Perhaps I know the subject too well. Or should quietly accept that The Atlantic needs a lot of click-fodder to pay the bills.
Taking the headline at face value, though, they’re not wrong at all, and this is something I’ve tried warning folks over myself for several years now. Our collective response to COVID was truly the alarm bells going off (vaccine conspiracies, anti-masking, denialism, etc), and now we’re seeing an anti-science (and anti-reality) administration celebrate the gutting of our scientific prestige in the name of nostalgia for -isms. While authors and commentators are handwringing over whether the US is “cooked” scientifically, those in the know or who are observant already know the answer is an emphatic YES.
With the present attack on science, we’ve effectively outsourced one of the last remaining industries that kept us afloat as an empire. We have no real manufacturing (at least of anything others want), and what we do make is of decreasing quality so that shareholders can get paid (e.g. Boeing jets, American cars, and now even SIG handguns - if we can’t make decent planes, cars, and guns, then what do we even export besides raw materials/agriculture?). Without science driving R&D, we won’t even have the patents on innovative new medicines, technologies, or energy sources that we can export abroad.
So yeah. We’re done as an Empire. This isn’t something we can roll back next election, and I don’t think the current crop of Americans have felt enough pain to suddenly grow cooperative and engage in self-sacrifice for the greater good.
> American cars, and now even SIG handguns
SIG is a German/Swiss company, not American. American cars vary in quality wildly by manufacturer, with Stellantis being the worst offender of what you describe but Chevrolet being the least bad (at the moment).
American gun culture and the gun business in America is a huge outlier internationally. I would find it hard to think of why that would be healthy.
The person I replied to was saying that American manufacturing was trending towards lower quality because of a shift in culture in American companies that sacrificed quality for profit.
The fact that Sig guns are manufactured in the US, or the fact that they are guns as opposed to some other product, are not actually relevant to that. Since Sig is a German company, then one would expect that they would not be subject to the same drop in quality OP described. Since they are, that indicates that the problem described is present in Europe as well and is not a uniquely American phenomenon.
With nothing like that looming right now, there is no check and balance on the anti-science regiment, and so sliding downhill we go. Sadly I don't see this changing either, unless theoretical physicists turn up the basis for some new weapon.
Maybe it’s OK. I don’t have to think about predators, which bugs are edible, and I have an entertainment rectangle in my pocket that I can use to tease people on the internet.
You act like this is something specific to one party when in fact it is representative of both parties, aka the Uniparty.
All agents of capital have blood on their hands from the pandemic they fumbled and that has not yet ended:
How the press manufactured consent for never-ending COVID reinfections
https://www.thegauntlet.news/p/how-the-press-manufactured-co...
Also, this is nothing specific to the US, though considering how many countries followed the lead of the CDC etc, one could reasonably argue the US is most to blame. But don't let that distract you from the fact that ultimately, global capital runs the show:
Modern Capitalism Is Weirder Than You Think It also no longer works as advertised.
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2022/03/how-asset-managers-h... (https://archive.ph/Ysw6k)
What a silly comment with zero connection to scientific reality.
> Never-ending reinfections were always inevitable when the first carrier left Wuhan, so "manufactured consent" or lack thereof are utterly irrelevant.
False. When properly and consistently worn, N95 respirators effectively stop COVID transmission.
> It's just another coronavirus much like the others that were already endemic.
It very clearly bucks previous trends, considering:
38% had self-reported long covid after 3 infections https://health-infobase.canada.ca/covid-19/post-covid-condit...
40% of the undergrad students reported brain fog due to COVID-19. 37% of the undergraduates exhibited impaired cognition up to 17 months post-infection.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S088915912...
https://oem.bmj.com/content/81/9/471 33.6% of healthcare workers have symptoms meeting NICE criteria for long Covid. Only 7.6% have a formal diagnosis
20% of kids (ages 6-11) and 14% of teens have for long covid https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/2822770
30% have long covid https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanwpc/article/PIIS2666-6...
36% had long covid https://www.medrxiv.org/content/10.1101/2025.01.01.24319384v...
There's a load of studies that something like 90% of people with long covid don't get better years later.
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanepe/article/PIIS2666-7...
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-022-29513-z
https://www.ijidonline.com/article/S1201-9712(23)00760-9/ful...
https://www.bmj.com/content/381/bmj-2022-074425
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanpsy/article/PIIS2215-0...
https://www.nature.com/articles/s43856-024-00657-x
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/eclinm/article/PIIS2589-5...
https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanam/article/PIIS2667-19...
A common type of long covid is myalgic encephalomyelitis which is generally lifelong:
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15699087/
Here's two reviews papers about long covid which both say that common long covid subtypes are generally lifelong
"Long COVID" isn't anything unique or special. An infection by most any virus can cause similar long-term symptoms in a subset of patients. It sucks for them, but that's just one of the many risks of living real world. The rest of us aren't going to waste time worrying about one more minor respiratory virus among hundreds of other ones.
Give people the facts about COVID, that it is basically like airborne AIDS, and then let them decide. Unfortunately they were never given that chance thanks to capital's forced messaging on the issue. Even most doctors are drinking the Koolaid. Everyone has a nuked immune system and have become used to getting sick constantly as a result, all seasons of the year.
> "Long COVID" isn't anything unique or special. An infection by most any virus can cause similar long-term symptoms in a subset of patients.
What's different about SARS-COV-2 is that it's constantly mutating and reinfecting at drastically greater rates than anything else we're used to dealing with. Each reinfection increases the risk of long COVID, causes measurable IQ loss, etc.
