It may be esoteric, but he fucking represents the state and it is his fucking JOB to know what is going on in the universities there when he is going to be making funding decisions.
It is John McCain's job to have a general understanding of the products and services available in the state which he represents. Demanding that he know that there is a fund of world-class knowledge on superorganisms? I'll give him a pass, thanks. He's got enough on his plate. This is what briefings are for.
Then there is the fact that he will be surrendering our scientific supremacy to the chinese.
He will not be doing anything of the sort. This kind of self-congratulatory scare tactic is exactly what prompted me to post in this thread. Cutting funding to discrete projects is not "surrendering our scientific supremacy." You go on to compound your error by behaving as if the money in question will not be used for some other socially beneficial purpose.
And what sort of scrutiny would that be? I have not seen anything that even remotely resembles honest scrutiny.
I made a general remark about how politics should work. If McCain cuts before he looks, he deserves your criticism (and mine). Not that it takes much to pass quick judgment on a lot of what was discussed in the article. More on that later.
Yes. Cutting the WHOPPING 6 billion annual budget of the NSF. That will relieve so much financial burden
Your statement is the equivalent of saying that we should throw money to science without first considering the costs and benefits of doing so. That isn't at all a credit to your powers of reason.
Which is not what he is trying to do here. He is using the sciences as a vehicle to attack the Obama administration.
If the Obama administration allowed a dinner cruise in Chicago to pick up $1 million for counter-terrorism, it deserves some criticism.
Why not simply state that he can't comment on the issue because he hasn't studied it? It's the truth, it's direct, and it doesn't reveal his profound ignorance.
That would be preferable, but it's also unrealistic. Politicians build reputations on making judgments. If you're going to criticize the nature of our political system, fine. I concede that it would be preferable for McCain to withhold comment. However, I'm not going to be surprised, or outraged, when he doesn't.
Which is not how it works. Cutting money to an already money starved agencies only means shutting down good research.
Sometimes, that good research isn't as important as other priorities. We're fighting two wars on the other side of the world; the economy is in a bad way; the national infrastructure needs maintenance, restoration, or replacement; healthcare costs are skyrocketing; etc. The opinion put forth by Aly -- that another dollar for science is a dollar well-spent, and not missed anywhere else -- is indefensible.
How is it you ask me to prove something and then immediately thereafter STATE that you frequently use all the political power you have to support the Creationist agenda? Are you allergic to taking responsibility?
Are you a union man? Do you vote Democrat? By your logic, you use all the political power you have to support the union agenda. That's a ridiculous argument, based on the ability to overgeneralize because of the architecture of our political system.
You are full of shit. Paleontology strongly demonstrates the mechanisms and conditions of evolution of living systems, by providing the physical evidence to support the continued generational change in those systems. How else are you supposed to get trends in physiology, anatomy, et cetera for modern life if you do not extend that data backwards?
Please point me to some enriching studies.
Besides, the Naval Academy is barely an educational institution. It doesn't contribute any research at all, let alone do good research.
No; not an educational institution at all. It only trains hundreds of engineers every year. You're an elitist, pure and simple. Like Aly, you seem to believe that all science is good science, all the time -- as if there aren't trade-offs, and every dollar grows on a tree.
Our economy is driven by consumerism. By reducing both the strain on existing power grids and reducing the overhead the mall needs, it is less likely to shut down and more likely to continually service its community and hopefully have some boost on the economy. If it works, then this can be expanded to other malls, thus boosting the economy even more. If it fails, then it's only one mall.
Using similar mental gymnastics, I can make you a case for just about anything. Our society doesn't need another shopping mall; they provide no essential goods or services. That shopping mall is assuredly not the only point of purchase for useful goods and services in the community. If it couldn't sustain itself, and it doesn't provide anything essential, what am I being asked to pay so that it can have a state-of-the-art generator? How can you be sure that it is going to have the same effects as a pilot program? Why shouldn't I be concerned about its possible failure? Because it's only "one more dollar?" We don't have enough of them as it is.
Knowledge of historic evolutionary trends is helpful pretty much all the time.
Show me how it is more helpful than servicing the debt, or funding the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.
What is this political theater? A production designed to get more people interested in civics and government? Hard to say if it is good or bad without knowledge of what it is (like, you know, John McCain in the article)
Prove to me that you've done a study to validate that this theater is providing a valuable public service that brings about tangible gains for the nation. I am not interested in spending money on maybe-so's. You wouldn't let me fight wars on maybe-so's.
Should someone bring a bomb onboard, that could be problematic. Or, if the ship is taken and rammed into a harbor, marina, or the like, that could cause some problems too, I'd think. Perhaps cost even more money then what is being spent now as a preventative measure, perhaps.
Marginal impact, low probability. That money could be spent on more vulnerable communities.
Which, by all appearances, McCain did not do aside from just looking at it and going "we're spending money on ANT STUDIES?!?! JAYZUZ CHRIST!"
More like, "Look at this stuff we're spending money on!" He fired a rhetorical shotgun; the ant studies were one of many targets, most of which were indeed outrageous white elephants.