Is it just my imagination or is Canada's international reputation slipping into the sewer? The question seemed particularly pertinent this morning as I read an editorial in the New York Times
Sunday Review entitled "Silencing Scientists." I don't have to tell you whose scientists they are referring to. It's a short piece so I'll include it below (warning—may contain content unfit for younger readers):
Over the last few years, the government of Canada—led by Stephen
Harper—has made it harder and harder for publicly financed scientists
to communicate with the public and with other scientists.
It began badly enough in 2008 when scientists working for Environment
Canada, the federal agency, were told to refer all queries to
departmental communications officers. Now the government is doing all it
can to monitor and restrict the flow of scientific information,
especially concerning research into climate change, fisheries and
anything to do with the Alberta tar sands—source of the diluted
bitumen that would flow through the controversial Keystone XL pipeline.
Journalists find themselves unable to reach government scientists; the
scientists themselves have organized public protests.
There was trouble of this kind here in the George W. Bush years, when
scientists were asked to toe the party line on climate policy and
endangered species. But nothing came close to what is being done in
Canada.
Science is the gathering of hypotheses and the endless testing of them.
It involves checking and double-checking, self-criticism and a
willingness to overturn even fundamental assumptions if they prove to be
wrong. But none of this can happen without open communication among
scientists. This is more than an attack on academic freedom. It is an
attempt to guarantee public ignorance.
It is also designed to make sure that nothing gets in the way of the
northern resource rush—the feverish effort to mine the earth and the
ocean with little regard for environmental consequences. The Harper
policy seems designed to make sure that the tar sands project proceeds
quietly, with no surprises, no bad news, no alarms from government
scientists. To all the other kinds of pollution the tar sands will
yield, we must now add another: the degradation of vital streams of
research and information.
Worse than the Bush years, no less! I think the last sentence sums it up nicely—yet more tar sands pollution. And please note they say "tar" sands, not "oil" sands.
No comments:
Post a Comment