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Previous comments... You are currently on page 2.
Ayn Rand didn't use the term "fracking", but there is no doubt that it was fracking.
I will save this link to use for the next time I get into it with some of my Liberal acquaintances.
As someone else suggested, it is all about the money, and control of the people. If American citizens are finicially stable they Government has no way to use fear to control us. Hell this entire BLM and Dallas thing is the same thing with a different face on it.
My livelihood has been directly impacted by deliberately fraudulent "science" used by federal land management agencies in their implementation of land use policies with the sage grouse FEIS. I will elaborate someday.
Don't blame the government. They are culpable. But not for everything. People can be stupid on their own.
http://www.space.com/9593-einstein-bi...
But, the point is that he admitted that he was in error. And, he was exceptional.
But some people in that establishment do want to clean it up, and it's nice to see that starting to happen. It's only a start, though.
It's what liars do.
What I see here among some is a merger of two themes identified by Richard Hofstadter: the paranoid style in American politics; and the anti-intellectual tradition.
Some people have read that view into Atlas Shrugged, but that was not Rand's viewpoint.
I wonder if this has been a slow change, maybe starting around the time of William Harvey, who starts of On Circulation of the Blood saying it may be shocking to readers that there's something left to discover beyond Galen's work over 1000 years earlier.
Maybe the printing press started, the telegraph, continuing through low-cost high-throughput data. What hath God wrought?
"So, maybe science is safe for now."
I perceive that many people not working around science do not understand science. This article talks about sensational headlines. Science writers make a study interesting by pointing out how it's vaguely similar to sci-fi technology like FTL travel or teleporters. Then a different person writes a sensational headline that often has nothing to do with the real research.
I don't know if it's because of the sensationalism, but many non-scientists seem to start with the premise that all science is actually politics. It seems like they say we can't actually know anything through science, so we might as well pick comforting answers and find evidence to support them.
Michael Pollan does this in In Defense of Food. The book makes good points, but at times he seems to go to that argument that because scientific opinion changes over time, it's unreliable. He says at one point scientist told us all nutrition came from macronutrients, completely missing micronutrients. He talks about how research is funded industry, so we study the benefits of food processed before it gets to the consumer more than the benefits of food that's provided raw for the consumer to cook and process. I think he has a good point. But the answer is not to throw our hands up and say we can't know anything.
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