The White House, in another attempt to prevent disclosure of information, has begun a crackdown on USGS scientists, stating that their papers and reports must be screened before they can be released to the public.
The controversy is large enough that the USGS has issued their own response.
If a topic is “policy-sensitive’ or highly-visible” it will be flagged and the USGS Communications Office will be alerted. Now, while many jobs have policies for items to be reviewed before being released, this policy appears to be aimed at items that are contrary to the current administration. This damages the freedom of information that we are used to obtaining from the USGS because it can affect papers and reports on global warming, the Alaskan oil drilling in the Wildlife Reserve, and any other topic that counters the standing White House policy.
It’s also not surprising that the White House wants Mark Myers as director of the USGS. While Myers has a PhD in geology, he has spent most of his career in Alaska. Myers supports drilling in Alaska, something this administration has failed to convince environmentalists and other Americans as a good idea. Myers claims that, if he gets the job, he will only provide data and help people to interpret and understand the data. He claims that he will not be involved in any decision making.
So, why exactly is he being offered the position? He wants to be the director but he doesn’t want to make any decisions. Can people live in a vaccuum where they can actually do this?
If he is confirmed by the Senate, he will be the first director in many decades who will not be promoted from within the USGS or from the world of Academia. He has also spent a great deal of time working for oil companies as well as the State of Alaska. It is impossible to say that he will stay out of decision making, given the ties he has to corporations and his previous statements of support for drilling in Alaska as well as no human has ever held a position where they didn’t influence outcomes.
The biggest problem that we face, however, is that a little more than half the citizens of this once great country believe that this sort of behavior by government officials is acceptable. Far too many Americans now subscribe to the belief that the government knows best for its citizens and that, if you don’t have anything to hide, then why are worried over such a little thing as the government scrutinizing your every move. And they believe this because the education system is in the toilet and ignorant people are easier to sway than educated ones. People would much rather be told what to believe than do a little research to find the truth.
With most Americans not even bothering to vote and the constant gerrymandering of districts it’s easy to pack Congress with people who will vote along the same lines as the current administration. Couple that with the president’s ability to sign a piece of paper stating that he simply isn’t going to follow whatever law he doesn’t like, while stacking the courts with people who want to give the executive branch more power (see Justice Alito) and you’ve got the makings of a nice authoritarian society. George Bush has recreated our government into a unitary executive and no one cares.
It doesn’t matter to them because they cannot see how it directly effects them. When you try to explain and clarify exactly what it means, peoples’ eyes glaze over because they cannot grasp the most basic concept that the president is capable of taking the government and turning it into a machine that spends trillions of dollars on his own personal interests instead of the citizens he’s supposed to represent.
George Bush and his friends frequently speak of bringing democracy to the world, yet they seem to think that the USA isn’t worthy of keeping what democracy we have. They have decided that we cannot handle knowing the truth or deciphering the truth amongst the clouds of disinformation and junk science. They have decided that we are too stupid (and it seems they might be right in most cases) to figure this stuff out on our own, so they’ll just ban its release so as to not befuddle us.
The USGS has an immense wealth of information that is very informative. Just because a lot of Americans cannot understand the information doesn’t mean that others can’t. Nor should it mean that, since the majority of Americans don’t read this information, it isn’t worthy to be published. Many other scientists and science buffs enjoy reading this information and learning both sides of an issue. The lack of information means that we are shutting down debate, research, and real understanding of scientific methods and principles.
As early as ten years ago, Americans would laugh at you when you would suggest anything like this could happen. You’d be labeled a lunatic, a crackpot, and a conspiracy junkie, never to be taken seriously on anything. Today, however, people are starting to take notice.
What this boils down to is a basic censorship of ideas. We’ve been seeing this type of behavior from the White House for a few years now. American citizens need to speak up and inform their representatives in Washington that this is not what we want. We want our civil liberties and freedoms back. We want to be able to publish differing views on everything, even if it’s something as silly as a flying spaghetti monster.
It is wrong to suppress the information of facts merely because they may have a different view than what the current administration believes. While the USGS has been in trouble before for falsifying documentation, it should be noted that we may never know if it happens again if this new system does indeed get fully implemented.
Hopefully, on January 20, 2007, when the Democrats place Henry Waxman [pdf] as chairman of the Government Reform Committee, he will continue to speak up against the lying and secrecy that has fallen upon Washington. And, even more wishful thinking, that the American people will make enough of a stink about it, whether it be by calling, writing, voting or all three, forcing policy changes that will allow the government to be freer than it has been for the last six years.
Until then, or 2008 when Bush leaves office, most people will probably take the route of least resistance. That is, to sit on the couch and do nothing because to fight for something means to resist your status quo. It means doing whatever is necessary to tell Washington that stripping our freedoms, rights, and privileges in the name of protecting us from terrorism and providing security is wrong. And they can’t waste time on that when they only have a few minutes left to vote for American Idol.
So, it is left up to us that are sick and tired of these policies to do something. We need to continue the fight against the farcical dangers that Washington says we face and help to restore what we once had, for ourselves and for the stupid and lazy.


