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http://gadflyer.com/articles/?ArticleID=100

[The Gadflyer is a new progressive Internet magazine]

May 13, 2004

 

The Fraud of 'Sound Science'

A history of a conservative term of art

 

By Chris Mooney, Contributor

 

 

Over recent months, an unprecedented rupture has occurred between the U.S.

scientific community and the White House. Denunciations of President Bush's

science policies by a slew of Nobel Laureates organized by the Union of

Concerned Scientists, followed by a sweeping rejection of the scientists'

charges by the administration, have made for great political theater. But the

controversy has also shown that on issues ranging from mercury pollution to

global warming, today's political conservatives have an extremely peculiar - and

decidedly non-mainstream - concept of what science says and how to reach

scientific conclusions. Conservatives and the Bush administration claim to be

staunch defenders of science, of course; but

close attention to the very language they use suggests otherwise.

 

 

Much of the modern conservative agenda on science is embodied in the

enigmatic phrase " sound science, " a term used with increasing frequency

these days despite its apparent lack of a clear, agreed-upon definition. In

one sense, " sound science " simply means " good science. " Indeed, when

unwitting liberals and journalists have been caught using the phrase - which

happens quite frequently - it appears to have been with this meaning in mind.

 

 

Conservatives, too, want people to hear " good science " when they say " sound

science. " But there are reasons for thinking they actually mean something

more by the term. The Bush administration has invoked " sound science " on

issues ranging from climate change to arsenic in drinking water, virtually

always in defense of a looser government regulatory standard than might

otherwise have been adopted. In this sense, " sound science " seems to mean

requiring a high burden of proof before taking government action to protect

public health and the environment (not really a scientific position at all).

Indeed, in an online discussion of " Sound Science and Public Policy, " the

Western Caucus of the U.S. House of Representatives, chaired by Utah

Republican Chris Cannon, notes that " environmental laws should be made with

great caution and demand a high degree of scientific certainty " - once

again, a policy statement rather than one having to do strictly with

science.

 

 

A short history of the phrase " sound science, " and its development into a

mantra of the political right, clearly demonstrates its anti-regulatory,

pro-industry slant. Strategic uses by the business community trace back at

least to Dow Chemical Company president Paul F. Oreffice's 1983 claim that a

$3 million program to allay fears of dioxin pollution in Michigan would use

" sound science " to " reassure " the public - i.e., downplay risks. To rebut

Dow's claims, a young South Dakota representative named Tom Daschle promptly

released results from a confidential study suggesting that dioxin damages

the immune system. In this incident, it's possible to see the first

sprouting of a political debate over " sound science " that would bloom into a

full schism a decade later.

 

A key development came in 1993, when an Environmental Protection Agency

report estimated that secondhand smoke causes some 3,000 lung cancer deaths

each year. EPA classified secondhand smoke as a Group A human carcinogen.

The tobacco lobby quickly sprang into action, and it's not hard to see why.

If smokers were hurting other people, and not merely themselves, the issue

wasn't just about " personal responsibility " any more. Society could find

itself compelled to take steps to ban smoking in a variety of public venues.

 

 

The Tobacco Institute, an industry group, quickly labeled EPA's conclusions

" another step in a long process characterized by a preference for political

correctness over sound science. " And as we now know from tobacco documents

made available as a consequence of litigation, the industry decided to do

something about it.

 

 

In early 1993, Philip Morris and its public relations firm, APCO Associates,

created a nonprofit front group called The Advancement of Sound Science

Coalition (TASSC) to help fight against the regulation of secondhand smoke.

To mask its true purpose, TASSC assembled a range of anti-regulatory

interests under one umbrella, and rarely, if ever, explicitly challenged the

notion that secondhand smoke poses health risks. Instead, the group, headed

by former New Mexico governor Garrey Carruthers, described itself as a

" not-for-profit coalition advocating the use of sound science in public

policy decision making. " Still, at the very least TASSC implied that the

science of secondhand smoke was bogus. For example, in 1994 the group

released a poll of scientists suggesting that politicians were abusing

science on issues such as " asbestos, pesticides, dioxin, environmental

tobacco smoke or water quality. "

 

 

At roughly the same time, fortuitously or otherwise, the incoming Republican

Congress of 1994 adopted " sound science " as a mantra. Just a week after the

November 1994 elections, Newt Gingrich and company had set the tone.

