Over the course of the pandemic (and before that, in debates over climate change, stem cells, etc.), liberals have insisted that we must listen to science and heed the scientists. It was a cornerstone of President-elect Joe Bidens campaign and a constant refrain of Donald Trump critics.

Taken literally, I endorse the phrase listen to science wholeheartedly. Scientists have important things to say to policymakers and citizens alike and lets not forget that in a democracy, voters are policymakers too. A well-informed electorate is a useful check on ill-informed politicians.

The problem, however, is that the people who say listen to science tend not to mean it literally but figuratively, and worse, intermittently.

In the aftermath of George Floyds killing in May, massive protests against racism and police brutality erupted across the nation. The same champions of science suddenly changed their tune about mass gatherings because this was a good cause.

In a pluralistic society, the definition of a good cause is going to vary. Telling people that they cant see their dying parents, attend a funeral or make a living because science says its too risky but that protesting systemic racism and police brutality is OK is a great way to convince millions of people that listen to science is a weaponized political term, not a universal apolitical standard.

Indeed, liberals handed Trump precisely the kind of foil he wanted. At rallies, the president would tell the packed crowds that they dont want you to go to church, work, school or sporting events, but they think social-justice protests are fine. He even started calling his rallies protests to highlight the double standard.

Some epidemiologists made things worse by stepping out of their lanes.

We should always evaluate the risks and benefits of efforts to control the virus, Jennifer Nuzzo, an epidemiologist at Johns Hopkins, declared on Twitter. In this moment the public health risks of not protesting to demand an end to systemic racism greatly exceed the harms of the virus.

Im open to the idea that if the protests this summer could have ended racism, the benefits would outweigh the risks. But where is the evidence that happened? Is racism over now?

I trust epidemiologists to explain how epidemiology works. But there is no transitive property to their expertise. The opinion that the protests would even come close to eradicating systemic racism and police brutality is just that an opinion, and a flimsy one at that. Moreover, the opinion of medical scientists on such matters has no more authority than that of plumbers or electricians.

Which brings us to the point. Again, politicians should listen to scientists, but at the end of the day, they must consider factors from outside science. Thats not only fine but unavoidable. Using the phrase listen to the science as a shield for your preferred policies or as an attack on policies you dislike is not only bad faith, its a bad idea, because it will undermine the credibility of scientists and politicians alike.

Now that were entering the vaccination chapter of this horrible story, many of the same science worshipers are, in effect, telling the scientists to listen to politics.

In California, theres an effort to factor historical injustice into the vaccination rollout as a form of reparations. Because indigenous Americans were treated horribly in the past, the argument goes, they should be moved higher on the list of vaccine recipients.

A similar argument has emerged over whether the elderly those most likely to die from COVID-19 should be moved down the list because older populations are whiter, as noted by Harald Schmidt, an assistant professor of medical ethics and health policy at the University of Pennsylvania.

Instead of giving additional health benefits to those who already had more of them, we can start to level the playing field a bit, Schmidt told the New York Times.

Scientists are free to make such arguments, but these arent scientific arguments. They are political opinions, and they dont become any more legitimate simply because you wear a lab coat at work.

Jonah Goldberg is editor-in-chief of The Dispatch.

Follow this link:

For progressives, listen to science is subjective - Boston Herald

Related Post

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


Refresh