Worse than you think —

Trump flips science the bird with new budget

Cuts threaten US leadership in science, would result in widespread job losses.

Enlarge / WASHINGTON, DC - MARCH 13: US President Donald J. Trump (C) delivers brief remarks before signing an executive order entitled, 'Comprehensive Plan for Reorganizing the Executive Branch', beside members of his Cabinet in the Oval Office of the White House on March 13, 2017 in Washington, DC.
Michael Reynolds-Pool | Getty Image

Yesterday, the Trump administration released its first proposed budget outline. While this is just the first step in what will inevitably be extensive negotiations with Congress, it gives a clear indication of what Trump's priorities are. First and foremost, he is focused on the military, which will see a $54 billion increase in spending, offset by cuts or wholesale elimination of programs elsewhere. Science is clearly not a priority, as it is repeatedly targeted for cuts in every agency that funds it.

But those cuts aren't evenly distributed. NASA's budget is almost entirely unscathed, although Earth sciences research funded by the agency will be cut to expand funding elsewhere. The National Science Foundation, a major source of grants for fundamental research, isn't even mentioned, so there's no sense of how it will fare. And the harshest cuts appear to be directed at biomedical research, which will see a dramatic 20 percent drop in funding for the National Institutes of Health.

NIH hammered

For fiscal year 2018, the president's budget calls for a $15.1 billion cut to the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), a decrease of almost 18 percent. The proposed cuts to NIH would see the research agency lose $5.8 billion, dropping its budget from $31 billion to just $25.9 billion. Structural changes make the effective cuts closer to $6.3 billion, or over 20 percent. That would mean the smallest biomedical science budget since 2002. The real-world impact would be far greater, as biomedical research costs are increasing much faster than the rate of inflation.

NIH grants have been far harder to obtain after a long period where budgets barely kept pace with inflation. This large and sudden cut will have a devastating impact on the US research enterprise.

Just two pages of bullet points are devoted to the cuts intended for HHS, so it is still difficult to identify exactly which parts of NIH would be most greatly affected. The Fogarty International Center, which coordinates with researchers abroad—and also studies health effects of climate change—will be eliminated, although this center currently only receives $70 million a year, making it a very minor part of NIH's budget. One notable survivor? The 21st Century CURES program, promoted by former Vice President Joe Biden, will continue to see an increase in funding. This program allocates funding to cancer and neuroscience research, while streamlining FDA drug approval.

The White House's proposal would also see the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality absorbed into NIH. AHRQ's job is to make healthcare safer and more effective. In FY17, the agency's budget was $469 million, so folding it into NIH in without adding its half-billion in funding means the effective NIH cut is substantially larger than $5.8 billion.

NASA spared, heavy cuts elsewhere

Most other science funding sources will see their budgets shrink. NASA is a rare exception in that its budget is dropping by less than a percent, to $19 billion. The mission to Europa is specifically mentioned as part of a $1.9 billion infusion into the planetary sciences budget, up from $1.4 billion. But it's mentioned in that no money is provided for it, which sets Trump up for a collision with Congress. Earth sciences drops by $200 million to $1.8 billion, as development of four Earth-monitoring satellites will be terminated, and funding for research grants in the area will be reduced.

There's a continued emphasis on public-private partnerships, though specifics are few. The Orion capsule and Space Launch System rocket are slated for another $3.7 billion in development money. The goal of sending it to an asteroid returned to a near-Earth orbit, is scrapped, but the budget doesn't name any exploration goals in its stead.

NASA's Education group, which runs a lot of public-facing programs, will be eliminated entirely.

The White House also intends to completely abolish the Chemical Safety Board. This is the part of the government responsible for investigating industrial disasters like the refinery explosions that occur in Texas with an alarming periodicity, an odd choice in a budget that stresses the importance of "keeping Americans safe."

At the Department of the Interior, the US Geological Survey would see a cut of over 10 percent, dropping it to $900 million. Money to acquire new federal land would be cut, and additional budget would be allocated to increasing the use of existing land for energy development.

Energy

Science in the Department of Energy would also face severe cuts, with a budget that "demonstrates the administration's commitment to reasserting the proper role of what has become a sprawling federal government." While the Department's overall budget would be down by 5.6 percent (down to $28 billion), shifting funds within the DOE would result in a de-emphasis on energy and physics in order to provide more money for nuclear weapons programs. Nuclear weapons would actually see a $1.4 billion increase in funding, leading to more severe cuts elsewhere. Gone entirely are the ARPA-E advanced energy program and the Advanced Technology Vehicle Manufacturing Program, with the private sector expected to take up those high-risk, long term research investments.

The Office of Science in the DOE would see a cut of nearly 20 percent (down $900 billion). As its webpage states, "The Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States," funding the national labs, international collaborations like the Large Hadron Collider, and individual research grants to institutions. Its remit includes everything from fusion and high-energy physics to biology and high performance computing. A cut of this magnitude will undoubtedly lead to job losses nationwide.

Cuts to DOE science funding will have a widespread effect, as indicated by this view of where the funding goes.
Enlarge / Cuts to DOE science funding will have a widespread effect, as indicated by this view of where the funding goes.