" Property rights " and " sound science " had become " the environmental

buzzwords of the new Republican Congress, " a Knight-Ridder news report

noted. The perceptive report also included a definition of " sound science, "

which suggested it meant much more than simply " good science. " Instead, the

point was deregulation: " 'Sound science' is shorthand for the notion that

anti-pollution laws have gone to extremes, spending huge amounts of money to

protect people from miniscule risks. "

 

 

Calls for " sound science " closely accompanied the push to enact a key tenet

of the Republican Party's " Contract With America " - regulatory " reform, " an

industry-backed gambit to provide steep hurdles to future environmental,

health, and safety regulations. Reform bills sponsored in 1995 by Gingrich

and Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole would have imposed stringent new rules

on the process by which the Environmental Protection Agency and other

government bodies conducted science-based risk assessments to determine

whether a particular danger should be regulated. The proposals demonstrated

that the new Republican majority wanted nothing less than to become

government's science cops - and to start fixing the tickets of industry.

 

 

The leading regulatory reform proposals would have legislated the very

nature of science itself. They prescribed a one-size-fits-all standard for

risk assessment across very different government agencies, potentially

stifling scientific adaptability. The bills also would have erected a " peer

review " process to scrutinize risk assessments with large potential

regulatory impacts - one that would have not only bogged down the regulatory

process, but also allowed industry scientists to participate in or even

dominate reviews. In addition, regulatory reform would have created new

opportunities for federal court challenges over agency risk assessments - an

ideal opportunity for business interests to engage in scientific warfare

over analyses they didn't like. The whole process, Public Citizen lawyer

David Vladeck wrote at the time, smacked of an attempt to achieve " paralysis

by analysis. "

 

 

Reformers didn't describe it that way, of course. As Dole argued in a

Washington Post commentary, the goal was to make sure that agencies were

using " the best information and sound science available. " Yet the notion

that Republican reformers were merely calling for better science in the

abstract - instead of issuing unrealistic demands for minimized uncertainty

before regulation could be undertaken - is hard to swallow. At the same time

that they pushed for regulatory reform, the Gingrich Republicans dismantled

Congress's Office of Technology Assessment, a widely respected scientific

advisory body, and sought to slash funding for government scientific

research.

 

 

Throughout the whole saga, the Advancement of Sound Science Coalition

cheered the regulatory reformers along, sometimes explicitly. In an October

13, 1994 speech, TASSC chairman Garrey Carruthers specifically endorsed a

regulatory reform proposal by Louisiana Democratic Senator J. Bennett

Johnston (co-sponsor of the Dole bill). Then in 1995, the group released a

study protesting negative media coverage of regulatory reform, which Dole,

in turn, cited in a statement. Carruthers heralded the survey - without, of

course, mentioning tobacco in any way. " We want to offer information on how

scientific issues are communicated to the public as another means of

ensuring that only sound science is used in making public policy decisions, "

he stated.

 

 

Ultimately, the regulatory reformers went too far and their proposal died in

the Senate -but not before it had helped crystallize a new conservative

lexicon. In a 1996 report, the late Rep. George Brown, ranking Democratic

member of the House Science Committee, issued a long and anguished

reflection on the Republican Party's adoption of " sound science " principles

entitled " Environmental Science Under Siege: Fringe Science and the 104th

Congress. " Brown's report provides a powerful riposte to the " sound science "

movement, whose proponents he accused of having " little or no experience of

what science does and how it progresses. "

 

 

Brown's ire had been raised by a series of hearings by the

Republican-controlled Energy and Environment Subcommittee entitled

" Scientific Integrity and the Public Trust, " which were a closely related

offshoot of the regulatory reform movement. Presided over by Rep. Dana

Rohrabacher of California - who notoriously derided climate change as

" liberal claptrap " - the hearings levied charges of science abuse across

three environmental issues: ozone depletion, global warming, and dioxin

risks. After an analysis of the hearings, Brown found " no credible evidence "

of scientific distortion in the interest of environmental scare-mongering.

