Trump
administration’s ideal candidate for Secretary of Education. Her
hostility to public education aligned perfectly with Trump’s
belittling of what he demagogically calls “failing government
schools.” In his book “Great Again, How To Fix Our Crippled
America,” he wrote: “A lot of people believe the department of
education should just be eliminated. Get rid of it. If we don’t
eliminate it completely, we certainly need to cut its power and
reach.”
Although
holding no qualifications in the field of education, DeVos is
eminently qualified to fulfill Trump’s expectations. Being in
charge of the Department of Education gives her, among other things,
a bully pulpit from which to further demoralize American science
education.
For
at least the past two decades, DeVos has campaigned for charter
schools as alternatives to public schools, and for publicly funded
voucher schemes to fund private schools. Success in those endeavors
would result in federal taxpayer dollars supporting the
anti-Darwinist and climate-change-denial curricula of religious
academies.
The
Secretary of Education and her family have furthered that agenda by
donating millions of dollars to organizations like Focus on the
Family and the Family Research Council, which promote creationism and
intelligent design. The Family Research Council, it should be noted,
has been designated as an “anti-LGBT hate group” by the Southern
Poverty Law Center.
DeVos
and her husband funnel their philanthropy through their personal tax
shelter, the Dick and Betsy DeVos Foundation, which gave Focus on the
Family $275,000 from 1999 to 2001. From 2001 to 2013 her parents’
Elsa and Edgar Prince Foundation (of which Betsy was a vice
president) gave Focus on the Family $5.2 million and the Family
Research Council $6.2 million. Since the 1970s, the DeVos clan has
donated at least $200 million to extreme right-wing think tanks (like
the Acton Institute for the Study of Religion and Liberty) and
political action groups (like the Foundation for Traditional Values)
that seek to destroy public education and undermine the separation of
church and state.
Science
education in the United States was not in admirable shape before
Trump took office. In 2015 rankings by country of student performance
in mathematics and science, the United States placed 40th in math and
25th in science on the list of 72 countries. (Source: OECD.) With
Betsy DeVos at the helm of the federal agency responsible for
education policy, the future of American scientific education appears
bleak indeed.
The
preceding rogue’s gallery depicts a cast of characters in positions
of authority devoted to undermining the integrity of American
science. Their purpose is Robin Hood’s in reverse—to transfer the
vast wealth of the American economy from the households of the many
to the coffers of the few. Already the greatest heist in human
history—a robbery of trillions upon trillions of dollars—its
perpetrators are not yet satisfied. And they are still at large.
>> The article above was written by Cliff Conner, and is reprinted from Socialist Action.
1 comment:
Nope, Cliff Conner is still at large. More like the staff at socialist action is still at large. Your world as a Marxist in America is getting smaller and smaller by the minute.
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