In an age when far too many scientists keep their heads down and their concerns to themselves, scientist Anna Krylov has done something refreshing: she has spoken plainly, publicly, and with precision. Her recent article, “Why I Cut Ties with Science’s Top Publisher,” is a clear-eyed examination of how one of the world’s most prestigious scientific publishers, Nature Portfolio, has drifted from the pursuit of truth toward the pursuit of ideology. Her piece is not only courageous—it’s badly needed. At Watts Up With That, we have long argued that once scientific journals begin valuing political narratives over empirical rigor, the entire purpose of scientific publishing is compromised. In a succinct “we told you so” op-ed, Krylov has now offered a firsthand account that illustrates exactly how that corruption unfolds in practice.
Krylov recounts her more than 30 years of publishing, reviewing, and participating at the highest levels of academic science, especially within the Nature family of journals. She once regarded publication there as a professional milestone. But she describes a fundamental shift: editorial instructions urging “citation justice,” review assignments tilted by demographic targets, and editorial policies that openly consider rejecting scientifically valid research if the perceived “harm” outweighs the benefit of publication. As she succinctly notes, choosing which studies to cite “based on who wrote it rather than what it demonstrates is not science—it is propaganda in footnote form.” That line alone captures a problem observers like us have been warning about for years: that the peer-review system is increasingly bending toward ideological performance rather than objective analysis.
She further details Nature Portfolio’s 2019 “diversity commitment,” which explicitly directs editors to “intentionally” seek out authors and reviewers according to identity categories. Krylov recalls receiving a recent request to review a technical manuscript and wondering whether she was selected because of her expertise or her “reproductive organs.” It’s a pointed observation, lightly humorous, but sharply revealing. Once demographic checklists matter more than competence, peer review ceases to be a quality-control mechanism and becomes a quota system adorned with scientific language. This sort of deformation hasn’t been limited to chemistry or psychology; those of us following the publication landscape in climate science have witnessed similar distortions for years, often justified as promoting “consensus” or shielding the public from “misinterpretation.”
Particularly troubling is the 2022 Nature Human Behavior editorial she cites, which declared that scientifically sound research could be rejected if editors deemed its potential societal “harms” too great. As Krylov notes, editors have no special expertise in sociology, politics, or ethics; their expertise is supposed to be in evaluating research quality. Yet once an editorial board decides its mission includes moral guardianship, the literature becomes a curated narrative rather than a transparent record of inquiry. We at WUWT have warned repeatedly that such editorial activism—especially in climate journals—creates a feedback loop that amplifies favored conclusions and suppresses skeptical or inconvenient findings. Krylov has simply documented the same process taking hold across a wider swath of scientific publishing.
Her background gives her warnings unusual gravity. Growing up in the Soviet Union, she understands what “optional” ideological statements become once an institution signals that ideology as a core value. She notes that Nature’s “optional” diversity statements resemble the mandatory political pledges that characterized Soviet scientific life. This isn’t hyperbole. Anyone who has watched the trends in Western academic journals—particularly the climate journals—over the last decade can recognize the pattern: what begins as a nudge becomes a norm, then a requirement. Suddenly, failure to echo political language becomes evidence of professional defect.
What makes Krylov’s article so compelling is that it is grounded in experience, not abstraction. She does not attack particular individuals, nor does she resort to grand narratives. She simply describes how policies that appear benign on their surface—citation balancing, demographic outreach, editorial “harm” screening—accumulate until they reshape the culture of scientific publishing. When journals decide that their job includes upholding ideological priorities, skepticism is no longer welcomed, dissent becomes threatening, and the literature begins to ossify around pre-approved themes. At WUWT, we have long contended that this trend is why climate science has become so resistant to critical scrutiny. Krylov’s account shows that the problem is now broader and more embedded than many realized.
It appears that Nature’s folly is indicative of the peer review system that has lost its way and its integrity in the process.

Near the end of her piece, Krylov emphasizes that restoring scientific integrity cannot be achieved through political decree. Even if universities and agencies scale back DEI initiatives, the fundamental health of the scientific enterprise depends on scientists themselves insisting on objectivity, universal standards, open critique, and the freedom to follow data where it leads. “The pendulum will not swing back on its own; we must push it,” she writes. To anyone who has watched journals drift steadily toward ideological activism, that line rings true. These institutions will not spontaneously correct themselves. They will respond only when scientists—and readers—refuse to play along.
My Final Thought:
Krylov’s decision to sever ties with Nature Portfolio is a rare act of professional integrity, and her explanation of that decision deserves wide attention. Her article confirms what many within the scientific community have whispered privately but hesitated to say publicly: that the world’s most influential journals have begun prioritizing messaging over merit. At WUWT, we have argued for years that climate journals have been moving in this direction; Krylov has now shown that the trend is systemic to science, not isolated to climate science.