But he did come away with a definition of " sound science " as used repeatedly

by the Republican majority. " The Majority seems to equate sound science with

absolute certainty regarding a particular problem, " wrote Brown. " By this

standard, a substance can only be regulated after we know with absolute

certainty that the substance is harmful. This is an unrealistic and

inappropriate standard. "

 

 

Nevertheless, invocations of " sound science " to prevent regulation remain a

core component of the conservative science agenda today. In 2002, Republican

pollster and strategist Frank Luntz - who did polling work for the GOP's

1994 Contract with America - wrote in a memorandum (PDF) for GOP

congressional candidates that " The most important principle in any

discussion of global warming is your commitment to sound science. " But what

was most intriguing was what " sound science " actually meant to Luntz on

climate change. " The scientific debate is closing [against us] but not yet

closed, " he added cynically. " There is still a window of opportunity to

challenge the science. " It's hard to read Luntz's words as anything but yet

another call for " paralysis by analysis. "

 

 

Conservatives and liberals both agree that science is crucially important

for making public policy. But the answers provided by scientific research

are rarely certain and always open to disputation or challenge. When

conservatives today call for " sound science, " the evidence suggests that

what they really want is to hold a scientific filibuster - and thereby delay

political action.

 

 

Chris Mooney is a senior correspondent for The American Prospect. Read more of

his articles at: chriscmooney.com.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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" Frank " <califpacific

<alternative_medicine_forum >

Sunday, May 16, 2004 10:33 PM

The_Fraud_of_'Sound_Science'

 

> http://gadflyer.com/articles/?ArticleID=100

> [The Gadflyer is a new progressive Internet magazine]

> May 13, 2004

>

> The Fraud of 'Sound Science'

> A history of a conservative term of art

>

> By Chris Mooney, Contributor

 

> Over recent months, an unprecedented rupture has occurred between the U.S.

scientific community and the White House. Denunciations of President Bush's

science policies by a slew of Nobel Laureates organized by the Union of

Concerned Scientists, followed by a sweeping rejection of the scientists'

charges by the administration, have made for great political theater. But

the controversy has also shown that on issues ranging from mercury pollution

to global warming, today's political conservatives have an extremely

peculiar - and decidedly non-mainstream - concept of what science says and

how to reach scientific conclusions. Conservatives and the Bush

administration claim to be staunch defenders of science, of course; but

> close attention to the very language they use suggests otherwise.

>

>

> Much of the modern conservative agenda on science is embodied in the

> enigmatic phrase " sound science, " a term used with increasing frequency

> these days despite its apparent lack of a clear, agreed-upon definition.

In

> one sense, " sound science " simply means " good science. " Indeed, when

> unwitting liberals and journalists have been caught using the phrase -

which happens quite frequently - it appears to have been with this meaning

in mind.

>

>

> Conservatives, too, want people to hear " good science " when they say

" sound

> science. " But there are reasons for thinking they actually mean something

> more by the term. The Bush administration has invoked " sound science " on

> issues ranging from climate change to arsenic in drinking water, virtually

> always in defense of a looser government regulatory standard than might

> otherwise have been adopted. In this sense, " sound science " seems to mean

> requiring a high burden of proof before taking government action to

protect

> public health and the environment (not really a scientific position at

all).

> Indeed, in an online discussion of " Sound Science and Public Policy, " the

> Western Caucus of the U.S. House of Representatives, chaired by Utah

> Republican Chris Cannon, notes that " environmental laws should be made

with

> great caution and demand a high degree of scientific certainty " - once

> again, a policy statement rather than one having to do strictly with

> science.

