Interesting, non-obvious stuff here. "Inoculating against science denial" theconversation.com/inoculating-ag… http://t.co/U719oys3Pf—
(@pourmecoffee) May 16, 2015
Handy hints for the Antiscience Left
16 May 2015 Leave a comment
in economics of regulation, environmental economics, environmentalism, global warming Tags: anti-intellectualism, antiscience left, climate alarmists, conjecture and refutation, doomsday prophets, logical fallacies, philosophy of science, precautionary principle, propaganda
How the Antiscience Left approaches inconvenient evidence
06 May 2015 1 Comment
in environmental economics, global warming, health economics Tags: Anti-Science left, anti-vaccination movement, climate alarmism, conjecture and refutation, GMOs, precautionary principle, Twitter left, University of the Internet
On appeals to emotion
11 Apr 2015 Leave a comment
in development economics, energy economics, environmental economics, environmentalism, global warming, growth disasters, health economics, liberalism, resource economics Tags: activists, bootleggers and baptists, climate alarmism, conjecture and refutation, green rent seeking, peak oil, population bomb, precautionary principle
More on the horrors of DHMO
11 Apr 2015 Leave a comment
in health economics Tags: antiscience left, DHMO, precautionary principle, risk risk trade-offs
On burden of proof
20 Mar 2015 Leave a comment
in environmental economics, environmentalism, global warming, liberalism, rentseeking Tags: climate alarmism, conjecture and refutation, green rent seeking, philosophy of science, precautionary principle
The loaded question
28 Feb 2015 Leave a comment
in environmental economics, environmentalism, global warming, liberalism Tags: climate alarmism, conjecture and refutation, green rent seeking, philosophy of science, precautionary principle
On ad hominem attacks
26 Feb 2015 Leave a comment
in development economics, environmental economics, environmentalism, global warming Tags: activists, climate alarmism, conjecture and refutation, green rent seeking, philosophy of science, precautionary principle
The relative risks of nuclear and other energy sources
03 Jan 2015 Leave a comment
in energy economics, environmental economics, health and safety, health economics Tags: Anti-Science left, nuclear energy, precautionary principle
Fact check: conspiracy theories aren’t just for conservatives
29 Aug 2014 Leave a comment
in F.A. Hayek, Marxist economics, Milton Friedman, politics - USA Tags: Anti-Science left, conspiracy theories, conspiratorial left, FA Hayek, GMOs, Milton Friedman, Mont Pelerin Society, neoliberal conspiracies, neoliberalism, precautionary principle
Respondents were asked whether they agreed with four statements:
- “Much of our lives are being controlled by plots hatched in secret places,”
- “Even though we live in a democracy, a few people will always run things anyway,”
- “The people who really ‘run’ the country are not known to the voters.”
- “Big events like wars, the current recession, and the outcomes of elections are controlled by small groups of people who are working in secret against the rest of us.”

Source: monkey cage
American conservatives distrust science in part because they identify it with the regulatory state. When science means nuclear weapons, innovation and winning the space race, conservatives love it. When they associate science with the EPA, regulation, and global institutions, they hate it.
Just as climate science is unpalatable for the Right, the Left is uncomfortable with, for example, genetic modification and nuclear power. Research into risks and benefits of these technologies are met with suspicion by the Left.

I find it bizarre the right wing politics is considered more conspiratorial than the left wing – a left-wing that is currently obsessed with the comings and goings of the top 1%.

A gentleman by the name of Karl Marx had a conspiracy theory of history, that the bosses were conspiring against the workers, there is a ruling class pulling the strings from behind the scenes, and there is an inherent inequality of bargaining power between workers and employers because the bosses plot to keep wages down.
It should be mentioned in this connection that Karl Marx himself was one of the first to emphasize the importance, for the social sciences, of these unintended consequences.
In his more mature utterances, he says that we are all caught in the net of the social system. The capitalist is not a demoniac conspirator, but a man who is forced by circumstances to act as he does; he is no more responsible for the state of affairs than is the proletarian.
This view of Marx’s has been abandoned – perhaps for propagandist reasons, perhaps because people did not understand it – and a Vulgar Marxist Conspiracy theory has very largely replaced it. It is a come-down – the come-down from Marx to Goebbels.
But it is clear that the adoption of the conspiracy theory can hardly be avoided by those who believe that they know how to make heaven on earth. The only explanation for their failure to produce this heaven is the malevolence of the devil who has a vested interest in hell.
Karl Popper

Don’t let me start on how the Left over Left goes on about neoliberal conspiracy with Hayek and Friedman ruling the roost through the truly obscure Mont Pelerin Society.