In the end, her piece is a hopeful reminder that the scientific enterprise still has defenders willing to speak up. If science is to remain a tool for understanding reality—rather than enforcing political consensus—it will require many more voices like hers. Journals can only drift into ideology when the scientific community allows it. The moment researchers stop accepting ideological filters as the price of publication is the moment those filters begin to lose their power.
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But equity in science plays a role. Until Michael Mann burst onto the scene, there just weren’t enough retards publishing.
‘Until Michael Mann burst onto the scene, there just weren’t enough charlatans publishing.’
Better. So-called diffferently-abled persons did not choose their condition. Michael Mann chose to be a charlatan.
Most publishing houses, if not all, employ “sensitivity readers”… Look out scientific journals
A sensitivity reader is someone hired to look for offensive content, stereotypes, and bias
Mann has far more column inches for being upset than for any scientific output.
😄😆😅🤣😂
The even sadder reality that results from Krylov’s rejection of Nature, the ideology behind it, and much of “scientific” publishing is that when people like her break ties and publicly point to the ideological corruption that has overtaken these journals, that leaves these journals even more securely in the hands of that corruption. A second step is required: to establish scientific journals that explicitly reject such ideology and publish research purely on its scientific merit.
Of course, establishing such journals requires capital and requires the editorial boards be made up of the most respected scientists in their field. Doing this will make clear by which journals most scientists prefer to submit their work for publication whether or not science, as an element of “modern” society, has completely lost its way or whether it can be brought back to the path that reflects the purpose of science: to create true knowledge about how our physical, social, and individual worlds function.
But if people stop buying the publication, then the publication has to change or die.
Point taken, but it’s equally corrupt institutions who are the primary buyers of these journals. Not likely they will be the ones to put these journals in their place.
“But if people stop buying the publication, then the publication has to change or die.”
The brainwashed depend on echo chamber validation of their delusions and ignorance. Those dupes will never cancel what preserves cognitive dissonance
My son has long grappled with the difficulties and pointed out to me the money involved. The publishers receive most of their support from University libraries where DEI became the flavor of the month. To add to this is the whole peer review process. You do not know who is reviewing your submission and cannot reason with them when they err in their reviews despite having to pay the journal for publishing your article. If you peer review an article carefully it takes up much of your time. The journal can use your comments but you do not receive a fair remuneration for the time you spent.
A second front is needed to eliminate the academic “publish or perish” rite of passage.
Also, $1500 publication fees?
Sounds an awful lot like the current Medi-care phone scam.
I applaud her. Did it or will it make a difference in Nature’s fundamental thinking?
No. I had subscriptions to both Science and Nature for a long time, as an interested layman. I dropped Science because I was tired of having membership in AAAS bundled in and not being able to avoid their partisan political activism. The final straw for canceling Nature was an editorial endorsing some Presidential candidate (Obama?) expressly because of his support for gun control, probably as a public health emergency or some such rot. I had already been disillusioned by seeing 1 or 2 articles a year on improvements to climate models which were the kinds of things I had thought would have been essential right from the start — cloud cover is the only one I remember now.
Science has always been full of partisan politics long as I can remember, dating back to the 1970s or 1980s. Nature seemed to be less partisan at first and I don’t remember paying much attention to its politics until that editorial. The rot is far too entrenched to be easily removed. It will take a generation or two.
“She does not attack particular individuals, nor does she resort to grand narratives. She simply describes how policies that appear benign on their surface—citation balancing, demographic outreach, editorial “harm” screening—accumulate until they reshape the culture of scientific publishing.”
I understand her reasoning, but… Individuals enacted and enabled these policies, and other individuals did nothing to stop it. Names need to be named, but there are probably way too many to count at this point.
The article requires a subscription. But the opening paragraphs are here on X in the comment below the post.
I’ve had experience with narrative-preservation, in submitting two narrative-critical manuscripts to APA journals. APA editors fled the submissions.
Eventually published elsewhere: here and here.
Nature Reviews Psychology, to which Krylov refers, merely made official what is already a widespread betrayal of science in the field.
Too bad her article is published in The Free Press which ain’t free.
It’s a really bad habit to put a link in an article which needs a subscription.
We need more heretics.
Being a heretic in USA used to be as easy as getting a bad haircut and a tattoo. Now that so many Americans have done that (while repeatedly voting for tattoo-less old white men with expensive haircuts?) actual work would be required in place of quick-and-easy symbols. Nope. Not going to happen.
