This conjunction of an immense military establishment and a large
arms industry is new in the American experience. The total
influenceeconomic, political, even spiritualis felt in every city,
every State house, every office of the Federal government. We recognize
the imperative need for this development. Yet we must not fail to
comprehend its grave implications. Our toil, resources and livelihood are
all involved; so is the very structure of our society.
In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition
of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the
military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of
misplaced power exists and will persist.
It is not an understatement to say that Eisenhower’s warning not
only was unheeded but also was prophetic, and the endless military
involvement of US armed forces around the world for the past half century
is proof that the president was right. However, the speech contained
another warning about the role of science and scientists in our society
that also went unheeded:
Akin to, and largely responsible for the sweeping changes in our
industrial-military posture, has been the technological revolution during
recent decades.
In this revolution, research has become central; it also becomes more
formalized, complex, and costly. A steadily increasing share is conducted
for, by, or at the direction of, the Federal government.
Today, the solitary inventor, tinkering in his shop, has been
overshadowed by task forces of scientists in laboratories and testing
fields. In the same fashion, the free university, historically the
fountainhead of free ideas and scientific discovery, has experienced a
revolution in the conduct of research. Partly because of the huge costs
involved, a government contract becomes virtually a substitute for
intellectual curiosity. For every old blackboard there are now hundreds
of new electronic computers.
The prospect of domination of the nation’s scholars by Federal
employment, project allocations, and the power of money is ever present
and is gravely to be regarded. Yet, in holding scientific research and
discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal
and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of
a scientific-technological elite. (emphasis mine)
One can say Eisenhower was describing “capture theory” long before
it became embedded in the economics journals, and for all of the advances
that have been made in science, the melding of science and politics has
proven to be disastrous to how we live our daily lives as the
“scientific-technological elite” Eisenhower feared has come to
power.
Another speech,
this one given recently by Mises Institute president Jeff Deist to
the Ron Paul Institute, does not have the fame of Eisenhower’s, but it is
no less important to understanding how that elite, from lifelong medical
bureaucrats like Anthony Fauci to the tech billionaires that seek to
remake the world through coercion, has used science not to enlighten, but
rather to push dangerous policies through outright obfuscation. He
writes:
And we’re still living with it [COVID-19]. Consider we still don’t
have definitive answers to these simple questions:
Do masks really work?
Do kids really need masks? As an aside, our great friend Richard
Rider reports that San Diego Countypopulation 3.3 millionshut down its
public schools for a year with one student death!
Is there asymptomatic spread?
Does the virus live on surfaces?
How long does immunity last after having covid?
How many vaccines will someone need to be “fully” vaccinated? How
many boosters? Annual?
Aren’t delta and other variants simply the predictable evolution of
any virus?
How do we define a “case” or infection if someone shows no symptoms
and feels fine?
Can covid really be eradicated like polio? If so, why haven’t we
eradicated flu by now?
And so on. We never get clear answers, but only fog.
These are not unanswerable questions, but because covid-19 became a
political malady, the political side has overwhelmed the
medical/scientific aspect of this virus and its effects, because
mystification happens to be politically useful. In other words, politics
ultimately overwhelms science, and when politics comes to the fore,
science itself disappears and is replaced by
something akin to
Lysenkoism, which is the ultimate result when everything in society
becomes politicized.
Much of the present corruptionno other word will sufficeof science via
politics has come through environmentalism, and I present the case of
acid rain as proof. While most readers probably are not familiar with the
subject, forty years ago it was the environmental crisis. As I laid out
in an article that I
published in Reason
magazine in 1992,
environmentalists and their media allies believed that the sky literally
was falling:
[I]n the late 1970s. Scientists in the United States, Canada, and
Scandinavia became alarmed at what they believed was massive
environmental degradation caused by sulfur dioxide-laced rain that came
from coal-fired power plants. The media followed with hundreds of
apocalyptic stories, such as “Scourge from the Skies” (Reader’s Digest),
“Now, Even the Rain is Dangerous” (International Wildlife), “Acid from
the Skies” (Time), and “Rain of Terror” (Field and Stream).
In 1980, the EPA [Environmental Protection Agency] declared that acid
rain had acidified lakes in the northeastern United States a hundredfold
since 1940, and the National Academy of Sciences predicted an “aquatic
silent spring” by 1990, declaring in 1981 that the nation’s number of
acid-dead lakes would more than double by 1990.
As news stories on this new and deadly terror proliferated, the
Jimmy Carter administration convinced Congress to fund a scientific study
about acidic rain, with the idea being that the scientific findings would
quickly validate the need for more environmental regulation of coal-fired
electric power plants. However, after Ronald Reagan was elected, he
extended Carter’s National Acid Precipitation Assessment Program (NAPAP)
into a full-blown study that was charged with taking an in-depth look at
the problem and recommending solutions. It would be the last study of its
type.
The most worrisome problem that lawmakers and environmentalists allegedly
faced was massive acidification of lakes and creeks in the Adirondack
Mountains, and a cursory view seemed to indicate that the claims could be
true. At the turn of the twentieth century, most of these now acidic
lakes (about 5.0 pH factor) that were void of aquatic life at one time
had been favorite fishing spots of President Theodore Roosevelt, who was
known for his love of the outdoors. Eight decades later they essentially
were dead lakes, and acid rain had to be the culprit.
