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This Website is Dedicated to
Alvin Alexander Cheyne
January
10, 1921 - June 17, 2005
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Keep science in its place
Albany
Democrat-Herald Editorial
August
2, 2007
In
Washington
, Democrats on the House
Natural Resources Committee this week examined whether the Bush
administration — namely Vice President Cheney — had exerted undue
political influence in the dispute over
Klamath
Basin
water in 2001. The answer
is that if political influence was not used, it certainly should have
been.
Science can never be allowed to substitute for political decision
making. If it ever is, we might as well call off any further elections
and turn every national question over to the people running the National
Academy of Sciences.
In
2001 federal agencies cut off irrigation water to the farming economy of
the
Klamath
Basin
. The
farmers complained bitterly that they were losing their farms. They
didn’t complain to the agency scientists; they complained to the
people in elected federal offices. In 2002 the farmers were allocated
more water, and there are continuing discussions among various interests
on how to resolve the situation in the long run.
That’s
the way our system is supposed to work.
But some of our laws are not written that way.
They require certain actions — such as listing a species as
threatened, for example — in response to what the data show, not what
the people want.
But voters still expect their elected
officials to look out for them. An official can’t afford to say:
“I’d like to help and I think you should have help, but the
scientists tell me I should let you starve, so don’t bother me
anymore.”
The trouble lies in our laws, not in what
elected leaders do in response to what they see as a public need. If the
public doesn’t agree with what officials do, they can un-elect them.
But there is no way — and should not be — to vote on science.
The data show what they show, and unless they
are manipulated, they should be taken as fact. But that doesn’t mean
that politicians should have to do what the data show.
Do not wish for a country in which science
rules without a political process that can act regardless of what the
data show. In such a tyranny, science might say that the country can
sustain 150 million people but not 300 million, and 150 million of us
would have to go.
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NOTE: In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. section 107, any copyrighted
material herein is distributed without profit or payment to those
who have
expressed a prior interest in receiving this information for
non-profit
research and educational purposes only. For more information go
to:http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml
Source:
http://www.dhonline.com/articles/2007/08/03/news/opinion/4edi01_science.txt
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