Peter Woods of NAS writes:
I am pasting below a copy of an email that I’ve sent to many members of the National Academy of Sciences. I’ve also sent a version of it to the board members of the AAAS. And I have posted it to the National Association of Scholars website here.
It explains itself pretty clearly, but it will help to give a little background. We were drawn into this by James Enstrom, a former UCLA senior scientist and a National Association of Scholars member. We championed his case when he was fired for blowing the whistle on a major fraud at the California Air Resources Board (CARB). CARB had issued research findings (and ultimately regulations) based on a study that Enstrom demonstrated was fraudulent. The main author of the study had a mail order Ph.D.—as it happens, the address of the phony degree-granting institution is on Madison Avenue two blocks from my office. There was other mischief too, involving several of Enstrom’s colleagues who had seats at CARB.
Enstrom sought to publish some account of this in Science under the editorship of Marcia McNutt. He didn’t get anywhere. But he did end up making the acquaintance of other scientists who had similar experiences with McNutt. McNutt is now the only candidate to be president of the National Academy of Sciences. Enstrom hoped that if he could draw attention to her record of bolting the door against scientific dissent from establishment positions, the members of the Academy might have second thoughts.
I don’t want to put the National Association of Scholars into a campaign against McNutt’s election, but it does seem to me a good opportunity to raise broader questions about how science is now conducted in the United States—and how public policy is being built on it.
For several years I’ve been trying to get some traction for the National Association of Scholars on the threats to the integrity of contemporary science arising from entrenched political interests. We’ve made relatively little headway with this, although our studies of the sustainability movement and its subsidiary the fossil fuel divestment movement have attracted considerable attention. There are, of course, a handful of people in Congress who have enunciated their skepticism about the global warming orthodoxy and now the reliability of the Marks paper that claims that the pause in global warming never happened.
Breaking through the barriers to open scientific discussion requires finding 1) champions who can command public attention and respect; 2) factual narratives that are relatively easy for the public to grasp; and 3) vulnerabilities that the establishment cannot trivialize. I would think the best way to deal with the three issues mentioned in my letter would be to get the press interested in the enormous costs of the regulations that have been based on these spurious – or at least dubious – theories.
Yours,
Peter Wood
December 9, 2015
Dear Members of the National Academy of Sciences,
This is an NAS to NAS letter—which requires some “disambiguation.” I am president of the National Association of Scholars, founded in 1987, and whose organizers apparently didn’t give much thought to the space already occupied by those initials by the National Academy of Sciences, founded 124 years earlier. I’ll defer to the Academy’s seniority by reserving NAS in what follows for the body of scientists who incorporated during President Lincoln’s tenure. The National Association of Scholars is a broad-based group of academics that includes professors in the humanities and social sciences (I’m an anthropologist) as well as the natural sciences.
The occasion for this letter is Dr. Marcia K. McNutt, Editor-in-Chief of Science. We are concerned that she is the only official candidate to be the next NAS president. To be clear, the National Association of Scholars does not oppose Dr. McNutt’s candidacy. We simply believe that members of an important national organization like NAS should have at least two candidates to consider when voting for your next president. Indeed, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), which publishes Science, always has two candidates for president and its other elected positions. Other scientific organizations also have two candidates for their elected positions.
Also, we want to bring to your attention our serious concerns about the current state of discourse in the sciences. Dr. McNutt has played a significant role in three active controversies involving national regulatory policy that deserve attention in themselves and that are also part of a larger problem. The larger problem is how the scientific establishment, particularly Science and NAS, should evaluate and respond to serious dissent from legitimate scientists. This is an especially important consideration for NAS, which was established to provide “independent, objective advice on issues that affect people’s lives worldwide.”
The three controversies are:
1. The status of the linear no-threshold (LNT) dose-response model for the biological effects of nuclear radiation. The prominence of the model stems from the June 29, 1956 Science paper, “Genetic Effects of Atomic Radiation,” authored by the NAS Committee on the Biological Effects of Atomic Radiation. This paper is now widely questioned and has been seriously critiqued in many peer-reviewed publications, including two detailed 2015 papers. These criticisms are being taken seriously around the world, as summarized in a December 2, 2015 Wall Street Journal commentary. In August 2015 four distinguished critics of LNT made a formal request to Dr. McNutt to examine the evidence of fundamental flaws in the 1956 paper and retract it. However, on August 11, 2015 Dr. McNutt rejected this request without even reviewing the detailed evidence. Furthermore, Dr. McNutt did not even consider recusing herself and having independent reviewers examine evidence that challenges the validity of both a Science paper and an NAS Committee Report.