“Being a heretic in USA used to be as easy as getting a bad haircut and a tattoo”
I would say that makes one a narcissist, as opposed to a heretic.
From post:”…tattoo-less old white men…”.
Would voting for folks like AOC be a better option? Or Pelosi? Or Warren?
Do those three have tattoos? An image comes to mind that would get be sued and run out of a decent town.
Fortunately, the importance of leading ‘science’ journals like the Nature stable is waning. There are at least two reasons for this.
Everybody should have a copy of Rud’s ebook ‘Blowing Smoke.’
To Anthony Watts, author of the above article:
I just want to offer my compliments and thanks to you for such a thoughtful, well-written article on this very important topic in science today. Propaganda and censorship have no place in The Scientific Method, as you point out so well.
As for your closing sentence, a new chant for our age: STOP ideological filters NOW!
Only those who are financially independent in some way or retired and out of the game have the luxury of going against the climate grain, surely?
As noble or replete in integrity as this is it will skim under the radar as if it never happened. Only people reading sites such as this will be aware of it.
There is no need for propaganda to be rich in intellectual content. – Joseph Goebbels
Just repeat the dumbed down message over and over.
Everybody must understand that if we abandon truth, the world will be destroyed. We need to wake because that is what is happening.
Sean, you seriously overestimate the importance of Homo Sapiens.
So far as we know, H.s. is the only culturally obligate sentient species in the universe.
In that light, nothing is of value absent humans. Without us, it’s all just matter and energy.
I’d suggest that unique position makes H.s very important.
Well, (ignoring that you forgot the glue gravity/force as part of the unversal Trinity ) neither the universe nor it’s properties will change if we stop to exist
and observe things and talk about them in our human echochamber.
We are important because we think we are but we are not.
We may be a unique anomaly,way less than 0.000000000000000000000001%
but only important from a transcendental point of view,
that we are a way for god to observe the universe as a latin poet said a hundred years ago( Sagan sto…paraphrased the quote and replaced god with universe to make it digestable for his peers)
I think therefore I think I think.
If humans go extinct, and presuming no alternative sentient observers, the universe becomes meaningless.
When you write, “neither the universe nor it’s properties will change” you have introduced an implicit observer and assigner of properties.
Undescribed and unobserved, the universe has no properties.
Unobserved, the universe has no ‘is.’
George, one of our enemies’ defining characteristics is that they consider humans to be inferior to wildlife and to all other species. No-one that doesn’t think that way could support “re-wilding,” “nett zero,” or any other restrictions on human civilization without proof that those restrictions would be beneficial to us in the long term.
Who, in turn, seriously overestimate the importance of themselves.
In particular those who have ever attached themselves in any context to the ridiculous notion of “saving the planet.”
Kudos to scientist Anna Krylov whose accomplishments will give weight to her statement. No one cares that I cut ties with a couple or three well-known popular science magazines about 15 years ago. Occasionally these had interesting information-rich articles but were unbalanced by the political narratives.
Organized crime is not defeated one foot soldier at a time. The top generals must be exterminated. Cut the head off the snake. This is true for drug cartels and the science journal mafia.
Story tip: Similar case here, from an environmentalist who worked f the IPCC ( Peter Taylor)
On Tom Nelson’s YT channel:
https://youtu.be/RdybHS0XhZg?si=f31g5nwYYwySfebp
Posted today on the channel. Peter was fully onboard…until he started looking into things.
There may be some gems buried in a hour-long video. Give me a transcript.
You want ME to do that? No patience?
The gems you are hoping for are scattered throughout the presentation.
In resume: classic environmentalist involved in Greenpeace and the IPCC starts looking into the Climate issue and CO2, spots the holes in the consensus arguments and sees contradictions and uncertainties presented as facts, writes a report, gets big pushback, makes more connections w fellow skeptical scientists, gets attacked..
Not an unusual story..
“It’s the old, old story; droid meets droid, droid becomes chameleon, droid loses chameleon, chameleon turns into blob, droid gets blob back again, blob meets blob, blob goes off with blob and droid loses blob, chameleon and droid. How many times have we seen that story?”
“In an age when far too many scientists keep their heads down and their concerns to themselves”
Someone woke up on the judgy side of the bed this morning.
“Judgy” side . . . or “obvious” side? You be the judge.
Well, it’s either keep your head down/opinions to yourself-or risk being screamed at and cancelled in the hallway by some blue haired banshee! (Ask me how I know this happens…I did neither and was occosted while at work).
