Wednesday, July 10, 2013

It's Not Just The U.S. Anymore

America's hat has a conservative party with a war on science, too (h/t nc links):
The appointment of National Research Council president John MacDougall in Canada — effectively the country’s top scientist — is being received by scientists the way James Watt was received by environmentalists in the Reagan Administration as head of the national park system. Like Watt, MacDougall seems antagonistic to the field that is supposed to be fostering with federal funds. Recently, MacDougall announced that “Scientific discovery is not valuable unless it has commercial value.” It turns out that all of that stuff by Galileo was just academic crap.
Gary Goodyear, minister of state for science and technology, announced that the NRC will shift its focus away from basic research to “large-scale research projects that are directed by and for Canadian business.” That will mean little or no funding for basic research under the $900 million annual budget. It is part of the conservative governments shift toward industry despite protests from leading scientists that the approach is simplistic and shortsighted. Those commercial applications are built on a foundation of basic research.
McDougall’s bio says that he began his career as a petroleum engineer and ultimately became the owner of an international engineering consulting firm.
I'm sure that when the government started funding the internet they knew it would have commercial value.  Or maybe GPS.  Or Tang.  Oh, wait, the only government research that will ever have commercial value is the research the corporations have the government give them funding for.  Why don't they call it what it is, which is cronyism.  Here in Ohio, that is our JobsOhio program, where the government runs a "private" corporation which hands out money to create "economic development" for campaign contributors, but the program can't be publicly audited.  Yeah, no corruption there.

1 comment:

  1. Welcome to our nightmare. The northern Bush years. Anything that encourages people to think for themselves, as opposed to thinking for the dollar, is discouraged and disdained. It's getting ugly.

    Canada is no longer what people thought it was.

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