Every year or two, some attention-hungry politician realizes they can get puff-peace coverage by pulling themselves up as the taxpayers friend, and derisively pointing out some government research project with an odd sounding name. The ultimate interview whore, William Proxmire, set the mold but he's had a steady stream of imitators ever since.
Of course, Proxmire left office, just as the conservative movement was beginning to aggressively undermine faith in government and libertarian billionaires were starting to set up pseudo-think tanks to provide, if not an intellectual framework, then at least a veneer of respectability. When the Golden Fleece awards started in 1975, it is difficult to imagine a witness denying the very idea that public research can have economic value. In 2017, it's almost expected.
Paul made his case for the bill yesterday as chairperson of a Senate panel with oversight over federal spending. The hearing, titled “Broken Beakers: Federal Support for Research,” was a platform for Paul’s claim that there’s a lot of “silly research” the government has no business funding. Paul poked fun at several grants funded by NSF—a time-honored practice going back at least 40 years, to Senator William Proxmire (D–WI) and his “Golden Fleece” awards—and complained that the problem is not “how does this happen, but why does it continue to happen?”
Paul’s proposed solution starts with adding two members who have no vested interest in the proposed research to every federal panel that reviews grant applications. One would be an “expert … in a field unrelated to the research” being proposed, according to the bill. Their presence, Paul explained, would add an independent voice capable of judging which fields are most worthy of funding. The second addition would be a “taxpayer advocate,” someone who Paul says can weigh the value of the research to society.
...
Two of the witnesses—Brian Nosek of the University of Virginia in Charlottesville and Rebecca Cunningham of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor—were generally supportive of the status quo, although Nosek emphasized the importance of replicating findings to maximize federal investments. The third witness, Terence Kealey of the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C., asserted that there’s no evidence that publicly funded research makes any contribution to economic development.
If you're up for more of the same, here's the related
post we ran back in 2011.
Sometimes the press isn't good at connecting stories, particularly when
those stories don't match up with the journalists' rather constrained
world-view. One of the most reliable examples is the coverage of
earmarks. The very fact that earmarks are reported as budget stories is
troubling, showing how easily reporters can be manipulated into wasting
time on trivia, but as bad as these stories are on a general level, the
specifics may be even worse.
Like so many bad trends in journalism, the archetypal example comes from Maureen Dowd, this time in a
McCain puff piece from 2009. Here's the complete list of offending earmarks singled out by the senator and dutifully repeated by Dowd:
Before
the Senate resoundingly defeated a McCain amendment on Tuesday that
would have shorn 9,000 earmarks worth $7.7 billion from the $410 billion
spending bill, the Arizona senator twittered lists of offensive
bipartisan pork, including:
• $2.1 million for the Center for Grape Genetics in New York. “quick peel me a grape,” McCain twittered.
• $1.7 million for a honey bee factory in Weslaco, Tex.
• $1.7 million for pig odor research in Iowa.
• $1 million for Mormon cricket control in Utah. “Is that the species of cricket or a game played by the brits?” McCain tweeted.
• $819,000 for catfish genetics research in Alabama.
• $650,000 for beaver management in North Carolina and Mississippi.
•
$951,500 for Sustainable Las Vegas. (McCain, a devotee of Vegas and
gambling, must really be against earmarks if he doesn’t want to
“sustain” Vegas.)
• $2 million “for the promotion of astronomy”
in Hawaii, as McCain twittered, “because nothing says new jobs for
average Americans like investing in astronomy.”
• $167,000 for
the Autry National Center for the American West in Los Angeles.
“Hopefully for a Back in the Saddle Again exhibit,” McCain tweeted
sarcastically.
• $238,000 for the Polynesian Voyaging Society in
Hawaii. “During these tough economic times with Americans out of work,”
McCain twittered.
• $200,000 for a tattoo removal violence
outreach program to help gang members or others shed visible signs of
their past. “REALLY?” McCain twittered.
• $209,000 to improve blueberry production and efficiency in Georgia.
Putting
aside the relatively minuscule amounts of money involved here, the
thing that jumps out about this list is that out of 9,000 earmarks, how
few real losers McCain's staff was able to come up with. I wouldn't give
the Autry top priority for federal money, but they've done some good
work and I assume the same holds for the Polynesian Voyaging Society.
Along the same lines, I have trouble getting that upset public monies
spent on astronomical research. After that, McCain's selections become
truly bizarre. Urban water usage is a huge issue, nowhere more important
than in Western cities like Los Vegas and it's difficult to imagine
anyone objecting to a program that actually gets kids out of gangs.
Of
course, we have no way of knowing how effective these programs are, but
questions of effectiveness are notably absent from McCain/Dowd's piece.
Instead it functions solely on the level of mocking the stated purposes
of the projects, which brings us to one of the most interesting and for
me, damning, aspects of the list: the preponderance of agricultural
research.
You could make a damned good case for agricultural
research having had a bigger impact on the world and its economy over
the past fifty years than research in any other field. That research
continues to pay extraordinary dividends both in new production and in
the control of pest and diseases. It also helps us address the
substantial environmental issues that have come with industrial
agriculture.
As I said before, this earmark coverage with an
emphasis on agriculture is a recurring event. I remember Howard Kurtz
getting all giggly over earmarks for research on dealing with waste from
pig farms about ten years ago and I've lost count of the examples since
then.
And interspaced between those stories at odd intervals
were other reports, less flashy but far more substantial, describing
some economic, environmental or public health crisis that reminded us of
the need for just this kind of research. Sometimes the crisis is in one
of the areas explicitly mocked (look up the
impact of industrial pig farming on rural America*
and see if you share Mr. Kurtz's sense of humor). Other times the
specifics change, a different crop, a new pestilence, but still well
within the type that writers like Dowd find so amusing.
Here's the
most recent example:
Across
North America, a tiny, invasive insect is threatening some eight
billion trees. The emerald ash borer is deadly to ash trees. It first
turned up in Detroit nine years ago, probably after arriving on a cargo
ship from Asia. And since then, the ash borer has devastated forests in
the upper Midwest and beyond.
* Credit where credit
is due. Though not as influential as Dowd, the New York Times also runs
Nicholas Kristof who has done some excellent work describing the human
cost of these crises.