From The American, by Kenneth P. Green and Hiwa Alaghebandian
Science is losing its credibility because it has adopted an authoritarian tone, and has let itself be co-opted by politics.

In a Wired article published at the end of May, writer Erin Biba bemoans the fact that “science” is losing its credibility with the public. The plunge in the public’s belief in catastrophic climate change is her primary example. Biba wonders whether the loss of credibility might be due to the malfeasance unearthed by the leak of emails from the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia in the United Kingdom, but comes to the conclusion that malfeasance isn’t the cause of the public’s disaffection. No, people have turned against science simply because it lacks a good public relations outfit. Biba quotes Kelly Bush, head of a major PR firm, on the point:
Biba says researchers need a campaign that inundates the public with the message of science: Assemble two groups of spokespeople, one made up of scientists and the other of celebrity ambassadors. Then deploy them to reach the public wherever they are, from online social networks to “The Today Show.” Researchers need to tell personal stories, tug at the heartstrings of people who don’t have PhD’s. And the celebrities can go on “Oprah” to describe how climate change is affecting them—and by extension, Oprah’s legions of viewers.
“They need to make people answer the questions, What’s in it for me? How does it affect my daily life? What can I do that will make a difference? Answering these questions is what’s going to start a conversation,” Bush says. “The messaging up to this point has been ‘Here are our findings. Read it and believe.’ The deniers are convincing people that the science is propaganda.”
While nobody would dispute the value of a good PR department, we doubted that bad or insufficient PR was the primary reason for the public’s declining trust in scientific pronouncements. Our theory is that science is not losing its credibility because people no longer like or believe in the idea of scientific discovery, but because science has taken on an authoritarian tone, and has let itself be co-opted by pressure groups who want the government to force people to change their behavior.
In the past, scientists were generally neutral on questions of what to do. Instead, they just told people what they found, such as “we have discovered that smoking vastly increases your risk of lung cancer” or “we have discovered that some people will have adverse health effects from consuming high levels of salt.” Or “we have found that obesity increases your risk of coronary heart disease.” Those were simply neutral observations that people could find empowering, useful, interesting, etc., but did not place demands on them. In fact, this kind of objectivity was the entire basis for trusting scientific claims.
But along the way, an assortment of publicity-seeking, and often socially activist, scientists stopped saying, “Here are our findings. Read it and believe.” Instead, activist scientists such as NASA’s James Hansen, heads of quasi-scientific governmental organizations such as the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, editors of major scientific journals, and heads of the various national scientific academies are more inclined to say, “Here are our findings, and those findings say that you must change your life in this way, that way, or the other way.”
So, objective statements about smoking risk morphed into statements like “science tells us we must end the use of tobacco products.” A finding of elevated risk of stroke from excess salt ingestion leads to: “The science tells us we must cut salt consumption in half by 2030.” Findings that obesity carries health risks lead to a “war on obesity.” And yes, a finding that we may be causing the climate to change morphed into “the science says we must radically restructure our economy and way of life to cut greenhouse gas emissions radically by 2050.”
To see if our suspicions were correct, we decided to do a bit of informal research, checking Lexis Nexis for growth in the use of what we would categorize as “authoritarian” phrasing when it comes to scientific findings. We searched Nexis for the following phrases to see how their use has changed over the last 30 years: “science says we must,” “science says we should,” “science tells us we must,” “science tells us we should,” “science commands,” “science requires,” “science dictates,” and “science compels.”
What we found surprised us. One phrase, in particular, has become dramatically more frequent in recent years: “Science tells us we should.” Increased usage of this phrase leads to a chart resembling a steep mountain climb (or, for those with a mischievous bent, a “hockey stick”). The use of the phrase “science requires” also increases sharply over time. The chart (below) vividly shows the increasing use of those particular phrases. Some of this may simply reflect the general growth of media output and the growth of new media, but if that were the case, we would expect all of the terms to have shown similar growth, which they do not.

read more at: The American
This is what happens when the only scientific research funded by government is that which meets government requirements for political correctness, and requirements for scientific correctness are lacking.
Post Normal Science is not science. The people know it.
Brendan H says at 11:34 am [ … ]
This is tailor made for someone who believes the things that Brendan believes.☺
Scientists should have more pride and not accept that they are a dependency class created by the government.
You can either take that gov’t check, or you can persue scientific inquiry. Either/or.
You can only serve one master.
