Booman Tribune

Bush Fired Scientist Wins Nobel

by Steven D
Tue Oct 6th, 2009 at 07:48:18 AM EST

Three Americans won the Nobel prize for Medicine the other day. (Cue U-S-A! U-S-A! chants). They recieved the award for discovering the existence and role an enzyme, telomerase, plays in repairing damaged DNA strands (actually something quite important for the future of medical treatments for genetic diseases and many cancers). Yet one of them, Elizabeth Blackburn, wasn't good enough for our last President George Bush, because he fired her from the Federal government's Council on Bioethics. Why? Because she didn't toe the GOP line on stem cell research which made her persona non grata to the Bush and the Republican party's faith based version of what science should be:

Blackburn spoke out about the Council of Bioethics, demonstrating that despite its written mission to be a body that monitors research developments and recommends appropriate guidelines, it was really just a tool for parroting the Bush Administration's positions on certain hot-button issues -- particularly embryonic stem cell research. Thus, Blackburn played a central and important role in revealing the extent of the political interference in science that pervaded the Bush Administration.

We, as a country are lucky that Elizabeth Blackburn, chose to immigrate to the united States from Australia (oh, that's right, she's an immigrant, as well, another Republican bugaboo). I wish we could say the same about our politics at the moment. Consider this an object lesson in all that is wrong with the Republican Party's embrace of the extreme tight wing. The rest of the world sees Elizabeth Blackburn as a dedicated, influential and significant scientific researcher. Republicans? Too many of them probably applauded George Bush when he kicked her to the curb. When you put your politics before advancing education, especially science education, you set your country up for a gigantic fall.

The last eight years before this one are proof of that fact. Only in America do politicians and PR hacks masquerading as "climate experts" make headlines by proclaiming global warming is a fraud and a hoax by a conspiracy of environmentalist wackos. Only in America is "intelligent design" given any credibility as a "scientific theory on par with the theory of evolution. Only in America do we have a "Creationist Museum." Only in America do we fire potential Nobel Prize winning scientists for saying that political calculations shouldn't drive policy decisions on scientific research, as Elizabeth Blackburn noted:

When prominent scientists must fear that descriptions of their research will be misrepresented and misused by their government to advance political ends, something is deeply wrong. Leading scientists are routinely called on to volunteer their expertise to the government, through study sections of the National Institutes of Health and advisory panels of the National Academy of Sciences and as advisers to departments ranging from health and human services to defense. It has been the unspoken attitude of the scientific community that it is our duty to serve our government in this manner, independent of our personal political affiliations and those of the administration in effect at the time. But something has changed. The healthy skepticism of scientists has turned to cynicism. 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 advisory bodies and through the delay and misrepresentation of their reports. As a naturalized citizen of the United States, I have an immigrant's love for my country. But our country must not fail us. Scientific advice should and must be protected from the influence of politics. Will the President's Council on Bioethics be up to that challenge?

And the sad fact is that only in America has this resulted in our children falling behind much of the rest of the developed world in math and science skills, skills critical for the future of our nation in the 21st Century. So congratulations to you, right wing nuts and tea baggers and Glenn Beck followers, who bitch about all the "junk science" being shoved down your throats by folks like Elizabeth Blackburn, and James Hansen. Who worry that swine flu vaccinations are a part of a conspiracy by the Antichrist President Obama to contaminate your precious bodily fluids.

You'd have thought we would have learned something from the propaganda and lies spread by the tobacco companies years ago that the science was wrong about the connection between cancer and smoking. But, it seems ever since Ronald Reagan assumed power in 1981, the dumbing down of the American public has accelerated at an ever faster pace. Certainly since Fox News established itself as the house organ for conservatives and radical fringe extremists, we've seen that element of our population that is fervently anti-intellectual, anti-science and pro- Fundamentalist Christian achieve a prominence in our political discourse far in excess of their actual numbers.

No wonder the rest of the world thinks American is becoming a dangerous, ignorant, barbaric society. They have good reasons for such beliefs.



Display:
Fixed to read 'DNA strands', not 'DNA stands' which sounds like either a place to get a lemonade and some semen on the side, or a device that prevents DNA from falling over.
by BooMan on Tue Oct 6th, 2009 at 09:44:19 AM EST
Thanks Boo.  This was before coffee, lol

A conservative is a man with two perfectly good legs who, however, has never learned how to walk forward. Franklin D. Roosevelt
by Steven D on Tue Oct 6th, 2009 at 02:15:54 PM EST
[ Parent ]
Beck, Bush, Inhofe, Fundamental Christians, Council of Bioethics, creationism are all evidence of a society that is losing its way, that is in a state of disarray, that is in imminent danger of decay.  When a society cannot even protect the integrity of its science, it is approaching a terminal point.  The empire is in deep trouble and one very clear sign of this is its unawareness of its serious condition;

When the dollar crumbles, the party will be over---for all of us, here, in the good, old, USA.

He who will not reason is a bigot; he who cannot is a fool; and he who dares not is a slave. Sir William Drummond

by Dongi 2 on Tue Oct 6th, 2009 at 10:19:23 AM EST
It's gratifying that the intelligent part of the world has revealed to all what American treasures were wasted by an administration shaped by passionate ignorance and strategic deceptiveness.

However, demanding that politics stay out of science is a foolish dream unless we want to close government research and leave it entirely in the hands of corporations and their university toadies. It was a political decision to launch NASA, create the Internet, establish the CDC, support sustainable energy, and on and on. The essential question is, how do we deal with science and its detractors in a democratic society? There can never be a satisfactory answer to that one.

FDR's response to progressive demands: "I agree. Now go out and make me do it."

by DaveW on Tue Oct 6th, 2009 at 01:17:18 PM EST
speaking of immigrants, and native born scientists. today three more were recognized for their ground breaking achievements:

STOCKHOLM - Three Americans whose 1960s research laid the foundation for today's world of computerized images and lightning-fast communication shared the 2009 Nobel Prize in physics Tuesday for their work developing fiber-optic cable and the sensor at the heart of digital cameras.

Charles K. Kao, 75, was cited for discovering how to transmit light signals over long distances through glass fibers as thin as a human hair. His 1966 breakthrough led to the creation of modern fiber-optic communication networks that carry voice, video and high-speed Internet data around the world.
...

Willard S. Boyle, 85, and George E. Smith, 79, were honored for inventing the eye of the digital camera, a sensor able to transform light into a large number of pixels, the tiny points of color that are the building blocks of every digital image.
...

The work of the three men is "something that has really changed our lives," said Joseph Nordgren, chair of the academy's physics committee. "The impact on science is enormous."

The Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences said all three have American citizenship. Boyle is also Canadian. Kao was born in Shanghai and is also a British citizen.

link

well done.

the revolution will not be televised...

by dada on Tue Oct 6th, 2009 at 02:52:12 PM EST
Three Americans won the Nobel Prize for Medicine?

You've got to be joking.  The media here in Australia were full of the fact that an Australian woman - the first ever - had won a Nobel Prize.  See this Sydney Morning Herald story as a typical example.

A very interesting example of 'where you sit is where you stand'.  Or the nationalist orientation of the media.

Elizabeth Blackburn, sacked by Bush from the Council on Bioethics, is an Australian and American dual citizen.  Very few MSM outlets in either country reported that fact.

by canberra boy (canberraboy1 at gmail dot com) on Wed Oct 7th, 2009 at 06:43:49 AM EST


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