When I read yesterday that a prominent American scientist had been awarded the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for her pioneering work in the field of cell biology, I stared at her name for half a minute.
Elizabeth Blackburn...Elizabeth Blackburn...Why does that name ring a bell?
I was about to take the knee-jerk research route - by using what President Bush liked to call "the Google" - when realization dawned. And all I needed to do, to verify my hunch, was dig out a very fat file. The file is entitled "Bush and Science" (an absurd pairing, I know), and deep inside, yup, there she was: Elizabeth Blackburn.
Here's what was omitted from the Nobel Prize news stories. Just for the record:
Turns out, this winner of the Nobel Prize was fired by the Bush administration back in 2004, stripped of her membership on the President's Council of Bioethics. Turns out, Blackburn was one of the early prominent casualties of the Bush team's war on science, its ongoing campaign to distort or suppress scientific evidence for its own ideological ends.
Blackburn repeatedly voiced such complaints during council meetings, as did one of her fellow appointees; the purpose of the council, after all, was to offer the president a variety of views on issues such as stem cell research. But, in February 2004, she was informed by phone that her services on the council were no longer needed. The other complainant, Dr. William May, was also fired. The Bush team offered no reasons for the firings, and said of Blackburn, "The charge that she was let go because of her policy views is utterly without merit." (And if you believe that, I have some Iraq WMDs to show you.)
Blackburn did not go quietly. She soon assailed the Bush administration in an article written for the New England Journal of Medicine: "There is a growing sense that scientific research - which, after all, is defined by the quest for truth - is being manipulated for political ends. There is evidence that such manipulation is being achieved through the stacking of the membership of (White House) advisory bodies, and through the delay and misrepresentation of their reports. As a naturalized citizen of the United States" - she was born in Australia - "I have an immigrant's love for my country. But our country must not fail us. Scientific evidence should and must be protected from the influence of politics."
And in 2007, on ABC Radio, she shared this reminiscence of Bush policymaking: "Science policy (was) being influenced by things that weren't based on scientific evidence...not taking the evidence into account...I think as scientists it sort of sticks in our throats when evidence is being ignored...If you're setting policy, it seems like there is a responsibility to get the evidence as good as you can."
The Bush team's determination to (in Blackburn's words) "mess with the evidence" and "bias the evidence" was standard operating procedure. One of my many favorite stories concerns NASA, where the agency's top scientist on climate change was ordered not to speak publicly about his speciality anymore; he was muzzled by a 24-year-old political appointee whose sole qualification for NASA work was that he had worked as a gopher on the 2004 Bush re-election campaign. This was all documented in a 2008 report by the NASA inspector general, who concluded, more broadly, that Bush's NASA had been presenting information about global warming "in a manner that reduced, marginalized, or mischaracterized climate-change science."
Meanwhile, Bush was required by law to give Congress an updated assessment of the effects of climate change; that report was required by law to be delivered in 2004. Bush ignored the deadline. Nor did he deliver such a report in 2005 or 2006 or 2007. He finally complied in the spring of 2008, and only because a court ordered him to do so. By then, of course, the integrity of the Environmental Protection Agency had long been compromised. Within the EPA, the Bush team repeatedly suppressed or dismissed valid climate change evidence in favor of industry-sponsored junk science, prompting former EPA chief Christie Todd Whitman (another reality-based casualty) to recall in 2007, "What disturbed me most was the administration's record of taking the most extreme of science - what I call the 'political science' - and giving it the same weight as the real science."
And that's precisely what Elizabeth Blackburn had been warning back in 2004. Her Nobel Prize is not only a celebration of science and what she calls "the quest for truth"; it is also a veritable rebuke to the dark age that is now blessedly dead and gone.
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KevSim Dude, science and the planet have no sense of time. anonymous
I don't get the "forget it, Bush isn't president any more" tactic of belittling liberal criticism. Last I heard, the republican party was still in business, was still very well financed by the same old folks, still holding the same beliefs, and was busily trying as hard as ever to throw monkey wrenches into the works. liberal
Kevin, NO, NO we cannot let these incidents go !!! It is about time that the proofs of Bush administration incompetence be paraded about for all to see even Tom from Wilmington and Swedesboro Mike !!! Now when we see them acknowledge the intellectual dishonesty of Bush and his administration - then it's time to let it go ! ModerateMarge
FRom last time, when did you conservatives suddenly fall in love with the Dalai Lama? It's mostly my liberal friends who swoon over the guy, and I tell them the same thing I posted here already. We should not make promises to him that we can't keep, ala the Bush administration practice. This is not fair to him or to the Tibetan people. Failure to make insincere promises is not "throwing him under the bus." It is just honesty and plain speaking. liberal
I am as opposed as anyone to the sins of the Bush administration, but I'm not very happy with the tendency of some people on the left to make a moral crusade out of it or, literally, a "federal case." We need to push our own ideas forward, and not fantasize about the cheap thrill of retribution. The republicans play a very hard, dirty, and possibly dangerous brand of politics, but this is not the same as immorality or criminality--it's a fine line but it has to be respected. liberal- The fact that she was awarded the Nobel prize tells you all you need to know about the Nobel prize. Mr. Smith
- Mr. Smith You obviously have a strong science background to discredit the entire community for your misplaced beliefs.
liberal, since when did meeting with the dali lama become so dangerous to you and Obama? Your views on China and why Obama should not meet with the dali lama are nothing more than appeasement with the blind hope that a propblem will go away. Did you work for Chamberlain in 1939? How did that work out? CD75- All of the nuclear power plants that have been built recently is a testament to the liberals embrace of science. When the evdience piled up that the earth has been cooling for about 10 years now liberals embraced that science by changing the term from "global warming" to "climate change". Libs love them some science. jmc
Does Bush Bashing and living in the past make everyone feel better for the moment? Good, because Obama is still failing at everything he does. (Even SNL is starting to pick up on this - see last Saturday's show). CD75
Even former Enron advisor and now NYT columnist Paul Krugman won a Nobel Prize. Krugman did such a great job for Enron. What is the Nobel Prize really mean anymore? CD75
CD75 more importantly - how did George W. Bush's Iraq folly work out ??? Did you think it was great thinking to make the war on Osama and terror a multi fronted war by invading a country which had NOTHING to do with 9/11 ??? It would have been far more understandable had W invaded Saudi Arabia !!! What do you think of the humongous deficits run up by W - mostly off budget ????? Do you think the deficits would be comparable with Obama's if the expenditures were on the budget ??? Plenty of blame for both parties to be sure, but you sure seem to forget the sins of the GOP !!! Rest assured the rest of us do not ! ModerateMarge
When the right-wingers stop equating Obama to Carter, then I will begin work on getting past my Bush Derangement Syndrome. In the meantime, were the respective policies of FDR and Hoover relevant to today's raging debate about who is to blame for the economic free fall? As for BDS... everytime I hear a hard-right poster declare the need to simply get over it, I draw the analogy of a drunken frat boy who tells his "date" who just awoke from her drunken stupor to learn she's being vio1ated that she should just "get over it." Phrossty
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