If a field of 1 acre has 10 sheep, then every field on the earth of 2 acres or more will at least have 20 sheep. Trust me. I’m A scientist….
Public Relations is an offshoot of the advertising industry and has been contaminated by the ‘principles’ developed by showmen, car sales real estate people and the Wizard of Oz.
One just has to look at the effects of public relations people upon politicians (the likes of Tony Blair’s sexed up War in Iraq and George Brown’s saving the world’s economy come to mind) to understand the effect of such people upon their credibility in the public’s mind. If one believes all that is claimed by using this or that brand of toothpaste for instance, one needs one’s head examined.
Science should be free of the practices and skills of such people if it is retain the public’s trust.
Doug
DirkH quotes Brendan Locke as follows:
“[…] My point being, you don’t “like” the Science. DIY, prove ‘em wrong. Go on, it’s permitted!”
Son, you have it backwards still. The burden of proof is entirely on the scientist who is presenting his hypotheses. That is the core principle of Scientific Method. The scientist must share all of his data and methods in a form that is intelligible to all other interested scientists. The scientist must actively seek tests of his hypotheses. Climategaters did not follow the Scientific Method and that is established beyond a shadow of a doubt.
Smokey: “Brendan H says at 11:34 am [ … ]
This is tailor made for someone who believes the things that Brendan believes.☺”
Thanks for the info, Smokey. Just by way of interest, do you prefer crinkly or smooth? My research indicates that crinkly provides that extra bit of protection, probably due to the increased surface area.
Brendan Locke says:
July 29, 2010 at 10:16 am
What kind of litmus are you applying in order to choose what you like (err….”believe in”) and what you don’t believe in, in regards to Science?
The only real litmus here is truth. Truth isn’t about what you want or choose to believe. Finding it is a process, an ongoing one, and it takes work. Many here in fact, are “accidental skeptics”, having believed the Alarmist side of things originally until actually looking into it. If the evidence that C02, and in particular our C02 was creating a problem for our climate (or will be) was there, we would, of course accept it. Such is not the case, however.
“What kind of litmus are you applying in order to choose what you like (err….”believe in”) and what you don’t believe in, in regards to Science?””
//If I could again hamfistedly tramp in. I made a comment, quite some time back (and I don’t remember where,) that statistically speaking, the scariest part of people accepting AGW to me was that no bit of prediction has ever been retraced or allowed to be proven wrong. Almost every field of research, even those which lead to physical laws, has had its incorrect dead ends and disproven theories (which fit some available experimental data but did not hold up to subsequent challenge.) That AGW does not allow this to happen smacks of large and obvious experimenter bias and groupthink, all on its own.
The litmus test:
1) The scientific method is followed
a) A hypothesis, which is specific in scope and purpose, and falsifiable, is constructed.
b) A sequence of experiments which can be conducted by any researcher (given resources) are performed dutifully and the results recorded
c) The hypothesis is confirmed within the framework of the experiment, or falsified
d) A conclusion is made
2) Adequate communication of result requires that 1) the hypothesis, 2) all necessary information to replicate experiments and 3) conclusion are communicated. Other information such as derived data and notes are typically also communicated, but this is a matter of convenience or courtesy. In some cases, independant confirmation requires NO communication of data between experimental sites. The data is not important, 100% replicable experiments are.
3) All science hypothesis or even laws are subsequently subject to falsification from subsequent experimentation or observation.
That’s the litmus test. You can still be wrong, you can still perform experiments which only seem to confirm your hypothesis and you can still form an inaccurate conclusion, but sooner or later, it is usually found.
I’m looking for a quote by a “Climate Scientist” who suggested exaggeration to get people to act and he suggested that the amount of exaggeration was up to each individual “scientist”.
PR firms?
Why not just bribe people?
General Electric has agreed to pay $23.5m to settle allegations from US regulators that its subsidiaries bribed Iraqi officials to win contracts under the United Nations Oil for Food Programme between 2000 and 2003.
Anthony: A slight correction r: my post @ur momisugly 11:39am, 7-29-”
The credo, or as Jeff Id called it “The Skeptics Creed”, is the first part of my post. The Michael Crichton quote came from Christopher Booker’s excellent book: The Real Global Warming Disaster. Just thought I would clarify that. Crichton’s quote I think is what is central to the CACC Discussion. I have seen nothing from the warmists that convinces me they are right.
899: “THINK: How is it that almost all of the MSM —newspapers, radio, TEE VEE, major magazines, journals, etc., all seem to reflect the VERY SAME THOUGHTS?
