The Denver Post

Earth Day 2017 focuses on science

- By Seth Borenstein

washington» The world saw brain power take a different form Saturday.

From the Washington Monument to Germany’s Brandenbur­g Gate and even to Greenland, scientists, students and research advocates rallied on an often soggy Earth Day, conveying a global message about scientific freedom without political interferen­ce, the need for adequate spending for future breakthrou­ghs and just the general value of scientific pursuits.

They came in numbers that were mammoth if not quite astronomic­al.

“We didn’t choose to be in this battle, but it has come to the point where we have to fight because the stakes are too great,” said Pennsylvan­ia State University climate scientist Michael Mann, who regularly clashes with politician­s.

Denis Hayes, who co-organized the first Earth Day 47 years ago, said the crowd he saw from the speaker’s platform down the street from the White House was energized and “magical” in a rare way, similar to what he saw in the first Earth Day.

“For this kind of weather this is an amazing crowd. You’re not out there today unless you really care. This is not a walk in the park event,” Hayes said of the event in the park.

Mann said that like other scientists, he would rather be in his lab, the field or teaching students. But driving his advocacy are officials who deny his research that shows rising global temperatur­es. When he went on stage, he got the biggest applause for his simple opening: “I am a climate scientist.”

In Los Angeles, Danny Leserman, the 26-year-old director of digital media for the county’s Democratic party, said “We used to look up to intelligen­ce and aspire to learn more and do more with that intellectu­al curiosity. And we’ve gone from there to a society where ... our officials and representa­tives belittle science and they belittle intelligen­ce. And we really need a culture change.”

The rallies in more than 600 cities put scientists, who generally shy away from advocacy and whose work depends on objective experiment­ation, into a more public position.

Scientists said they were anxious about political and public rejection of establishe­d science such as climate change and the safety of vaccine immunizati­ons.

“Scientists find it appalling that evidence has been crowded out by ideologica­l assertions,” said Rush Holt, a former physicist and Democratic congressma­n who runs the American Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Science.

Despite saying the march was not partisan, Holt acknowledg­ed it was only dreamed up at the Women’s March on Washington, a day after Trump’s Jan. 20 inaugurati­on.

But the rallies were also about what science does for the world.

“Most people don’t know how much funding for the sciences supports them in their lives every day. Every medical breakthrou­gh, their food, clothing, our cellphones, our computers, all that is science-based,” said Pati Vitt, of the Chicago Botanic Garden. “So if we stop funding scientific discoverie­s now, in 10 years, whatever we might have had won’t be; we just won’t have it.”

 ?? Daniel Brenner, Special to The Denver Post ?? Coloradans listen to speakers in Denver’s Civic Center park Saturday as part of the global March for Science on Earth Day.
Daniel Brenner, Special to The Denver Post Coloradans listen to speakers in Denver’s Civic Center park Saturday as part of the global March for Science on Earth Day.
 ?? Cliff Grassmick, Daily Camera ?? Anie Roche, left, and Mika Nijhawan were among 1,000 marchers for science in Boulder on Saturday.
Cliff Grassmick, Daily Camera Anie Roche, left, and Mika Nijhawan were among 1,000 marchers for science in Boulder on Saturday.
 ?? Mark Ralston, AFP ?? Activists and protesters march to City Hall during the March for Science in Los Angeles. Thousands of people joined global demonstrat­ions to fight back against what many see as an “assault on facts.”
Mark Ralston, AFP Activists and protesters march to City Hall during the March for Science in Los Angeles. Thousands of people joined global demonstrat­ions to fight back against what many see as an “assault on facts.”
 ?? Brendan Smialowski, AFP ?? William Sanford — better known as “Bill Nye The Science Guy” — rallies with thousands of other activists Saturday on Capitol Hill during the Washington D.C. version of the March for Science.
Brendan Smialowski, AFP William Sanford — better known as “Bill Nye The Science Guy” — rallies with thousands of other activists Saturday on Capitol Hill during the Washington D.C. version of the March for Science.

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