Ben, please... While clearly no party is entirely immune for making idiotic policy proposals, AWB has absolutely nothing to do with science. Public health is not science. For a discipline to be science, it should produce theories that are (a) useful, in the sense that you can predict the outcome of the system based on the starting condition, and (b) falsifiable, in the sense that you can stage an experiment that disproves the theory. Social sciences are not that.
http://1-800-magic.blogspot.com/2008/09 ... ience.htmlAnd even if they were, disagreeing with various social science topics, none of which can be proved anyway, is very, very different than disagreeing with physics...
Back to the topic at hand...
> what evidence do you have that it sorely lacking in the US
Wouldn't the link in the first post on this thread be the evidence?
> there's an esoteric level of any field where it only makes sense to experts but if we had a citizenry trained to identify and dissect arguments, they could cut through that bullshit in a heartbeat. Hell, they would have the skills (and motivation) to research the subject themselves and make an informed decision - rather than parroting what they were told by a talking head.
Actually, not really. By definition, bleeding edge of science/technology is pretty inaccessible to non-experts. This is not a new phenomenon. Consider, for instance, when the curvature of Earth was first estimated by Eratosthenes. How many people back then had mathematical apparatus to research the subject and make an informed decision? Incidentally, how many people can do it now? Common sense logic is that the Earth is flat.
Now consider Copernicus times. Common sense and the Bible both agreed that Earth is at the center of the Universe, and Sun revolves around the Earth. Again, how and based on what a common person with no mathematical apparatus can make an informed decision here?
We are having exactly the same discussion about climate research. We call it "climate research", but this is actually just physics. I am not an expert in this specific field of physics, but after spending my early years studying high energy physics I am pretty damn sure that I cannot make "my own informed opinion" about modern climate models based on the internet research. This is the stuff you study for years, learn from super-smart people, and maybe then you can have an informed opinion.
What I do know though is how the peer review process works in science, and I know what the indications are for when the consensus around the theory is reached and it's now more than a speculation. THIS - what a scientific theory is, what a peer review process is, what the scientific consensus is - these are the things that we should teach at school (ideally, through a required multi-year, multi-subject set of classes in laboratory sciences, like we had in Soviet Union - physics, chemistry, biology, all of them every year for 4 years). Based on the things I am hearing - starting from morons bringing snowballs to prove that global warming is not happening and ending with the discussion of how scientists get more grant money for global warming - it another very clear education that basic scientific education in this country is sorely lacking.