This is a consequential matter that bears on a great deal of national public policy, as the LNT model has served as the basis for risk assessment and risk management of radiation and chemical carcinogens for decades, but now needs to be seriously reassessed. This reassessment could profoundly alter many regulations from the Nuclear Regulatory Commission, Environmental Protection Agency, and other government agencies. The relevant documents regarding the 1956 Science paper and Dr. McNutt can be examined at www.nas.org/images/documents/LNT.pdf.
2. Extensive evidence of scientific misconduct in the epidemiology of fine particulate air pollution (PM2.5) and its relationship to mortality. Since 1997 EPA has claimed that lifetime inhalation of about a teaspoon of particles with diameter less than 2.5 microns causes premature death in the United States and it established an national regulation based on this claim. Science has provided extensive news coverage of this issue and its regulatory significance, but has never published any scientific criticism of this questionable claim, which is largely based on nontransparent research.
Earlier this year, nine accomplished scientists and academics submitted to Science well-documented evidence of misconduct by several of the PM2.5 researchers relied upon by EPA. The evidence of misconduct was first submitted to Dr. McNutt in a detailed June 4, 2015 email letter, then in a detailed July 20, 2015 Policy Forum manuscript “Transparent Science is Necessary for EPA Regulations,” and finally in an August 17, 2015 Perspective manuscript “Particulate Matter Does Not Cause Premature Deaths.” Dr. McNutt and two Science editors immediately rejected the letter and the manuscripts and never conducted any internal or external review of the evidence. This a consequential matter because many multi-billion dollar EPA air pollution regulations, such as, the Clean Power Plan, are primarily justified by the claim that PM2.5 is killing Americans. The relevant documents regarding this controversy can be examined at https://www.nas.org/images/documents/PM2.5.pdf.
3. Science promotes the so-called consensus model of climate change and excludes any contrary views. This issue has become so polarized and polarizing that it is difficult to bring up, but at some point the scientific community will have to reckon with the dramatic discrepancies between current climate models and substantial parts of the empirical record. Recent evidence of Science bias on this issue is the June 26, 2015 article by Dr. Thomas R. Karl, “Possible artifacts of data biases in the recent global surface warming hiatus”; the July 3, 2015 McNutt editorial, “The beyond-two-degree inferno”; the November 13, 2015 McNutt editorial, “Climate warning, 50 years later”; and the November 25, 2015 AAAS News Release, “AAAS Leads Coalition to Protest Climate Science Inquiry.”
Dr. McNutt’s position is, of course, consistent with the official position of the AAAS. But the attempt to declare that the “pause” in global warming was an illusion has not been accepted by several respected and well-informed scientists. One would not know this, however, from reading Science, which has declined to publish any dissenting views. One can be a strong supporter of the consensus model and yet be disturbed by the role which Science has played in this controversy. Dr. McNutt and the journal have acted more like partisan activists than like responsible stewards of scientific standards confronted with contentious claims and ambiguous evidence. The relevant documents and commentary regarding the Karl paper and McNutt editorials can be examined at https://www.nas.org/images/documents/Climate_Change.pdf.
All three of these controversies have arisen on issues in which a strong degree of scientific consensus became intertwined with public policy and institutional self-interest. That intertwining can create selective blindness.
Dr. McNutt has in her career found herself faced more than once with the challenge of what to do when an entrenched orthodoxy meets a substantial scientific challenge. The challenge in each case could itself prove to be mistaken, but it met what most scientists would concede to be the threshold criteria to deserve a serious hearing. Yet in each case Dr. McNutt chose to reinforce the orthodoxy by shutting the door on the challenge.
The three areas that I sketched above, however, seem to have such prominence in public policy that they would warrant an even greater investment in time, care, and attention than would be normally the case. In that light, Dr. McNutt’s dismissive treatment of scientific criticisms is disturbing.
I bring these matters to your attention in the hope of accomplishing two things: raise awareness that the three issues represent threats to the integrity of science arising from the all-too-human tendency to turn ideas into orthodoxies; and suggest that it might be wise for NAS to nominate as a second candidate for president someone who has a reputation for scientific objectivity and fairness and who does not enforce orthodoxy.
I welcome your responses. The National Association of Scholars will present an open forum on these matters with a section reserved specifically for NAS members. Furthermore, I will put you in contact with NAS members who are concerned about Dr. McNutt becoming the next NAS president.
Thank you for your consideration.
Yours sincerely,
Peter Wood
President
National Association of Scholars
8 W. 38th Street, Suite 503
New York, NY 10018

“at some point the scientific community will have to reckon with the dramatic discrepancies between current climate models and substantial parts of the empirical record”
yes. not just the hiatus. all of the empirical record.
this for example: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2662870
more at: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=2220942
Why do I suspect this kind of anti-science tomfoolery isn’t taking place in other parts of the World such as China, India and even Russia?