It is very sad what Nature (the journal, now the stable of journals) has become.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8F9gzQz1Pms
(Dr. Glaucomflecken: “Nature does open access”)
Now where did I see that
slidebefore . . .Ah yes . . . Scientific American
I still have various archived articles from the good old days
Scientific publications receive more manuscripts than they can publish. The job of the editor is to decide, based on subjective judgement, which of those manuscripts to pursue for publication. Acting like this subverts the scientific process is silly.
Further the reason to solicit participation from historically disadvantaged groups is precisely because those groups have historically been denied the ability to participate in the scientific process. There is nothing unscientific about this. The undercurrent of the opposing voices is that members of these groups cannot competently contribute to scientific endeavors and thus removing barriers to their participation means abandoning competent research. This is quite an odious viewpoint, and it is a shame to see Krylov tacitly endorsing it. She even attempts to undermine her own credibility in the pursuit of her culture war nonsense. Why she has chosen to make this sad fight her legacy is a mystery.
What we have here is a case of soft racism a.k.a. the post-colonial colonialism of the urban chattering classes.
Correct.
Quite.
A non-sequitur. Your assertion does not follow from your previous statements.
Historically disadvantaged is before the US Civil Rights Act which was 61 years ago.
Which historically disadvantaged groups are you referring to?
Well, there is certainly nothing scientific about evaluating a manuscript on any basis other than potential merit and contribution to the field of research.
Projection.
Actually, no. It is you and your ilk who are making this claim, not Krylov at al.
What “barriers” are you referring to? Are you claiming that a competent editor of a reputable scientific journal would today reject a paper based on the authors’ race, nationality, religion, or sex?
Indeed.
Again, projection. It is you and your ilk making the claim.
Nothing nonsensical about the culture war which is the greatest threat to science and Western civilization today.
Well, it may be a mystery to you, but not to anyone outside your ivory tower bubble.
It does for anyone who can put two and two together. Let me know how much hand holding you require and I can walk you through it at your level.
61 years was not a long time ago, and the civil rights act did not unilaterally undo centuries of structural and systemic discrimination. Nor did it put an end to racism or sexism in American society.
There is no scientific way to evaluate how much any study “contributes to the field of research.” It’s a subjective assessment by the editor.
The claim is that by emphasizing members of disadvantaged groups, merit will be lost. What other conclusion can be drawn about the beliefs of the people making this claim?
I don’t think there is a lot of overt discrimination by journal editors today, certainly there was a lot in the very recent past. There are significant structural barriers to participation, though, some of them being the direct echos of that past explicit discrimination.
Conservatives should probably stop hysterically waging it, then.
Top marks for an attempt at an item by item rebuttal, but it just more vacuous assertions and special pleadings.
Ah, a classic feeble parting shot amidst a hasty retreat. I accept your concession.
Self praise is the faintest of praise.
You’ve made your argument and I’ve made mine.
I will go with the voters decision at to who has made the stronger and more convincing case.
You’ll accept pats on the back from people who already agreed with you instead of engaging in honest discourse? Very brave.
I have no say here as to whether or not people agree with me.
This is not the academia with it’s endemic groupthink.
Anyways, your sense of entitlement is laughably remarkable,
first declaring “victory” in the G.W. Bush sense of the word,
then insisting that I’m obliged to debate you as long as you wish it so.
Only a cloistered academic type would equate “bravery” with a debate on a forum board.
Could not have wished for a better and more pretentious counterparty to score own goals and assist me in making my points.
You’re not obliged to do anything, but a failure to substantively engage is indeed a tacit concession, which I’m happy to accept.
What we have here is a case of Sayre’s Law
“In any dispute the intensity of feeling is inversely proportional to the value of the issues at stake.”
and its Corollary
“That is why academic politics are so bitter.”
Anyways, enjoy your delusion that you’re some bigshot PI here, one that makes and applies the rules, and that we’re lowly grad students who have to follow and obey.
Pretentious ? … Moi ?!?
Many academic type are absolute legends in their own minds.
That’s why they don’t need actual, real physical measurements. Their intellectual prowess let’s them create models that suffices to provide how the physical world works.
The point is, they are not merely removing barriers, they are promoting base on identity check boxes regardless of the quality or content.
That’s a contention you’ve injected. Nowhere does Nature group say their journals should ignore quality of content to favor inclusion. The two goals are not mutually exclusive. Unless, that is, you believe that people in underrepresented groups are academically or intellectually inferior. But surely that isn’t something you believe, is it?
That is true, however, as pointed out, it has reached the point where checking boxes has become more important than strictly adhering to merit. The normal term for this is quota. When quotas become more important than merit, science suffers.
All submissions of research should be anonymous.
It doesn’t matter WHO says something, it’s WHAT was said.
