The administration’s war on science — revisited

Dr. Julie Gerberding, director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told a Senate panel yesterday that climate change “is anticipated to have a broad range of impacts on the health of Americans.” If that sounds a little vague and non-specific, there’s a good reason — the White House refused to let her say what she wanted to say.

Testimony that the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention planned to give yesterday to a Senate committee about the impact of climate change on health was significantly edited by the White House, according to two sources familiar with the documents.

Specific scientific references to potential health risks were removed after Julie L. Gerberding submitted a draft of her prepared remarks to the White House Office of Management and Budget for review.

Instead, Gerberding’s prepared testimony before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee included few details on what effects climate change could have on the spread of disease. Only during questioning did the director of the government’s premier disease-monitoring agency describe any specific diseases likely to be affected, again without elaboration.

A CDC official familiar with both versions told the AP that Gerberding’s draft “was eviscerated.” Among the deletions were “details on how many people might be adversely affected because of increased warming and the scientific basis for some of the CDC’s analysis on what kinds of diseases might be spread in a warmer climate and rising sea levels.”

Consider the big picture here. We have a CDC, financed by taxpayers, committed to public safety. We have a CDC director, whose salary is financed by taxpayers, prepared to tell senators the truth. We have CDC research, financed by taxpayers, pointing to potential public-health consequences associated with climate change.

And we have a White House that believes the truth should be muzzled, and information should be kept from the public, because it conflicts with the Bush agenda.

This might be amusing if a) it weren’t so serious; and b) it didn’t happen all the damn time.

Let’s not forget, for example, that in June 2005, the New York Times uncovered the fact that the White House hired Philip Cooney, a former lobbyist for the American Petroleum Institute, to be chief of staff of the president’s Council on Environmental Quality. As part of his responsibilities, Cooney re-wrote government reports on global warming, editing out scientific conclusions he didn’t like, and substituting the conclusions of scientists with his own politically-motivated opinions.

For that matter, Gerberding is hardly the first to be muzzled. James Hansen, the longtime director of NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies, has spoken out repeatedly, explaining to anyone who will listen that administration officials have tried to censor scientific information about climate change. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s scientists have reported similar problems.

In one particularly egregious example from a year ago, weather experts at NOAA set up a seven-member panel to prepare a consensus report on the views of agency scientists about global warming and hurricanes. When the data suggested that global warming is contributing to the frequency and strength of hurricanes, the Bush administration blocked the release of the report. (It led Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-N.J.) to argue that “the administration has effectively declared war on science and truth to advance its anti-environment agenda.”)

Moreover, TP notes that a “January report found 435 instances in which the Bush administration interfered into the global warming work of government scientists over the past five years.”

Sen. Barbara Boxer (D-Calif.), the committee chairperson, said in a statement last night that the administration “should immediately release Dr. Gerberding’s full, uncut statement, because the public has a right to know all the facts about the serious threats posed by global warming.”

Sounds reasonable, doesn’t it?

Reasonable? The word doesn’t compute anymore.

  • Why are people so afraid of information? It’s always seemed to me that the more one knows, the more input there is, the greater the opportunities for making better decisions. Of course, there’s always the chance that one may have to admit error – or be in a position of being proved wrong about something – and I guess it’s more important for Bush to hold onto “being right,” even if he has to muzzle and censor to prevent the free and open dissemination and sharing of information.

    It’s just unacceptable and inexcusable.

  • We’ve got precisely the kind of government we fully deserve.

    Most Americans believe more in the power of prayer than in the validity of scientific approaches to reality.

    We’re the only industrial nation without universal medical care.

    The only problems we recognize, real or merely imagined, are those which we believe can be dealt with through military or police strength.

    Weak, mealy-mouthed, apologetic Democrats (like Stark, Pelosi, Reid) are no better than the fascists they claim to oppose.

  • “the greater the opportunities for making better decisions”

    you’re right, as always, anne. but did it ever occur to you that the bush administration has no interest in making better decisions?

  • just bill, the Bush administration always searches for better decisions. The question you need to ask is “better for who?” To which the answer is: follow the money.

