- Stacked numerous advisory committees with industry representatives and members of the religious Right.
- Begun deploying a missile defense system without evidence that it can work.
- Banned funding for embryonic stem cell research except on a claimed 60 cell lines already in existence, most of which turned out not to exist.
- Forced the National Cancer Institute to say that abortion may cause breast cancer, a claim refuted by good studies.
- Ordered the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to remove information about condom use and efficacy from its Web site.
Mooney explores these and many other examples, including George W. Bush’s support for creationism. In almost every instance, Republican leaders have branded the scientific mainstream as purveyors of “junk science” and dubbed an extremist viewpoint-always at the end of the spectrum favoring big business or the religious Right-“sound science.” One of the most insidious achievements of the Right, Mooney shows, is the Data Quality Act of 2000-just two sentences, written by an industry lobbyist and quietly inserted into an appropriations bill. It directs the White House’s Office of Management and Budget to ensure that all information put out by the federal government is reliable. The law seems sensible, except in practice. It is used mainly by industry and right-wing think tanks to block release of government reports unfavorable to their interests by claiming they do not contain “sound science.” For all its hostility to specific scientific findings, the Right never says it opposes science. It understands the cachet in the word. Perhaps Republicans sense what pollsters have known for decades-that the American public is overwhelmingly positive about science and that there is nothing to be gained by opposing a winner. Instead the Right exploits a misconception about science common among nonscientists-a belief that uncertainty in findings indicates fatally flawed research. Because most cutting-edge science-including most research into currently controversial topics—is uncertain, it is dismissed as junk. This naive understanding of science hands the Right a time-tested tactic. It does not claim that business interests or moral values trump the scientific consensus. Rather rightists argue that the consensus itself is flawed. Then they encourage a debate between the consensus and the extremist naysayers, giving the two apparently equal weight. Thus, Mooney argues, it seems reasonable to split the difference or simply to argue that there is too much uncertainty to, say, ban a suspect chemical or fund a controversial form of research. The Republican War on Science details political and regulatory debates that can be arcane and complex, engrossing reading only for dedicated policy wonks. Thankfully, Mooney is both a wonk and a clear writer. He covered many of the battles in real time for publications such as the Washington Post, Washington Monthly, Mother Jones and American Prospect. “When politicians use bad science to justify themselves rather than good science to make up their minds,” Mooney writes, “we can safely assume that wrongheaded and even disastrous decisions lie ahead.” Thomas Jefferson would, indeed, be appalled. Writing in 1799 to a young student whom he was mentoring, the patriot advised the man to study science and urged him to reject the “doctrine which the present despots of the earth are inculcating,” that there is nothing new to be learned. He concluded by saying opposition to “freedom and science would be such a monstrous phenomenon as I cannot place among possible things in this age and this country.”
