Now on ScienceBlogs: Charles Darwin February 12, 1809 - April 19, 1882

ScienceBlogs Book Club: Inside the Outbreaks

Thoughts from Kansas

You will notice that it lacks definiteness; that it lacks purpose; that it lacks coherence; that it lacks a subject to talk about; that it is loose and wabbly; that it wanders around; that it loses itself early and does not find itself any more. --Mark Twain

Search

Profile

Josh at work Joshua Rosenau spends his days defending the teaching of evolution at the National Center for Science Education. He is formerly a doctoral candidate at the University of Kansas, in the department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology. When not battling creationists or modeling species ranges, he writes about developments in progressive politics and the sciences.

The opinions expressed here are his own, do not reflect the official position of the NCSE. Indeed, older posts may no longer reflect his own official position.

Sb/DonorsChoose Drive


Thanks!

Recent Posts

Recent Comments

Archives

Subscribe to TfK:

Accolades

Best of Kansas City

Good posts from history

The Birth of Intelligent Falling

A failure of Intelligent Design

Why it's called Intelligent Design Creationism

Write a letter to the editor

My photo albums.

Support TfK

Buy me things from my Amazon.com wishlist.

Buy yourself things!

Search Now:
Search Amazon.com
Add yourself to the Frappr map!
Check out our Frappr or add yourself to it!

    follow me on Twitter

    « Obama announces his science team | Main | What Ails the Mercurial Jeremy Piven? »

    Which are the top 5 anti-science think tanks?

    Category: Policy and Politics
    Posted on: December 22, 2008 7:27 PM, by Josh Rosenau

    Climate Progress's Joe Romm is upset with John Tierney. John Tierney pans Obama Science Advisor John Holdren for being on the opposite side from a range of high-profile climate change deniers, delayers, and equivalents. Romm responds (in part):

    Tierney is easily the worst science writer at any major media outlet in the country. Pretty much every energy or climate piece he writes is riddled with errors and far-right ideology, including this one.

    Amazingly, Tierney quotes CEI attacking Holdren. Now CEI is itself probably one of the top five anti-scientific think tanks in the country. It has taken $2 million of ExxonMobil money in the past decade to run an anti-science disinformation campaign with ads that claim the ice sheets are gaining mass when they are losing it and ending with the absurdist and suicidal tag line, “CO2: they call it pollution, we call it Life!” And those are only some of their ads aimed at destroying the climate for centuries.

    That comment about the "top five anti-scientific think tanks" got me thinking. Clearly the Discovery Institute deserves a place on the list (and in private email, Romm agrees). But who else should be on the list, and what criteria should we use to decide which think tank is the very most anti-scientific?

    Other likely selections include Heritage, George Marshall, Heartland, Cato, and AEI. The Annapolis Center for Science-based Public Policy never quite took off in a big public way, but has been working away behind the scenes for a while to promote "sound" science. The Center for Regulatory Effectiveness has worked behind the scenes for years to undermine effective regulation of pollutants, including second-hand smoke and carbon dioxide. Several of these are well-documented in The Republican War on Science by Chris Mooney.

    I've emailed Chris for his nominations, but this is your chance to make a nomination for the top five, and to make your case for the top anti-science think tank of 2008.

    Share on Facebook
    Share on StumbleUpon
    Share on Facebook
    Find more posts in: Politics

    TrackBacks

    TrackBack URL for this entry: http://scienceblogs.com/mt/pings/88523

    Comments

    1

    Is Cato really an across-the-board anti-science think tank? I mean, Timothy Sandefur is a member. Not trying to start anything, I just honestly need more info. It's hard to top the DI, of course.

    Posted by: James F | December 22, 2008 9:35 PM

    2

    Cato is a mixed bag, because the libertarian camp is a mixed bag. I've tangled with one of Cato's education people several times over his anti-evolution advocacy (which comes up in the context of their attempts to replace public education with vouchers and private schools). And Cato's libertarianism leads them to oppose any government regulation that would avert climate change, and that then leads them down the path of climate change denial. For instance, see: http://climateprogress.org/2008/08/27/must-have-ppt-1-the-narrow-temperature-window-that-gave-us-modern-human-civilization/

    I suspect that there are worse groups out there.

    Posted by: Josh Rosenau | December 22, 2008 10:14 PM

    3

    The Discovery Institute. They hurt a core science that everyone should at least be familiar with - biology. Evolution is a corner stone in biology. Without that, biology becomes little more than taxonomy. Promoting Religion couched as a "Science" dressed in a clown suit to a public that is about as scientifically stupid as you can get should earn them a spot without question.

    Posted by: TheEngima32 | December 23, 2008 12:25 AM

    4

    Assuming that you actually mean "Top 5" and not just "Top 5 in America", then I would like to nominate the "Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith" - the Vatican's think-tank.

    Your local groups simply can't compete with them. They influence public opinion across Europe, Africa and North America. They have helped the spread of AIDS, put up roadblocks to stem-cell research, attacked gender science, and going back through the 450 years that they've been around they've used fire and torture to destroy European scientists.

    Posted by: Martin | December 23, 2008 6:03 AM

    5

    I don't think the Cato Institute quite makes the cut. The other delusion tanks you list are filled to overflowing with people who are complete fucking bonkers on every conceivable topic. Cato is mostly stocked with people who are almost sane on one or two topics, and complete fucking bonkers on every other topic. They're a strong performer in the august field of institutional crankery, but not top 5.