>

>

> A short history of the phrase " sound science, " and its development into a

> mantra of the political right, clearly demonstrates its anti-regulatory,

> pro-industry slant. Strategic uses by the business community trace back at

> least to Dow Chemical Company president Paul F. Oreffice's 1983 claim that

a

> $3 million program to allay fears of dioxin pollution in Michigan would

use

> " sound science " to " reassure " the public - i.e., downplay risks. To rebut

> Dow's claims, a young South Dakota representative named Tom Daschle

promptly

> released results from a confidential study suggesting that dioxin damages

> the immune system. In this incident, it's possible to see the first

> sprouting of a political debate over " sound science " that would bloom into

a

> full schism a decade later.

>

> A key development came in 1993, when an Environmental Protection Agency

> report estimated that secondhand smoke causes some 3,000 lung cancer

deaths

> each year. EPA classified secondhand smoke as a Group A human carcinogen.

> The tobacco lobby quickly sprang into action, and it's not hard to see

why.

> If smokers were hurting other people, and not merely themselves, the issue

> wasn't just about " personal responsibility " any more. Society could find

> itself compelled to take steps to ban smoking in a variety of public

venues.

>

>

> The Tobacco Institute, an industry group, quickly labeled EPA's

conclusions

> " another step in a long process characterized by a preference for

political

> correctness over sound science. " And as we now know from tobacco documents

> made available as a consequence of litigation, the industry decided to do

> something about it.

>

>

> In early 1993, Philip Morris and its public relations firm, APCO

Associates,

> created a nonprofit front group called The Advancement of Sound Science

> Coalition (TASSC) to help fight against the regulation of secondhand

smoke.

> To mask its true purpose, TASSC assembled a range of anti-regulatory

> interests under one umbrella, and rarely, if ever, explicitly challenged

the

> notion that secondhand smoke poses health risks. Instead, the group,

headed

> by former New Mexico governor Garrey Carruthers, described itself as a

> " not-for-profit coalition advocating the use of sound science in public

> policy decision making. " Still, at the very least TASSC implied that the

> science of secondhand smoke was bogus. For example, in 1994 the group

> released a poll of scientists suggesting that politicians were abusing

> science on issues such as " asbestos, pesticides, dioxin, environmental

> tobacco smoke or water quality. "

>

>

> At roughly the same time, fortuitously or otherwise, the incoming

Republican

> Congress of 1994 adopted " sound science " as a mantra. Just a week after

the

> November 1994 elections, Newt Gingrich and company had set the tone.

> " Property rights " and " sound science " had become " the environmental

> buzzwords of the new Republican Congress, " a Knight-Ridder news report

> noted. The perceptive report also included a definition of " sound

science, "

> which suggested it meant much more than simply " good science. " Instead,

the

> point was deregulation: " 'Sound science' is shorthand for the notion that

> anti-pollution laws have gone to extremes, spending huge amounts of money

to

> protect people from miniscule risks. "

>

>

> Calls for " sound science " closely accompanied the push to enact a key

tenet

> of the Republican Party's " Contract With America " - regulatory " reform, "

an

> industry-backed gambit to provide steep hurdles to future environmental,

> health, and safety regulations. Reform bills sponsored in 1995 by Gingrich

> and Senate Majority Leader Bob Dole would have imposed stringent new rules

> on the process by which the Environmental Protection Agency and other

> government bodies conducted science-based risk assessments to determine

> whether a particular danger should be regulated. The proposals

demonstrated

> that the new Republican majority wanted nothing less than to become

> government's science cops - and to start fixing the tickets of industry.

>

>

> The leading regulatory reform proposals would have legislated the very

> nature of science itself. They prescribed a one-size-fits-all standard for

> risk assessment across very different government agencies, potentially

> stifling scientific adaptability. The bills also would have erected a

" peer

> review " process to scrutinize risk assessments with large potential

> regulatory impacts - one that would have not only bogged down the

regulatory

> process, but also allowed industry scientists to participate in or even

> dominate reviews. In addition, regulatory reform would have created new

> opportunities for federal court challenges over agency risk assessments -

an

> ideal opportunity for business interests to engage in scientific warfare

> over analyses they didn't like. The whole process, Public Citizen lawyer

> David Vladeck wrote at the time, smacked of an attempt to achieve

" paralysis

> by analysis. "