However, acidic precipitation was decidedly not the reason for lake
acidity, something that intuitively doesn’t make sense. After all, if
rain has a low pH factor and it falls into a body of water, would it not
be affecting the lake’s acidity? That viewpoint was seen as the default
position and few people believed it could be challenged.
Yet that is what happened when scientists were permitted to do their
research and field work without political interference, at least for a
while. In 1983, one of the researchers, a soil scientist named Ed Krug,
and a partner coauthored a paper in Science that not only challenged the
status quo, but also laid it to rest. Their own research, along with that
of scientists in Scandinavia, where acid rain supposedly was also
destroying lakes, demonstrated that historical land use patterns in lake
watersheds were highly significant, while they also found that much of
natureeven bare rockseffectively buffets low-pH factor rain and pretty
much neutralizes it even before it reaches lakes, streams, and
rivers.
According to Krug and other researchers, the reason that many lakes went
from hosting aquatic life to becoming relatively sterile was not the
advent of acidic precipitation, but rather the way that people had used
land in the lake watersheds over the centuries. During eras when land use
involved slash-and-burn agriculture, the soil runoff was relatively
alkaline, thus allowing the lakes to support life.
However, as watersheds reverted to their more natural uses, especially in
the Adirondack Mountains, which were being transitioned into “Forever
Wild” territories, the soil became more naturally acidicand so did the
lakes that took in the runoff. For that matter, as the NAPAP scientists
found, the largest concentration of acidic lakes was not found in the
Adirondacks, where rain is relatively acidic, but rather in northern and
central Florida, which doesn’t receive acidic rain at all.
As the research into historic Adirondack land use patterns deepened,
scientists found, using core samples from the lakes’ bottoms, that these
lakes had been naturally acidic well before the appearance of Europeans
in the upstate New York region. In his article “Fish Story” for the
Heritage Foundation publication Policy Review, Krug wrote that the word
“Adirondack” was a Native American term meaning “bark eater.” The
Irish
Times
reported:
The situation turned out to be much more complex than had been
predicted. The acidity of a lake is determined as much by the acidity of
the local soil and vegetation as it is by acid rain. Many lakes in
north-eastern America, dead in the 1980s, had plenty of fish in 1900. It
was surmised by environmentalists that 20th-century sulphur dioxide
emissions had choked these lakes to death with acid rain. But the NAPAP
showed many of these lakes were acidic and fishless even before European
settlement in America. Fish survived better in these lakes around 1900
because of extensive slash and burn logging in the area. The soil became
more alkaline as the acid vegetation was removed, reducing the acid
flowing into the lakes and making the water hospitable to fish. Logging
stopped in 1915, acid soils and vegetation returned and the lakes became
acidic again. The study also found that in many cases forests were
suffering debilitation due to insects or drought and not acid
rain.
The publication continued:
The NAPAP reported in 1990. The findings were explosive: first, acid
rain had not injured forests or crops in US or Canada; second, acid rain
had no observable effect on human health; third, only a small number of
lakes had been acidified by acid rain and these could be rehabilitated by
adding lime to the water. In summary, acid rain was a nuisance, not a
catastrophe.
If one would think this good news (The sky really isn’t falling!),
think again. Irish Times continues:
The findings of NAPAP were not welcomed by the powers-that-be, many
of whom had staked their reputations on the impending Clean Air Act which
would call for drastic reduction of sulphur dioxide emissions. The NAPAP
was ignored.
Indeed, Democrats in Congress accused the NAPAP team of
“politicizing” its research, as though three thousand scientists of
varying political persuasions would march in lockstep to the desires of
Ronald Reagan. When President Carter’s administration first formed NAPAP,
it seemed that the main purpose of the research was to confirm what
“everybody already knew” about acid rain. However, after the Reagan
administration expanded the research mission of the organization, the
research lost popularity, as the findings did not fall in line with
environmental narratives.
In the end, the scientists were condemned for not politicizing their
research, and the lesson was not lost on anyone. The US Environmental
Protection Agency specifically went after Krug, making it difficult for
him to continue to pursue his research career, something I expounded in
my Reason article. Another scientist associated with the NAPAP program
told me that never again would the EPA and environmental advocates ever
again conduct the same kind of research agenda. He told me when I
interviewed him in 1991: “There is no NAPAP for global warming.”
We mostly remember Eisenhower’s speech for his near-prophetic words on
the “military-industrial complex.” However, what he said about
government-influenced corruption in scientific research was just as
foretelling. So much of what we have known as “science,” from the
university research faculties to the research laboratories to the
scientific journals, research that at one time was based upon applying
theories and data to reach conclusions that were to be “discovered,” as
opposed to being predetermined, has become utterly rigged.
Moreover, science as much as possible was to be a meritocracy in which
education, ability, insight, and perseverance determined the success of a
scientist. Today, success depends more upon one’s ability to promote
progressive narratives, and entry into the research fields themselves are
now increasingly determined by one’s sex, ethnicity, and other
characteristics that have nothing to do with one’s ability to conduct
scientific inquiry.
These are situations that do not end well, for so much of politics is
based upon lies and rigging outcomes to satisfy progressive political
constituencies. And just as progressives have proven to be destructive at
governance, they are equally destructive of science and inquiry
themselves. Nothing that progressives touch remains uncorrupted.