Don’t these nutters understand that there’s a big academic World out there, and Western scientists with their politicised grant-grabbing fakery comprise an ever-decreasing proportion of it?
It will end in tears.
@ur momisugly catweazle, 6.08 pm, + 1. They are not standing still, frankly I believe they are laughing their a..es off at us!
Current President of National Academy of Sciences is Ralph Cicerone, a former professor of “Earth System Science” and then a chair of namesake department in UCI. Stephen Schneider has mentioned him as a close associate.
National Academy of Sciences seems hopeless. Whether it “elects” McNuts or not, National Academy of Sciences needs to be replaced, not repaired.
tip of the corrupt iceberg
Don’t icebergs have a habit of ” Flipping ” ? Any day now would be nice…
If you identify the nature of scientific integrity clearly, its abuses become clear. The following identification of the nature of scientific integrity has an element that is directly relatable to Wood’s (National Academy of Science) concerns about the cause of lack of integrity in science.
With respect to that conception of scientific integrity, then the concern about scientific integrity in the behavior of McNutt (Editor-in-Chief of Science) is a concern about her tolerance of blocking “reliable mechanisms for efficient correction” of “flawed theories” and of blocking criticism of the scientists entrenched in the flawed theories.
McNutt shows no inclination of changing her behavior that causes integrity concerns, so she remains an advocate of blocking “reliable mechanisms for efficient correction” in science.
John
I wish something could be done about the CARB director Mary Nichols too. Totally out of control, unaccountable warmunist bureaucrat.
She is a major C-word.
I’m assuming you don’t mean “C”ute !!
You are paying too high a compliment to the ‘C’ word. She’s well-beneath that.
Correction–too high a compliment to her; she is well below the c-word. Long day….
Some time back I through the comments, I referred my publication Agricultural and Forest Meteorology 77 (1995) 113-120, with reference to pause in temperature. The greenhouse gases effect follow inverted ‘Z’ shape pattern in conversion of energy in to temperature with the increase of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere. Ken Stewart on 16th December 2015 presented an article “Energy, Carbon Dioxide, and The Pause” by using energy data from the BP Statistical Review of World Energy 2015, CO2 data from NOAA, and Temperature data from UAH. Between 336 to 400 ppm of CO2 presented a relation of 0.0063 X, and between 370 to 400 ppm of CO2 presented 0.0004 X [pause]. This is exactly what I presented in my article with reference to relative growth or relative yield versus relative radiation stress or relative water stress or relative nutrient stress wherein maximum impact is in the slant line part shown in inverted Z. The horizontal portion in the present case started around 370 ppm – pause. The initial horizontal part might have ended at around 150 ppm. The slant portion was maximum in between 150 to 370 ppm of CO2. With more accurate temperature data that takes in to account the rural-cold-island effect will provide the correct limits to CO2 for starting of slant portion and starting of pause.
Dr. S. Jeevananda Reddy
Umm, isn’t an inverted Z the same as a non-inverted Z?
Horizontal inversion?
The National Academy of Sciences like the U.S. Department of Agriculture is a Civil War Institution! It, like it’s sister bureaucracies and malfunctions needs to be disestablished and its current employees jailed for crimes and high treasons against the USA and Humanity.
Ha ha
As for linearity or lack thereof for causation of cancer by radiation: Most cells need at least two mutations to become cancerous, because people (or other animals that live long enough to have significant incidence of cancer) with many or most cells only 1 mutation away from becoming cancerous have lower reproduction rates due to often dying younger.
Since most human cells are at least two mutations away from becoming cancerous from radiation, the cancer-causing effect of radiation is not linear. If you double a dose of radiation, you double the number of cells getting a 1st mutation from the dose, and you also double the dose received by cells after they get a first mutation from the dose. Not counting the cells that already had a 1st mutation when the radiation dose in question started (a minority of them in most cases), the number of cells getting a 2nd mutation roughly quadruples with a doubling of a dose of radiation. This is an oversimplification when the dose is over a period of time that is significant in comparison to the life expectancy (and variation of that with mutations) of the cells involved, but it explains cancer risk from exposure to radiation being generally superlinear.
Don
The IPCC says it’s not a problem if we all start wearing these
http://i2.wp.com/craftgossip.com/files/2014/12/il_570xN.463029880_4rz8.jpg
WTF ?????
Brave letter and worthy fight.