  • To Ed Stephan. Stark was forced by the leadership to apologize or he would have been formally censured. It’s plenty outrageous, but not on Stark’s part. I’ve been wavering, but Pelosi finally lost me completely on this one. She has no idea how to play the game, how to pivot and attack against the reThugs. Maybe she thinks she can take the high road, but humiliating one of her members who was courageous enough to speak the truth is just remarkably wrong.

  • Oh, of course, bill – but it also occurs to me that he sees the “best decisions” as those that won’t harm business, and by suppressing reports and testimony that might lead to the logical next step of having to regulate the businesses and industries that are contributing to climate change, and moving away from oil, he never has to go there. So, in a way, Bush has already made the “best decision” and the case is closed.

  • It’s too bad that Dr. Gerberding didn’t have the courage to simply defy the White House and deliver her full statement. No one would throw her in jail, since nothing she says is classified or unknown. What could happen to her? She could always find a job, since there is a doctor shortage (and I am assuming here she is an MD rather than just a PhD). There is plenty of demand for risk assessment and epidemiological expertise. So why the slavish acquiescence?

  • Seems increasingly stupid if we look at the news today, but increasingly stupid seems to be a trait of the Bush Admin.

  • “…the public has a right to know all the facts about the serious threats posed by global warming.”

    Yeah, Barbara, they do. And they have a right to think that the members of the House would impeach criminal members of the executive branch who literally kill Americans for profit. But no, we get you and your friends just making useless noise every time Bush does something that will kill more Americans.

    Impeachment would be reasonable, CB. Anything less is dereliction of duty.

  • Ed Stephen @#5

    Exactly!

    I would only add bribery/extortion (ie:$$) to military/police action.

  • Ed Stephan said:

    We’ve got precisely the kind of government we fully deserve.

    What do you mean “we”, paleface?

    Carol said: So why the slavish acquiescence?

    I was wondering that too.

    Anne said: It’s always seemed to me that the more one knows, the more input there is, the greater the opportunities for making better decisions.

    Good point. If the Republicans claim to run government like a business they’re about 30 years behind the times. Modern businesses thrive on information and innovation.

  • “i’ll be so glad when the grown-ups are in charge again.”

    You Bet! We need a better class of liars.

  • It’s not just Washington, and not just science. In Mississippi, victims of Hurricane Katrina are fighting tooth and nail to get access to basic information about how our recovery is going. The absence of info means the State can define its own progress and achievements, without necessary checks and balances from its citizens.

    We need clear, national standards that protect people’s rights to speak the truth, and require our government(s) to share that truth with the people it governs.

  • Though I can’t be so acerbically vehement about it as Racerx, I do agree with the point that the fact nobody in the executive branch has yet been even seriously called on criminal activity is a terrible shame on both sides of the aisle. How can this continue? How can we even comprehend that it continues?

  • Yep, there’s deep murmurings reverberating through the DC malarial feverish jungle canopy like them crazy drums and pointy-head pundits that never stop. When I asked (or axed if you’re stupid or have lousy taste in music) somebody if the drums ever stop, they replied, “No. Very bad when drums stop. Then we get bass solo!”.

    Okay, bad joke. Anyway, have you ever seen those lists of all the elements in the human body and how much they would be worth if you could cook them down, extract, and sell them? The gist of it is that we’re all made of mostly oxygen, hydrogen and carbon with small amounts of stuff like potassium and phosphorus thrown in for flavoring and color, and altogether our component elements are worth a little less than a dollar, assuming you could find a buyer for tiny amounts of easily obtainable elements. Well, we’d have to take a loss on this seven year disaster (don’t know if it’s tax deductible) but it just might be time to accept a tolerable level of loss and throw Boosh, Chainy, the whole Republican congress, and, ah hell, let’s throw in Coulter and her adam’s apple, any employee at Faux, and even Rush (careful, don’t strain yourself – don’t know if it’s covered by rip-off insurance), and see if we can walk away from this disaster of stupendous proportions with enough chump change in our pocket for a twelve pack of Schlitz and a pound of head cheese. Hell, the resultant hangover and intestinal upset would be tolerable if I didn’t have to gaze one more time upon the slack-jawed mouth-breathing Gimp attempting to thrash out some brain dead 3rd graders half-baked glue-inspired “thoughts”.

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