Trump vs. Science: The chaos is confusing: Isn't science a force for good? Hasn't it contained disease?
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Late yesterday, Sethuraman Panchanathan, whom President Trump hired to run the National Science Foundation five years ago, quit. He didnt say why, but it was clear enough: Last weekend, Trump cut more than 400 active research awards from the N.S.F., and he is pressing Congress to halve the agencys $9 billion budget.
The Trump administration has targeted the American scientific enterprise, an engine of research and innovation that has thrummed for decades. It has slashed or frozen budgets at the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and NASA. It has fired or defunded thousands of researchers.
The chaos is confusing: Isnt science a force for good? Hasnt it contained disease? Wont it help us in the competition with China? Doesnt it attract the kind of immigrants the president says he wants? In this edition of the newsletter, we break out our macroscope to make sense of the turmoil.
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These are mechanical threats to science who gets money, what they work on. But there is a more existential worry. The Trump administration is trying to change what counts as science.
One effort aims at what science should show and at achieving results agreeable to the administration. The health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., wants to reopen research into a long-debunked link between vaccines and autism. He doesnt want to study vaccine hesitancy. The National Science Foundation says it will no longer fund research with the goal of combating misinformation, disinformation, and malinformation that could be used to infringe on the constitutionally protected speech rights of American citizens. A Justice Department official has accused prominent medical journals of political bias for not airing competing viewpoints.
Another gambit is to suppress or avoid politically off-message results, even if the message isnt yet clear. The government has expunged public data sets on air quality, earthquake intensity and seabed geology. Why cut the budget by erasing records?