The Politically Incorrect Guide to
Science by Tom Bethell
Review By Dustin
Hawkins
Jan 9, 2006
Throw out your textbooks and forget everything you have learned about
science. They didn’t teach you this stuff in college.
The media generally follows the “if it bleeds, it leads” philosophy:
Stories detailing devastation garner front-page status while stories lacking
prophetic dramatic climax wind up on page B-17. As Tom Bethell writes in The
Politically Incorrect Guide to Science, this can be universally applied to
science. Such an understanding has been grasped by high-powered special
interest groups who use the media to further their causes by predicting the
most ominous disasters that man will ever see. Many entities, from the media
to politicians, are all too willing to help these special interests along in
their causes—the media by promoting the panic, and the government by funding
it.
As a result, declarations of destruction caused by supposed man-made
global warming dominate headlines while opposing viewpoints, though equal in
number, are left without the megaphone of major newspapers, scientific
journals, nightly newscasts, and congressional hearings.
Studies claiming that SUV’s are causing polar ice caps to melt and
thereby turning Florida into a giant swimming pool are, admittedly,
interesting. Studies disputing such claims, and thus not predicting massive
wide-scale destruction, are not interesting. Therefore, the former gets a
Hollywood movie deal, a prime-time news segment, and prominently displayed
magazine covers while the latter is sent to the garbage can.
Global temperature patterns are just one of the many areas of science
that is under heavy assault by liberal activists and environmentalists. As the
book’s teaser claims, “Liberals have hijacked science for long enough. It’s
time to set the record straight.”
Science bias is happening on a much larger scale than most people
realize. For instance, scare tactics have successfully crippled the use of
nuclear power in America as an energy source. Despite nuclear plants emitting
no carbon dioxides, sulfur dioxides, or nitrogen oxides—unlike coal-fired
plants—anti-nuclear activists have derailed the cleaner, safer energy source
with the help of a friendly media and Hollywood movies:
The highly regarded TV commentator Edwin Newman said on NBC that as a
result of the heat generated by nuclear power plants, ‘by the end of the
decade our rivers may have reached the boiling point.’ Then life imitated art.
In 1979, Columbia Pictures released The China Syndrome, starring activist
actress Jane Fonda. In the movie, the meltdown of a nuclear reactor core
threatened to burn its way deep into the earth, “all the way to China.”
Bethell then brings into the nuclear energy discussion the phenomenon
hormesis, which is described as being “so widely observed that it deserves to
be called a law of nature.” Yet its existence is practically buried in
scientific debate. Hormesis maintains that “things that are toxic in large
doses are helpful in small doses,” including nuclear radiation, which appears
to have a positive effect on the reduction of various cancers.
This can be best understood by considering the effects of alcohol in both
large and small quantities. Heavy consumption of alcohol can lead to alcohol
poisoning and ultimately be fatal. Yet doctors recommend the consumption of
small amounts of alcohol as it has proven to have cardiovascular benefits,
including cutting the risk of heart attacks. The same concept applies to
many other irrationally feared substances, such as mercury, across the board.
Yet the U.S. policy on nuclear radiation maintains that no levels of nuclear
radiation are safe and special interest groups have run with that philosophy
in their attempts to prevent the expansion of nuclear power usage.
Another myth countered in Bethell’s book is the idea that, up until the
14th century, there was a long-standing, wide-spread belief that the earth was
flat. The flat-earth myth was first heavily promoted by Washington Irving, the
creator of Rip Van Winkle, in the early 19th century and later popularized
further by John William Draper and Andrew Dickson White. The latter two,
Draper a medical school dean at NYU and White the founder of Cornell
University, wrote highly influential books promoting the existence of the
“flat-earthers” in the late 1800s. Their works were among the first to pit so
furiously religion against science.
The goal of these writers was to project religious persons, with a heavy
focus on the Catholic Church, as being anti-science, anti-learning and as
having actually repressed the idea that the earth was spherical for hundreds
of years. As a result of their version of history becoming the scientific
mainstream, Christopher Columbus has been erroneously transformed into a “bold
rationalist who overcame ignorant churchmen and superstitious sailors” by
proving that the earth was not flat. Reality would say that there was no
reason to prove that the earth was round because very few people believed
anything else. Thanks to nineteenth-century revisionists, history books tell a
different story.
Indeed, there are far too many scientific falsehoods uncovered in this
Politically Incorrect Guide to be summarized here. Among the other findings:
embryonic stem cells cannot be used directly in therapy, because they cause
cancer; new, unknown species of animals continue to appear far more frequently
than known species disappear; in Africa, AIDS has been so narrowly redefined
that almost any sick person can be diagnosed with the syndrome; the hysteria
over DDT has led to the death of millions of people living in third-world
countries; and private investors avoid stem cell research, because they know
it likely will not produce any real results.
Interest groups have long distorted the truth and twisted findings in
studies in order to frame the debate about scientific issues. Groups lacking
causes lack funding. The best way to get funding is to make sure that there
exists the greatest number of, not just problems, disasters that need action.
Greenpeace, a liberal activist organization, would cease to exist if it were
publicly believed that any warming that might exist is merely part of a
natural cycle. Without global warming, there is no Greenpeace.
As a result, people are told that drilling for oil in Alaska will kill
off all wildlife, nuclear power is deadly, the earth is turning into a giant
oven, and most of the world thought the earth was flat until Columbus
discovered otherwise. And you might even believe it all, too. But now with a
Politically Incorrect rebuttal of these popularized myths, science will never
be viewed in the same way again.
Dustin Hawkins is the Editor and Publisher of the Capitol Hill
Journal.
Copyright © 2006 Townhall.com
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