The Columbus Dispatch

Our choice: protect ourselves or act stupid and risk death

- Your Turn Douglas C. Neckers

I worry about America — but for different reasons than many do.

I worry because at a time when we need more money spent on science, when we need, for example, more money for research into viruses, some in Washington want to cut the proposed budget for the National Science Foundation.

The foundation is a main source for funding university research in this nation. President Joe Biden proposed a National Science Foundation budget for next year of more than $10 billion – not nearly enough, but up from the $8.5 billion of the year before.

But the appropriat­ions committees in both houses of Congress have slashed that, and there are those who would cut that to as little as $3 billion, which would come close to destroying scientific research in our nation.

This would be nearly the worst thing this country could do.

With more than 790,000 in this nation dead from the coronaviru­s, and the threat of other viruses very real, we need more, not less scientific research. It is true that until now, the thrust of that research has been devoted too much to weapons and not enough to medicine.

But our ability to meet these challenges is being threatened by some in Washington who have little understand­ing of science, and who owe their loyalty to a particular lobby, like U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin (D-W.VA.) and the coal industry.

Coal was once the fuel that powered the industrial revolution. But it is a dirty and dwindling resource and an environmen­tal hazard. Neverthele­ss, the coal industry isn’t ready to die. Today, Manchin is the ultimate swing vote in the U.S. Senate – and also a man with millions in coal stock.

Is it any wonder he opposes President Biden’s clean energy program?

What is more baffling is that Ohio voters sent Mike Carey, a Republican coal industry lobbyist, to Congress in a special election this year. The district includes most of Columbus, where a forest of cranes has risen at Ohio State University, supposedly building innovation centers.

Is their new congressma­n going to bring coal barons to town? How many people in Columbus want more coal?

Yesterday we reached the second anniversar­y of the emergence of the worst and most lethal virus in known world history.

But even though it is still raging, parents from Nantucket to Nevada are still complainin­g because their kids have to wear masks in school and refuse to be vaccinated against its potentiall­y lethal consequenc­es.

Many are the same folks who bellyached last year because their kids were home doing schoolwork, thanks to online technology.

“My little Tommy absolutely needs socializat­ion,” they said. I might have thought keeping him alive should have been her greater priority. They may not believe in the virus, but the virus doesn’t care.

The world has changed, and we can either protect ourselves accordingl­y, or act stupid and risk death.

Some praise today’s science community for producing multiple effective vaccines. But that took months. I think they got caught with their pants down.

Why don’t we have a division of the National Institutes of Health devoted to viral diseases? Why aren’t those who run NIH out there fighting as vigorously for research on lethal diseases that are killing us as the military fight for more nuclear submarines?

Yes, I’m worried about America, and you should be, too. Those who have taken charge don’t seem very smart. When we need more systems using sunshine, they are bringing us more coal.

Common sense is a more important commodity. But the United States seems have lost most of that, even as the effects of climate change are more and more obvious to us all. We need enough common sense to face the facts.

Otherwise, we may not be able to face our grandchild­ren.

Douglas C. Neckers is Mcmaster distinguis­hed research professor (emeritus) and founder of the Center for Photochemi­cal Sciences at Bowling Green State University.

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