>

>

> Reformers didn't describe it that way, of course. As Dole argued in a

> Washington Post commentary, the goal was to make sure that agencies were

> using " the best information and sound science available. " Yet the notion

> that Republican reformers were merely calling for better science in the

> abstract - instead of issuing unrealistic demands for minimized

uncertainty

> before regulation could be undertaken - is hard to swallow. At the same

time

> that they pushed for regulatory reform, the Gingrich Republicans

dismantled

> Congress's Office of Technology Assessment, a widely respected scientific

> advisory body, and sought to slash funding for government scientific

> research.

>

>

> Throughout the whole saga, the Advancement of Sound Science Coalition

> cheered the regulatory reformers along, sometimes explicitly. In an

October

> 13, 1994 speech, TASSC chairman Garrey Carruthers specifically endorsed a

> regulatory reform proposal by Louisiana Democratic Senator J. Bennett

> Johnston (co-sponsor of the Dole bill). Then in 1995, the group released a

> study protesting negative media coverage of regulatory reform, which Dole,

> in turn, cited in a statement. Carruthers heralded the survey - without,

of

> course, mentioning tobacco in any way. " We want to offer information on

how

> scientific issues are communicated to the public as another means of

> ensuring that only sound science is used in making public policy

decisions, "

> he stated.

>

>

> Ultimately, the regulatory reformers went too far and their proposal died

in

> the Senate -but not before it had helped crystallize a new conservative

> lexicon. In a 1996 report, the late Rep. George Brown, ranking Democratic

> member of the House Science Committee, issued a long and anguished

> reflection on the Republican Party's adoption of " sound science "

principles

> entitled " Environmental Science Under Siege: Fringe Science and the 104th

> Congress. " Brown's report provides a powerful riposte to the " sound

science "

> movement, whose proponents he accused of having " little or no experience

of

> what science does and how it progresses. "

>

>

> Brown's ire had been raised by a series of hearings by the

> Republican-controlled Energy and Environment Subcommittee entitled

> " Scientific Integrity and the Public Trust, " which were a closely related

> offshoot of the regulatory reform movement. Presided over by Rep. Dana

> Rohrabacher of California - who notoriously derided climate change as

> " liberal claptrap " - the hearings levied charges of science abuse across

> three environmental issues: ozone depletion, global warming, and dioxin

> risks. After an analysis of the hearings, Brown found " no credible

evidence "

> of scientific distortion in the interest of environmental scare-mongering.

> But he did come away with a definition of " sound science " as used

repeatedly

> by the Republican majority. " The Majority seems to equate sound science

with

> absolute certainty regarding a particular problem, " wrote Brown. " By this

> standard, a substance can only be regulated after we know with absolute

> certainty that the substance is harmful. This is an unrealistic and

> inappropriate standard. "

>

>

> Nevertheless, invocations of " sound science " to prevent regulation remain

a

> core component of the conservative science agenda today. In 2002,

Republican

> pollster and strategist Frank Luntz - who did polling work for the GOP's

> 1994 Contract with America - wrote in a memorandum (PDF) for GOP

> congressional candidates that " The most important principle in any

> discussion of global warming is your commitment to sound science. " But

what

> was most intriguing was what " sound science " actually meant to Luntz on

> climate change. " The scientific debate is closing [against us] but not yet

> closed, " he added cynically. " There is still a window of opportunity to

> challenge the science. " It's hard to read Luntz's words as anything but

yet

> another call for " paralysis by analysis. "

>

>

> Conservatives and liberals both agree that science is crucially important

> for making public policy. But the answers provided by scientific research

> are rarely certain and always open to disputation or challenge. When

> conservatives today call for " sound science, " the evidence suggests that

> what they really want is to hold a scientific filibuster - and thereby

delay

> political action.

>

>

> Chris Mooney is a senior correspondent for The American Prospect. Read

more of his articles at: chriscmooney.com.

>

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