science and technology? who needs that junk?!

Science is the first thing politicians cut and the last thing they fund. They're trading short term cash for long term growth.

cyborg arm

Science and high tech research aren't faring well in the United States thanks to a myriad of issues that range from blatant anti-intellectualism, to lack of foresight and patience on the part of governments and investors. It seems that every time a budget needs to be cut, education and R&D are among the first victims. And this isn't just a U.S. problem. The Science and Technology Facilities Council across the pond is announcing that due to a £115 million deficit, the UK will be ending its role in prestigious scientific projects. That means almost a quarter of fellowships and post-doc research positions will go bye-bye as noted by Dr. Ian O'Neill in the link, above and opportunities for UK's scientists are going to be severely reduced to plug a small budget hole.

Considering that we're living in a year of bailout and emergency funding, it seems bizarre, yet understandable why politicians wouldn't want to help science and technology research while shelling out billions after billions across the economic spectrum. Think about the approach we take to research projects in general. Everybody praises scientists for new computers, breakthrough discoveries and medical treatments that give us a brand new way to effectively treat diseases. But does anyone want to pay for it from public funds? Not really. Since a great deal of the research being done today is very obscure to those who aren't skilled in the discipline which is being advanced, and at first glance it's hard to tell what the benefits of the research might be, we're often hit by arguments against funding scientific research along the lines of "how will this help starving children of give people jobs?" And because the answers aren't immediately forthcoming, there's little political consequence to a massive cut of an R&D budget or the abandonment of a funding body for scientific projects.

Once obscure research into microbiology gave us germ theory, vaccines and antibiotics. A small side-project at a predecessor to the LHC at CERN gave us the internet and tools for more precise radiation therapy used in oncology. The space program gave us the base technologies for today's small, portable devices like cellular phones, satellite communication, CD and eventually, MP3 players. Science does create jobs, it just doesn't do it in an instant by waiving a magic wand. This is why to leave an R&D funding body floating over a debt that's a rounding error compared to the kinds of loans and bailouts already given by governments across the West as the UK seems to be doing with the STFC, is an act of irresponsible shortsightedness. To symbolically save a pittance, the nation is shooting its future in the foot. The irony of the matter is groan worthy since compared to the annual monetary churn of banks and multinational corporations, as well as the cash plunged into a black hole of earmarks and pork barrels, scientific endeavors are a bargain. And in times of economic turmoil, the bargains are the ones being hit by cuts, not the behemoths burning through trillions in cash.

  archived from wowt
              
# politics // bailouts / public funding / scientific research


  show comments
latest reads

how to endanger the future of space flight for status and profit

CEOs and space faring powers are treating low Earth orbit as their personal playgrounds, much to the horror of space agencies.
how to endanger the future of space flight for status and profit

why your boss is obsessed with a.i. past the point of sanity

Not only is the C-suite not immune to AI psychosis, they seem to be primed to suffer the worst of it as their employees duck and cover.
why your boss is obsessed with a.i. past the point of sanity

why so many of us are just not that into chatbots

AI adoption is at an all time high, but opinion of AI keeps on tumbling with every poll and study on the subject.
why so many of us are just not that into chatbots

no, your chatbots aren't secretly marxists at heart

But they can and do detect and complain about unfair treatment when asked, according to an experiment by Stanford researchers.
no, your chatbots aren't secretly marxists at heart

how the right wing took over social media

Right wing content has a major advantage on social media. But we can do something about that with a very simple change in our habits.
how the right wing took over social media

no, we still don't know why t. rex had little arms

Popular science outlets continue to do a terrible job of explaining studies on primeval evolution and pretending we have answers we don't.
no, we still don't know why t. rex had little arms