The IMF, World Trade Organisation and trade negotiations are riddled with conspiracies if I am to believe my friends in the Left over Left.

Mention multinational corporations to a member of the Left of good standing and conspiracy theories pour fourth.

It would be unfair to bring up GMOs to remind the left of how anti-science it is. Don’t kick people when they’re down. The whole point of the precautionary principle is to allow the Left to reject good science.


At bottom, what call the barricades works if it’s not sexed-up with a conspiracy theory?
Basing policy on a scientific consensus is a new development for environmentalists
06 May 2014 Leave a comment
in economics of regulation, environmental economics, environmentalism, health economics, law and economics Tags: Cass Sunstein, GMOs, killer green technologies, Paul Nurse, precautionary principle
Previously the precautionary principle was used to introduce doubt when there was no doubt. But when climate science turned in their favour, environmentalists wanted public policy to be based on the latest science.
The precautionary principle is deeply incoherent. We should take precautions but there are always risks on both sides of a decision; inaction can bring danger, but so can action. Precautions themselves create risks so the precautionary principle bans what it simultaneously requires.

There is never perfect certainty about the nature and causes of health and environmental threats, so environmental and health regulations are almost always adopted despite some residual uncertainty.
We live in a Schumpeterian world where new risks replace old risks.
The obvious question is it safer or more precautionary to focus on the potential harms of new activities or technologies without reference to the activities or technologies they might displace? Jonathan Alder explains
In any policy decision, policy makers can make two potential errors regarding risk.
On the one hand, policy makers may err by failing to adopt measures to address a health or environmental risk that exists.
On the other hand, policy makers may adopt regulatory measures to control a health or environmental risk that does not exist.
Both types of error can increase risks to public health.

Consider the overwhelming consensus among researchers that biotech crops are safe for humans and the environment
This is a conclusion that is rejected by the very environmentalist organisations that loudly insist on the policy relevance of the scientific consensus on global warming.
In his 2012 Dimbleby lecture, Sir Paul Nurse calls for a re-opening the debate about GM crops based on scientific facts and analysis:
We need to consider what the science has to say about risks and benefits, uncoloured by commercial interests and ideological opinion. It is not acceptable if we deny the world’s poorest access to ways that could help their food security, if that denial is based on fashion and ill-informed opinion rather than good science.
Cass Sunstein wrote that in its strongest and most distinctive forms, the precautionary principle imposes a burden of proof on those who create potential risks, and requires regulation of activities even if it cannot be shown that those activities are likely to produce significant harms:
…apparently sensible questions have culminated in an influential doctrine, known as the precautionary principle.
The central idea is simple: Avoid steps that will create a risk of harm.
Until safety is established, be cautious; do not require unambiguous evidence.
Yet the precautionary principle, for all its rhetorical appeal, is deeply incoherent.
It is of course true that we should take precautions against some speculative dangers.
But there are always risks on both sides of a decision; inaction can bring danger, but so can action.
Precautions, in other words, themselves create risks – and hence the principle bans what it simultaneously requires.
Sunstein is a Democrat whose White House appointment to the head the White House Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs under Obama was opposed by the Left of the Democrat Party because of his views on the precautionary principle and his support of cost-benefit analysis as a primary tool for assessing regulations. Sunstein again:
The simplest problem with the precautionary principle is that regulation might well deprive society of significant benefits, and even produce a large number of deaths that would otherwise not occur.
Genetic modification holds out the promise of producing food that is both cheaper and healthier – resulting, for example, in products that might have large benefits in developing countries.
The point is not that genetic modification will definitely have those benefits, or that the benefits of genetic modification outweigh the risks.
The point is that the precautionary principle provides no guidance
The epitome of anti-science is support for the precautionary principle and opposition to cost-benefit analysis in assessing regulations. Which side of politics is guilty of this?
Environmentalists accept the views of scientists when its suits their anti-progress agenda. In other cases, the precautionary principle is used to delay judgment, reject science such as on GMOs and demand ever more evidence.
Environmentalists are all for the precautionary principle except when applied to natural medicines, organic food and marijuana.

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