Eric Cantor answers Paul Krugman in the New York Times
DOI: 10.1063/PT.4.0123
‘News of the week
A transcript of the congressman’s
While ‘Democrats, being human, often read evidence selectively and choose to believe things that make them comfortable,’ Krugman charges, ‘there really isn’t anything equivalent to Republicans’ active hostility to collecting evidence in the first place.’
Facts and evidence? Cantor’s letter begins on that topic. Facts ‘don’t support the allegations,’ he counters. He points to Republican origins for the ‘effort to double funding for medical research at the National Institutes of Health’ and asserts that ‘the Republican House alone...passed legislation ensuring that foreign-born students educated in the sciences’ in the US get to stay. As to ‘lower-priority programs like social and political science research,’ he declares, government ‘can’t afford to pay for everything, and governing is about making choices.’
The congressman also argues that while NSF can only support 15 percent of the biological-sciences grant applications it receives, ‘we spend nearly $250 million annually on research in the social, behavioral, economic and political arena, such as a recent $266,821 grant to figure out why voters chose the candidates they did in the 2010 election.’ He apparently means the NSF project ‘Political Context and Citizen Response in the 2010 Elections
Cantor concludes: ‘Reprioritizing government’s existing spending to favor saving lives over more political science research is not anti-science; it’s common sense.’
Steven T. Corneliussen, a media analyst for the American Institute of Physics, monitors three national newspapers, the weeklies Nature and Science, and occasionally other publications. He has published op-eds in the Washington Post and other newspapers, has written for NASA’s history program, and is a science writer at a particle-accelerator laboratory.