Well they aren’t and they never will be, so that’s a moot point.
Why did she publish behind a paywall?
Well, in that regard, I find it quite amusing that her article is published by an outfit calling its publication “The Free Press” . . . here’s the direct link:
https://www.thefp.com/p/why-i-cut-ties-with-sciences-top-publisher
Sure, when I hear “free press”, the first thing I think of is “paywalled”. /sarc
The head of the Free Press is a well known zionist ( Bari Weiss) heavily sponsored by the US and Israel.They attack anyone daring to criticize Israel and is one of the main propaganda outlets. An important boardmember of the BBC is also a full fledged Israel propagandist running a major zionist newspaper.
Im not sure about their take on the Climate ‘issue’.
Did you lose your way? This is not ZeroHedge for looney tune conspiracy losers.
You have..no idea.
Bari Weiss was a complete nobody until somebody decided she and her tiny publication would be the perfect tool for their purpose.
I was sympathetic towards her in the late 2010s and followed her appearances, not only on Rogan’s show but also w Jordan Peterson, now both part of the Shapiro zionist gang who are now desperately attacking Tucker Carlson and Candace Owens..and losing..badly.
You can call me whatever you like, the fight is clear for all to see. And Trump caries various highly dubious people in his admin, notably Marco Rubio but especially Scott Bessent and Pete Hegseth, just total neocon pro Israel activists.
Trump was pretty good in the first 4 months. The turning point was NOT releasing the Epstein files. It has been downhill ever since and he is losing support every week, from every direction. The only redeeming factor: the halting of Net Zero policies.
Still a looney tune ranting on about everything and anything except the actual topic under discussion.
WOW, Members of the US government who support a staunch US ally, over an ideology that wants to destroy western civilisations. !..
And you support the latter . no doubt. !
You are making a classic mistake by assuming a binary choice. I am on nobody’s team. I see reality and propaganda which is as usual done by all sides. But the zionist propaganda has been so entrenched for decades, especially in the US because both Israel and the US have mutual benefit in doing so. This does NOT mean i am on the side of Hamas or Hezbollah or any other terrorist organisation, the Muslim Brotherhood etc.
It’s like w Trump, you are forced to be either for or against him. All i can say: if you force me, i am against YOU.
Your type of thinking supports a civil war mentality. Is that what you want?
Ad hominem attacks reveal a lack of ability to create an objective critique.
An objective critique would require you to make the same argument about anti-Israel editors. Funny, I don’t think you are capable of doing that!
The “Free Press” is widely read
It is NOW. Look up its history.
There’s a saying to explain that: “A fool and his money are soon parted.”
Sorry to learn of your loss.
You’ve mistakenly identified the wrong fool, fool.
Very nice.
It took me 15 minutes to find the original Krylov article. While tracking it down, I learned that I had been suspended from X for unstated reasons and that Microsoft was blocking my Outlook emails for undisclosed reasons.
It is not only Nature that has gained a fit by of dictatorial self-importance. The whole process of communication between us scientists is corrupt and knowingly so. This is deliberate, not accidental and it is not excusable.
I have been a scientist since the 1960s. Never before have I seen such interference in the free flow of scientific discourse as now. Control freaks (who almost by definition cannot be scientists) have to be called out and neutralized. Strong medicine, but a tough disease.
Some of the main culprits really have to grow up and face a real, drug-free world, then shut up.
Geoff S
A link to Prof. Krylov’s original letter reply to Nature.
Why I no longer engage with Nature publishing group
which does not appear to be paywalled.
Your highlight didn’t hyperlink.
https://hxstem.substack.com/p/why-i-no-longer-engage-with-nature
My apologies for the dead hyperlink and thank you for posting the correct one.
It is going to get worse. COP30 voted to go after climate deniers to eliminate disinformation that is interfering with the pursuit of destroying human civilization.
It was not long ago there was a push to criminalize dissent. I suspect that is back in the mix.
Well, it is the only way left when you are losing grip on the narrative. More autocratic measures will (ironically) result in more questions. More people on the fence start to notice the forceful approach of trying to silence opposing voices. The same w the Ukraine conflict. A similar trend. Not going along w the official narrative? Off goes your head..
The most interesting devider is Israel. This goes all over the place, crossing boundaries. Look at what the people in power say and do.
They want to eliminate the opposition.
“To the fearless mind. To the inviolate truth.”
“Journals can only drift into ideology when the scientific community allows it.”
The scientific community has no say. Oligarch controlled editors aren’t going to challenge their masters.
New journals not captured by vested interests need to come into being that will follow the scientific method rather than ideological conformity.