But keep burying your head in the sand so that you can remain blissfully ignorant.
It's normal for someone who's taken a position fully in favor of "science" to show their bias against what they see as the most eminent threats. There's no attempt here to hide the bias, in fact there's a fairly respectable attempt to explain the reason for the bias which you don't always get.
Any anti-science crusaders from their point of view are not as sensible when they don't explain their bias either. Nobody expects it to be zero bias so when an opinionated person owns up to it this is just a little something that could lead back to better understanding.
You want to be able to compromise on the roots of disagreement, rather than mindless name-calling if you want to recover one of the most sorely-missed elements of greatness.
Naturally what brought this to mind is that the whole time almost nobody is paying any attention to the little detail where sliced bread has never been the best bread anyway :\
If it's informing and convincing people who don't agree - I'm thinking that 99.9% of those folks aren't going to read any longish article in The Atlantic. And the 0.1% who might read will quickly be repelled if not angered by the article's tone. Similar for folks who do agree, then try to convince others with arguments and tones from the article.
If a preacher has no interest in actually spreading the Good News - preaching to the choir can be quite comfortable. And he's free to take nasty digs at unbelievers while doing that.
The past is a different country. The problems existing now are not the same as those of two empires from 100 years ago.
I agree.
Not exactly by a long shot.
More like the Reagan era in the US where the pressure to dissolve scientific opportunity was strongest against places that conducted tasks more like Bell Labs most of all.
Eventually "all" was lost as labs that did survive best were not primarily "research", but that was the component which was jettisoned in an attempt to stay afloat.
If the ball was not dropped that badly that far back, Chinese research and especially their military would still be decades behind without any doubts.
NASA would have been on Mars a long time ago.
So you've got a good point, you learn even more when you look directly at the USA and not 100 years back.
Especially if you want to see how it can have a lasting influence on understanding what you're doing wrong right now.
But articles consisting of only Hitler and Stalin comparisons persuade just about no one and is not the type of discourse I expect from HN.
I also agree with you. A more recent look is much more relevant and insightful than the linked article.
You shouldn't need to bring up those tired regimes even if you're trying to emphasize unrecognized analogies.
Especially when you've got a 92-year-old Soviet with a first-hand account, that speaks for itself without any further name-dropping.
Do you think Stalin and Hitler as we know were the same Stalin and Hitler as experienced in the 1920s-1930s? If you shed the baggage, can't parallels be drawn to the modern era?
Authoritarianism of the 2020s looks quite different from the 1920s, the 2020s have the Competitive Authoritarianism flavour of it, it's different, it will attack institutions in different ways than simply shutting them down and imprisoning members, it's more subtle, more disperse, but still has the same underlying traits. Comparisons are apt, even if just as a reminder of how things historically evolved from the pre-authoritarian phase into a full-blown one, remembering to trace that is as convincing now as it was in the 1950s...
I think the point is we may be past persuasion. The damage is done.
My takeaway from these articles is to pay attention to and invest more in China.
The article mentions Lysenko, a Soviet "biologist" who set back Soviet biology for a generation. He believed, for example, that plants in the USSR would not compete with each other for resources the way they did in capitalist societies, but would instead share resources. He asserted that crops could therefore be planted closer together in the USSR, yielding more food per acre. Evidence to the contrary was suppressed: Lysenko had Stalin's ear and a zealot's confidence. The rest of the field was either purged or fell in line. Scientists lost their jobs or got sent to Siberia.
The comparison to the present-day US isn't perfect, but it also isn't hyperbole. While scientists in the US mostly aren't in the same type of danger of arrest for speaking out (assuming ICE doesn't start targeting political opponents), but we're looking at a similar era in the US in terms of making theories and data fit ideology. RFK, Jr. has his preferred biological theories about vaccines, autism, and disease. Government scientists are at risk of losing their jobs and their financial security if they reference (or publish) findings that Kennedy objects to. Universities are still (as far as I can tell) safe for natural scientists because the first wave of the crackdown is focused on the humanities and social sciences, so this purge of scientists is limited to federal government employees, but the effect is real, and it isn't a stretch to assume that if the government finds success in the current purge, it will go looking further afield.
The human impact is significant for those affected, but the article is right to point out that this purge of scientists from the government for ideological goals will have a broader impact for society: it will set back American science.
Kennedy doesn't even have to be wrong on the facts for the culture he's creating to be toxic for federal science in his department and beyond. Just the politicization of science pushes our country towards being a scientific backwater.
At least one of them seems to have an introspective capacity, at some level. So that's nice?
Genuinely I wonder if this would make for good charity? Where can I donate to promote political introspection? I'll consider any mainstream spot on the political spectrum.
Science is beneficial for progress, it makes sense at a 20,000 ft level for the government to encourage it, but politicians deciding which grants to offer, guidelines for what can be published by grant recipients, being able to make serious threats against universities and other such research institutions with few restrictions - there is no argument for a government to have such power. Either publicly funded research institutions should have strong protections in place for their academic integrity, or some alternative to government funding for these institutions should be the norm.
Well, kinda—but only because they're not cracking down on any specific views in the natural sciences; they're just cutting their funding entirely.
Large swaths of natural science research at US universities relied (past tense) on federal grant funding, and that's effectively been eliminated across the board.
They just don't want any science research being done, period, unless it's 100% funded and owned by for-profit companies.
The situation has only devolved since he wrote this.
Can we save it? I want to believe it, but I'm more and more of the mind that we need to create a new scientific institution to replace the old one, whatever that means.
LoganDark•20h ago