    Posted by: llewelly | December 23, 2008 8:31 AM

    6

    I'll second the nomination for the Discovery Institute. They're not just trying to influence lawmakers. They're trying to pervert the science taught in public schools, to undermine critical thinking by replacing it with "if we can't explain it now then we'll never be able to understand it so God did it." One of their shills admitted at Dover that ID needs its own affirmative action program in the public schools so that it can begin to be recognized as science. Their Wedge Document lays their agenda bare: to overturn contemporary science in favor of Design.

    They're actively going after our kids in the public schools, which is why I regard the DI as more sleazy than the others.

    Posted by: Cheryl Shepherd-Adams | December 23, 2008 9:51 AM

    7

    Recently I run into this website:
    http://www.forces.org/
    anyone know who are these idiots? Thanks.

    Posted by: Zig | December 23, 2008 10:04 AM

    8

    Cato is sometimes on the side of science but at a deep level it is anti-science. That's because like many so-called think-tanks they promote certain views that fit a specific ideology. Sometimes those views fit with the evidence and sometimes not so.

    Posted by: Joshua Zelinsky | December 23, 2008 2:51 PM

    9

    Well, as something of an expert in this field I have to say it's a tough one.

    If you're talking global warming? I'd say Heartland, AEI, CEI should certainly be in your top three (Cato at least fires the likes of Milloy to their credit). If you're talking condoms cause AIDS and homosexuality is a choice, I'd say Focus on the family, IWF. If you're talking creationism, right to die, culture of death nonsense then DI leads the pack.

    It depends on the crankery.

    Posted by: MarkH | December 24, 2008 12:18 AM

    10

    Heartland Institute and SEPP have got to be high up there.

    Both funding antiscience spokespeople on behalf of Industry.

    Posted by: Bek | December 24, 2008 11:39 AM

    11

    The Discovery Institute is so far ahead that it's almost unfair to make the others compete with them. It might be more fair to induct them into the anti-science hall of fame and name the contest the Discovery Awards. For my own nomination, I think Answers in Genesis deserves consideration. While they might not exactly qualify as a think tank, they are a powerful player as publicists for anti-science. Their young earth creationism is not only anti-biology, it's anti-geology, anti-astronomy, anti-physics, and anti-history.

    Just as a point of grammar, shouldn't "think" be in scare quotes when referring to these groups?

    Posted by: John J. McKay | December 24, 2008 1:09 PM

    12

    As far as I know, SEPP == Fred Singer (& wife), which I'm not really sure qualifies as a thinktank.

    See reasons for anti-science, mostly geared for anti-climate science, so I left religion off. The more general form should probably include religion under ideology, and I think there are a few more PSYCH reasons.

    Posted by: John Mashey | December 24, 2008 2:15 PM

    13

    Discovery Institute, definitely, in the top five.

    What about CEI? Their anti-science propaganda against DDT is the textbook example of anti-science propaganda.

    We might also sadly nominate the Congress on Racial Equality, which has sponsored some serious anti-science pieces in recent years about malaria and DDT.

    And how about the Institute for Creation Research? They whipped California's higher education establishment for decades, and now they've moved to Texas, bringing their sourpuss attitude and promotion of ignorance with them.

    Too bad the Tobacco Institute is gone. That would give us a standard against which to compare things.

    Posted by: Ed Darrell | December 24, 2008 2:18 PM

    14

    What you have to be careful to differentiate is the shark organizations and the remora that suck on them. For example, Heartland is currently one of the sharks, and SEPP feeds off them, providing product that the shark can market.

    With the passing of Seitz and Jastrow, Marshall may be a spent force. I don't think Happer (a very good physicist in his time) carries nearly as much weight)

    Posted by: Eli Rabett | December 24, 2008 2:27 PM

    15

    Oh, and how did I forget our own National Center for Policy Analysis here in Dallas. They don't do much on science, but they're into quackery when they do -- as they are on economics, health policy, pollution control, the BCS championship series, the designated hitter rule, and nearly every other thing they deal with.

    Good news: They're closed for the holidays!
    http://www.ncpa.org/

    Posted by: Ed Darrell | December 24, 2008 3:35 PM

    16

    The American Enterprise Institute deserves a place in the top five, surely. The AEI spent 2 years training Tom Switzer in the dark arts of neocon agitprop, then sent him back to Australia, perhaps on Rupert Murdoch's private jet, to run the op/ed section of The Australian newspaper during the Howard hegemony, to ignite the flames of the "culture wars", not least through attacking the science of global warming, and on the way, transforming our only national newspaper into the sad, addled rag we see today. The AIE deserves recognition for successfully distorting and undermining Australia's national science policy for around a decade, a lost decade...

    Posted by: grace pettigrew | December 25, 2008 1:39 AM

    17

    How can you have an anti-science think tank? lol.

    How about NCCAM? Not exactly a think tank but the potential for damage in American medical schools is vast. And then there are the various AIDS/HIV denier groups and the anti-vaxers.

    Posted by: Oldfart | January 5, 2009 10:25 AM

    Post a Comment

    (Email is required for authentication purposes only. On some blogs, comments are moderated for spam, so your comment may not appear immediately.)





    ScienceBlogs

    Search ScienceBlogs:

    Go to:

    Advertisement
    Follow ScienceBlogs on Twitter

    © 2006-2011 ScienceBlogs LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of ScienceBlogs LLC. All rights reserved.