It would appear that Marcia McNutt did not pay heed to Willis’ open letter at http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/08/04/an-open-letter-to-dr-marcia-mcnutt-new-editor-in-chief-science-magazine/
Ignoring the boorish elements of that letter the message found therein is a plea for honest science. Evidence at hand suggests that isn’t happening with the degree of success a prestigious science journal needs to remain prestigious.
Here’s a relevant prior thread—a review of Henry Bauer’s book, Dogmatism in Science and Medicine: How dominant theories monopolize research and stifle the search for truth.
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2012/11/05/dogmatism-in-science-and-medicine-how-dominant-theories-monopolize/
AAAS has become AARS.
The last time the NAS stood up to the GOV: go to the 26 minute mark of video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vRe9z32NZHY
Janice Moore has well stated,
“Just as politics has NO place (legitimately) in a court of law, so too, politics has NO place in science.”
To expand, scientists like any other citizen has political views, voting preferences, political tribal attachments, in short political biases, but when those biases control their work, it is no longer science. This is similar to the guilt of an accused being dependent on their political affiliation. What a horrible world that would be. Unfortunately that is what is happening with science. Scientific organizations deciding to supplant science with partisan activism was probably inevitable based on the warnings in Eisenhower’s farewell address to the nation.
Eisenhower said. “Partly because of the huge costs involved, a government contract becomes virtually a substitute for intellectual curiosity….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, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientific-technological elite..”
Eisenhower was smart man.
There does not seem to be a problem here.
The modern the government funded science method is to change the observed data to whatever one needs so that it conforms to the predetermined faddish notion. See NOAA and the ever changing temperature “data” set for an example.
“To be clear, the National Association of Scholars does not oppose Dr. McNutt’s candidacy. ”
This would appear to be a disconnect between their arguments and the above statement. Too PC to state the obvious need perhaps?
Thank you! Too many scientific organizations has published unscientific subjective statement in support of United Nations climate theory. Finally an organization starting to ask questions – rather than adding it´s weight to the dogma created by United Nations.
United Nations scientific method – the UNscientific method – is a threat for mankind.
A couple of thoughts.
-ONE candidate to vote for?
Reminds me of the Soviet Union I heard about when I was young.
Everyone voted….. they had to….. but there would be only ONE person running for each office.
-Everyone has heard of Ike’s farewell address, where he warned us about the ‘Military-Industrial Complex’. But very few know that, in the same speech, he warned us about a corrupt Government-funded Science ‘complex’.
-I was an engineer in the Dept of the Interior for 33 years.
It was a bad day when new Sec’y of the Interior Sally Jewell addressed the people working there and said “There better not be any DENIERS in the Department”. That was enough. That set the tone. Everyone realized that if they ever wanted to advance their career, they had best ‘toe the warmista Party line’.
-The Science is not important to these people.
All they need is pseudo-science, repeated loudly enough and granted enough headlines (like the false “97%” claim) that the politicians can use the headline, and the like-minded media can willfully look the other way and say:
“These are not the droids we’re looking for.”
“You can go about your business.”
“Move along.”
The Science is only to provide a fig-leaf of cover to impose CONTROL.
Where does “science” find such gems?
There is a striking contrast between these examples and the handling of the famous, HIV does not cause AIDS proposition, advanced by NAS member, Peter Deusberg. My recollection of the Deusberg affair was that it was a fairly good example of how science should work. There were some voiced demanding that Deusberg be silenced, and there were clearly many virologists and biomedical scientists who were embarrassed that he was receiving so much press. However, I recall that the mainstream media and scientific journals continued to cover and publish his findings and opinions. I did not sense that there were gatekeepers who kept any variation from the consensus position out of view. It was simply the case that eventually the evidence for causation of AIDS by HIV was so overwhelming that scientists and the public lost interest in Deusberg. I recall reaching that point when testing blood to be used for transfusions for HIV eliminated transfusion-induced AIDS. After that, Deusberg’s hypotheses were do obviously disproved that they were no longer worth anyone’s time, and he faded away. It did not require position statements by scientific associations or active opposition to publishing his work or an enforced consensus. It happened in the natural course of doing science. I moved from the, “well as a scientist in another field, I trust climate scientists and they must be right about CAGW” to being a full blown skeptic on CAGW largely on the basis of the anti-scientific attitudes revealed by the Climategate files and then the totally anti-scientific response by leaders in climate science research to those revelations. When you are sure of science as a method of knowing and you are sure you are correctly interpreting the data (and that the data is reliable), you don’t need or want to keep anyone out of the conversation. Those who are wrong will be revealed when the data conclusively refute them. No real scientist should feel the need to do anything more to silence dissent than to continue to do his/her job.