The Trump Administration Is Turning Science Against Itself - Wired
The damage the Trump administration has done to science in a few short months is both well documented and incalculable, but in recent days that assault has taken an alarming twist. Their latest project is not firing researchers or pulling fundsalthough theres still plenty of that going on. Its the inversion of science itself.
Heres how it works. Three dire wolves are born in an undisclosed location in the continental United States, and the media goes wild. This is big news for Game of Thrones fans and anyone interested in de-extinction, the promise of bringing back long-vanished species.
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All more or less reasonable reactions. And then theres secretary of the interior Doug Burgum, a former software executive and investor now charged with managing public lands in the US. The marvel of de-extinction technology can help forge a future where populations are never at risk, Burgum wrote in a post on X this week. The revival of the Dire Wolf heralds the advent of a thrilling new era of scientific wonder, showcasing how the concept of de-extinction can serve as a bedrock for modern species conservation.
What Burgum is suggesting here is that the answer to 18,000 threatened speciesas classified and tallied by the nonprofit International Union for Conservation of Natureis that scientists can simply slice and dice their genes back together. Its like playing Contra with the infinite lives code, but for the global ecosystem.
This logic is wrong, the argument is bad. More to the point, though, its the kind of upside-down takeaway that will be used not to advance conservation efforts but to repeal them. Oh, fracking may kill off the California condor? Heres a mutant vulture as a make-good.
https://www.wired.com/story/trump-administration-science/