Re: virus: War & Peace / Rethinking Iraq

From: Walter Watts (wlwatts@cox.net)
Date: Fri May 07 2004 - 19:08:05 MDT

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    We can't leave Iraq, we can't stay in Iraq, AND, to top it all off, the
    whole fucking Arab world sees us as imperialists satan-worshippers.
    Jesus christ on a popsickle stick!!!

    And there are SO many other good reasons to dump Bush without Iraq, like
    the one below:
    ---------------------------------------
    SA Perspectives
    May 2004 Scientific American

    Bush-League Lysenkoism

    Starting in the 1930s, the Soviets spurned genetics in favor of
    Lysenkoism, a fraudulent theory of heredity inspired by Communist
    ideology. Doing so crippled agriculture in the U.S.S.R. for decades. You
    would think that bad precedent would have taught President George W.
    Bush something. But perhaps he is no better at history than at science.
    In February his White House received failing marks in a statement signed
    by 62 leading scientists, including 20 Nobel laureates, 19 recipients of
    the National Medal of Science, and advisers to the Eisenhower and Nixon
    administrations. It begins, “Successful application of science has
    played a large part in the policies that have made the United States of
    America the world’s most powerful nation and its citizens increasingly
    prosperous and healthy. Although scientific input to the government is
    rarely the only factor in public policy decisions, this input should
    always be weighed from an objective and impartial perspective to avoid
    perilous consequences. . . . The administration of George W. Bush has,
    however, disregarded this principle.” Doubters of that judgment should
    read the report from the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS) that
    accompanies the statement, “Restoring Scientific Integrity in Policy
    Making” (available at www.ucsusa. org). Among the affronts that it
    details: The administration misrepresented the findings of the National
    Academy of Sciences and other experts on climate change. It meddled with
    the discussion of climate change in an Environmental Protection Agency
    report until the EPA eliminated that section.

    It suppressed another EPA study that showed that the administration’s
    proposed Clear Skies Act would do less than current law to reduce air
    pollution and mercury contamination of fish. It even dropped independent
    scientists from advisory committees on lead poisoning and drug abuse in
    favor of ones with ties to industry. Let us offer more examples of our
    own. The Department of Health and Human Services deleted information
    from its Web sites that runs contrary to the president’s preference for
    “abstinence only” sex education programs. The Office of Foreign Assets
    Control made it much more difficult for anyone from “hostile nations” to
    be published in the U.S., so some scientific journals will no longer
    consider submissions from them. The Office of Management and Budget has
    proposed overhauling peer review for funding of science that bears on
    environmental and health regulations —in effect, industry scientists
    would get to approve what research is conducted by the EPA. None of
    those criticisms fazes the president, though. Less than two weeks after
    the UCS statement was released, Bush unceremoniously replaced two
    advocates of human embryonic stem cell research on his advisory Council
    on Bioethics with individuals more likely to give him a hallelujah
    chorus of opposition to it. Blind loyalists to the president will
    dismiss the UCS report because that organization often tilts left—never
    mind that some of those signatories are conservatives. They may brush
    off this magazine’s reproofs the same way, as well as the regular salvos
    launched by California Representative Henry A. Waxman of the House
    Government Reform Committee [see Insights, on page
    52] and maybe even Arizona Senator John McCain’s scrutiny for the
    Committee on Commerce, Science and Transportation. But it is
    increasingly impossible to ignore that this White House disdains
    research that inconveniences it.

    --
    Walter Watts
    Tulsa Network Solutions, Inc.
    "Pursue the small utopias... nature, music, friendship, love"
    --Kupferberg--
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