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The Republican War on Science

June 5, 2008 · Print This Article

America is already known across the world for having an irrational disdain for science. Not to mention the fact that our country produces so few scientists of its own, we’ve depended on foreign-born scientists to help as along our treasured road of progress for decades. Isn’t it ironic that, despite all of the ‘progress must continue’, ‘don’t take away our technology’ anti-global warming talk, our leaders look down their noses at those who produce this technology?

The past seven and a half years under Bush have made the situation (as with many other situations – really, can we name one thing he actually improved?) much worse. The ‘war on terror’ has produced a convenient cover for the Bush administration to attack foreign-born scientists.

The Huffington Post quotes William A. Wulf, Ph.D., president of the National Academy of Engineering:

Between 1980 and 2000, the percentage of Ph.D. scientists and engineers employed in the United States who were born abroad has increased from 24% to 37%. The current percentage of Ph.D. physicists is about 45%; for engineers, the figure is over 50%. One fourth of the engineering faculty members at U.S. universities were born abroad. Between 1990 and 2004, over one third of Nobel Prizes in the United States were awarded to foreign-born scientists. One third of all U.S. Ph.D’s in science and engineering are now awarded to foreign born graduate students. We have been skimming the best and brightest minds from across the globe, and prospering because of it; we need these new Americans even more now as other countries become more technologically capable.

Dr. Moniem El-Ganayni is one of the scientists you’d think America would want to hold on to. The nuclear physicist has been an American citizen for 20 years and worked at the Bettis Atomic Power Laboratory – that is, until his security clearance was revoked. The reason? He’s an Egyptian-born Muslim. Dr. El-Ganayni’s efforts to get his clearance back have been fruitless, and he thinks he’ll have to move back to Egypt with his American-born wife.

The decision to revoke Dr. El-Ganayni’s clearance without holding a hearing was made by acting Deputy Secretary of Energy Jeffrey F. Kupfer, a Bush administration insider …. [who] certified that the appeals process set forth in DOE regulations “cannot be made available … without damaging the interests of national security by revealing classified information. …

Furthermore, he stated, his decision is “conclusive,” meaning the matter is officially closed.

Dr. El-Ganayni is far from alone. According to the ACLU, an “untold number of Middle Eastern immigrants and Muslims across the country have been quietly ensnared by measures aimed at strengthening national security in a post-9/11 world.”

In post 9/11 America, the worlds ‘national security’ have been used to shut people up when they question the government’s actions. The Bush administration has enjoyed a free-for-all where silly things like proof, trials, fairness and justice are put aside in the name of ‘protecting our country from terrorists’. And, as we all know, as far as the Bush administration and Republican lawmakers are concerned, if your name sounds foreign, you’re suspicious.

Perhaps there’s a faith-based reason behind some of this – conservatives are certainly known for putting their religious beliefs where they don’t belong, like government policies. The faith vs. science battle that’s constantly being waged in America, from the courtroom to the classroom, from creationism to global warming denial, has made it clear how conservatives feel about science.

Regardless, the Republican war on science has only put America in a position where it’s constantly shooting itself in the foot. Bush has already lost our country vast amounts of credibility. With the lack of top shelf scientists and engineers to help keep us on top, the United States may very well continue on a dramatic slide downward on the world power scale. Obama, at this point, is truly our light at the end of the tunnel. Again, is it 2009 yet?

Link [The Huffington Post]

Photo credit: Wikimedia Commons

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Comments

One Response to “The Republican War on Science”

  1. Paulidan on June 7th, 2008 3:01 pm

    Intelligent design is not falsifiable, therefore, it is not a scientific theory.

    Global Warming is not falsifiable (all possible observations confirm prediction), therefore, it is not a scientific theory.

    Whether dogma comes from the Right or the Left is irrelevant to the scientific method. Both are not scientific notions.

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