It’s NOT by coincidence: THEY ARE OWNED by the same small cadre of insiders.”
I thought JournoList was doing the coordinating?
It’s not science that has adopted an authoritarian dictatorship, it’s all the pesky frakkers who speak for science while wanting everyone else’s money to do it.
It would be interesting to plot Authoritarian Science Phrases and the US M-2 Money Supply on the same timeline. I would not be surprised that both exploding exponential curves overlap very well.
M. Simon says:
July 29, 2010 at 2:07 pm
I’m looking for a quote by a “Climate Scientist” who suggested exaggeration to get people to act and he suggested that the amount of exaggeration was up to each individual “scientist”.
This probably what you are referring to
“To capture the public imagination, we [scientists] have to offer up some scary scenarios, make simplified dramatic statements and little mention of any doubts one might have. Each of us has to decide the right balance between being effective, and being honest. This ‘double ethical bind’ we frequently find ourselves in cannot be solved by any formula. Each of us has to decide what the right balance is between being effective and being honest. I hope that means being both.”
The quote is from Stephen Schneider
Yeah sure, fraudulent data manipulation, lying, hiding data, conspiracy, and so on – none of this makes me mistrust scientists. It’s only because they are so clumsy at presenting their case. Really. (/sarc)
When Google was showing counts on their autosuggest facility recently, here are the counts for what the sceptical public have been searching for:
global warming hoax emails_______50,900,000
global warming myths and facts___11,700,000
global warming hoax statistics____6,550,000
global warming hoax articles______6,490,000
global warming hoax_______________5,810,000
global warming swindle video______2,060,000
global warming myth_______________1,360,000
climate change skeptics___________1,160,000
global warming skeptics___________1,120,000
global warming scam_______________1,060,000
global warming hoax books_________1,050,000
climate change skeptics articles____761,000
climate change skeptics scientists__696,000
global warming hoax al gore_________644,000
global warming swindle______________605,000
global warming swindle facts________603,000
climate change skeptics video_______529,000
global warming hoax quotes__________450,000
climate change skeptics arguments___319,000
climate change skeptics quotes______280,000
climate crisis skeptic______________258,000
climate crisis scam_________________209,000
climate crisis hoax_________________140,000
global warming swindle youtube______117,000
global warming hoax graphs__________112,000
global warming hoax essay___________105,000
global warming swindle download______78,300
global warming swindle torrent_______65,900
global warming swindle summary_______41,200
climate crisis swindle_______________33,500
TOTAL____________________________95,306,900
Climate change is still the preferred search term rather than the old “global warming” or the new alarmist term “climate crisis”:
climate change__________________196,000,000
global warming___________________29,400,000
climate crisis___________________23,700,000
Note that the counts are from the exact phrase Autosuggest and are NOT hits.
Dave Wendt,
That is the one. Thanks!
Left authoritarianism is in full force. Andrew Klavan writes how his thriller novel Empire of Lies, was cancelled from publication in France, after he was paid in full for the book, by an editor who replaced the one who purchased the book, simply because she did not like that the protagonist was a christian and that the book portrayed the left biased media as complicit in terrorism.
http://www.city-journal.org/2010/eon0726ak.html
The guys at Power Line ask if the left’s tendency to favor censorship is a result of their inherent authoritarianism, or just because they can’t stand losing an argument. They think its a mixture of both. I say that the second is an inherent characteristic of the first. We see it here every day in the climate debate.
Most of us skeptics would like nothing more than to debate and argue with the alarmists till the cows come home. We recognise both sides’ right to speak their views. It is the alarmists, however, who censor our posts on their websites, who post troll posts hiding behind fake names and emails here, who cannot debate on the merits, who call us “denialists” and seek to demonize in an Orwellian manner.
Oprah’s legions of viewers.
Oprah’s rating have been going down. Recently Judge Judy has better ratings.
Biba wonders whether the loss of credibility might be due to the malfeasance unearthed by the leak of emails from the Climatic Research Unit at the University of East Anglia in the United Kingdom, but comes to the conclusion that malfeasance isn’t the cause of the public’s disaffection. No, people have turned against science simply because it lacks a good public relations outfit. Biba quotes Kelly Bush, head of a major PR firm,
Like the saying goes: you can always find someone who will say what you want to hear.
The deniers are convincing people that the science is propaganda.
Nah. ClimateGate is doing a good job of that.
activist scientists such as NASA’s James Hansen
Isn’t he the death train guy?