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As many GOP conservatives understand it, environmental science is an enabler of dreaded government regulation.
Republicans have attacked mainstream scientific views and the threats to the American enterprise are profound.
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DeSmogBlog - Conservatives versus Science: A New Scientific Validation of the Republican War on Science (and Republican Brain) Thesis
UPDATE: The paper discussed below is downloadable here. For a while now, I’ve been aware of a powerful new paper that directly tests the central argument of my 2005 book The Republican War on Science—and also validates some key claims made in my new book, The Republican Brain. I’ve had to keep quiet about it until now; but at last, the study is out—though I’m not sure yet about a web link to it. The research is by Gordon Gauchat of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and published in the prestigious American Sociological Review. In the study, Gauchat uses a vast body of General Social Survey data to test three competing theses about the relationship between science and the U.S. public: 1) the cultural ascendancy thesis or “deficit model” view, according to which better education and engagement with science lead all boats to rise, and citizens across the board become more trusting of scientists and their expertise; 2) the alienation thesis, according to which modernity brings on distrust and disillusionment with science (call it the “spoiled brat” thesis if you’d like); and 3) the politicization thesis—my thesis—according to which some cultural groups, aka conservatives, have a unique fallout with science for reasons tied up with the nature of modern American conservatism, such as its ideology, the growth of its think tank infrastructure, and so on. The result? Well, Gauchat’s data show that the politicization thesis handily defeats all contenders. More specifically, he demonstrates that there was only really a decline in public trust in science among conservatives in the period from 1974 to 2010 (and among those with high church attendance, but these two things are obviously tightly interrelated). And not just that.
The New Yorker - The G.O.P.’s War on Science Gets Worse
Elizabeth Kolbert writes about efforts by the congressional G.O.P. to slash funding for NASA and other key earth-science organizations.
The New Republic - The War on Science Is Over. The Republicans Won.
How the Trump administration made Texas Congressman Lamar Smith`s dreams come true
NCSE - Review: The Republican War on Science Reports of the National Center for Science Education Volume: 25 Year: 2005 Issue: 3–4 Date: May-August Page(s): 45–46 Reviewer: Robert L Park, University of Maryland This version might differ slightly from the print publication. Work under Review
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