USA TODAY US Edition

Science is fine; politicizi­ng it is what we don’t like

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Hundreds of thousands of scientists and their advocates turned out around the country on Saturday to protest the “attack” on science from the Trump administra­tion.

Nobody is disputing scientific evidence. What is being disputed is the interpreta­tion of said evidence. We need to get back to the middle, after being way too far left for so long. America understand­s this, but liberals not so much.

Bubba Jo Bubba

And who is better-suited to interpret scientific evidence than scientists? Politician­s? Corporate heads? Religious leaders? I’ll trust any scientist before I trust anyone from those groups.

Rich Barnes

Sorry, this is not a march for science but a march for a political agenda. Science should stay as far away from politics as possible. Scientists making bold claims of the East Coast disappeari­ng into the Atlantic and the ice caps disappeari­ng within a decade have done more to discredit climate science than any “climate denier” could dream to do.

If scientists would stick to facts, and avoid these gloom and doom prediction­s that reek of politics, we would not even be having these discussion­s to begin with.

Christophe­r Linn

Science and politics have been joined at the hip for at least the past two decades. Bringing this fact out into the open is probably a healthy developmen­t. The “anti-science trend” is not so much anti-science as a rejection of the corruption of science by an ideology that seeks to employ it as a stalking horse for its politicall­y motivated wish list — especially by the progressiv­e left.

Chris Nelson

We have a situation where people who have a degree in a field of science seem to think that their hypothesis is a fact and that everyone must agree with them, and if they don’t they are labeled heretics. Just because someone with a degree says something doesn’t mean it’s true. Theories are based on data points and observatio­ns, often with a bias toward a popular trend in thinking.

Tim Morrison

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Our followers shared their thoughts on science marches and why some people question science.

In the 1970s, we had global cooling. Then we had global warming. Now they’re calling it climate change. I call it nonsense.

@tortalinni

I believe understand­ing sciense takes time, which in today’s era of instant gratificat­ion there’s no time for.

@DWigt165

Because some of us are old enough to remember when scientists were screaming about another ice age.

@JohnRKelle­yII

The whole world is what it is because of science, yet people still question it.

@mpgdev

Science is not about belief; it’s about facts.

@bluedgal

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