One state that may see a bit more job action? Nevada, as $120 million will be allocated to the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste facility in an attempt to restart licensing now that one of its primary opponents, former Senator Harry Reid, has retired. Otherwise, about $150 million in assistance to states for energy-efficiency programs would also be cut, forcing the states to either curtail the programs or come up with their own funding.

Environment

The Environmental Protection Agency comes in for one of the biggest whippings. The budget calls for a $2.6 billion funding cut—a reduction of nearly a third—and cuts loose 3,200 of EPA’s 15,000 employees. Funding for enforcement of EPA regulations is reduced by a quarter, and the Office of Research and Development loses half its funding—partly from STAR grants, which fund research and graduate education. Grants for states and tribes to support environmental programs are also cut nearly in half.

The Superfund program for cleaning up contaminated industrial sites loses 30 percent of its funding, and the EPA’s Chesapeake Bay cleanup and restoration program dies entirely. Even Trump’s own choice for EPA Administrator, Scott Pruitt, has tried to defend money for Superfund, and he promised to support the Chesapeake Bay program during his confirmation hearing.

The Great Lakes Restoration Initiative “and other geographic programs” are also eliminated completely in the budget. At least 50 other programs would be shut down—most of which are not named. The list does include a program to screen chemicals for endocrine disrupting health effects, funding for infrastructure in native Alaskan villages threatened by climate change, and the popular Energy Star program that gives consumers information about the energy efficiency of products.

And, of course, the budget calls for $100 million in cuts from EPA climate programs and research. This includes discontinuing funding for the Clean Power Plan, which the Trump Administration is expected to attempt to undo. Part of a 29 percent cut for the State Department comes from eliminating funding for international climate change programs—including the payments agreed to as part of the Paris Agreement, which were intended to help less-developed nations deal with the consequences of climate change and acquire renewable energy technology.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) also loses funding in the proposed budget, although there are fewer specifics. The budget claims to cut funding needed for polar weather satellites currently being built “by better reflecting the actual risk of a gap in polar satellite coverage.” With the satellite network aging, researchers and weather forecasters have expressed concern about satellites dying without an available replacement.

The budget would also eliminate $250 million worth of NOAA’s marine programs, including killing the Sea Grant program that funds university research on coastal habitats and fisheries.

Devastation

As you might expect, there is outrage within the science policy community this morning. In a statement sent to Ars, Benjamin Corb, Director of Public Affairs at the American Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology said:

A $6 billion cut to the National Institutes of Health is unacceptable to the scientific community, and should be unacceptable to the American public as well. President Donald Trump's fiscal year 2018 spending plan erases years worth of bipartisan support for the NIH, and the American biomedical research enterprise which has long been the global leader for biomedical innovation. Cuts this deep threaten America's ability to remain a leader.

Corb's statement applies well beyond biomedical research. These sorts of cuts will lead to widespread job losses in many areas of research, which will trigger a loss of expertise that could take a decade to rebuild if funding were ever restored. They pose a long-term threat to US leadership in the sciences, and the elimination of international partnerships that will result will cause researchers elsewhere to rethink the role of the US as a reliable collaborator for science.

There is strong support for many of these programs in Congress, however, both because of their local impact on the economy and because some Congress members generally support science. The budget will also face a complicated mix of budget hawks, democratic opposition, and individual priorities there. This isn't the last word, but it's a clear message: science funding cannot expect support from the Trump administration.

50 Reader Comments

  1. On a personal note, I have to feel for my former colleagues at NIH; until 2015 I worked at the agency and crafting my institute's annual budget justification to Congress was a large part of my role. During that time it often felt like a pointless task; the act of passing a proper budget was often too much to ask of Congress, which instead passed what's known as continuing resolutions—in effect simply carrying over the same funding level from one year to the next. Given the document we read this morning, one has to hope that Congress has as little appetitive for the destruction of US biomedical research as the rest of us.
    14546 posts | registered
  2. Make the Dark Ages Great Again!
    144 posts | registered
  3. "The National Science Foundation, a major source of grants for fundamental research isn't even mentioned, so there's no sense of how it will fare"
    Not a surprise since for Trump and his administration they do not exist, especially their findings-conclusions.
    559 posts | registered
  4. Although I can't help but be pessimistic that the legislative process for enacting the budget will fix some of these dangerous spending cuts, I hope Congress can surprise me and not only reduce some federal spending but also maintain high levels of research.
    3094 posts | registered
  5. Who needs knowledge when you can have weapons and walls?
    (/s needed?)
    325 posts | registered
  6. There is so much wtf generated by this budget that I can't even. How in the hell is gutting funding for the arts and sciences (not to mention diplomacy and health) supposed to make us great again?

    Oh right something something police state, terrorism, nationalism.
    333 posts | registered
  7. A fence and another fighter jet is so much more important than critical infrastructure, VA care, and science. Still a smaller government too, somehow.
    Edit: I forgot the //sarcasm, stop downvoting. Except you know who, a downvote from you is an endorsement.

    Last edited by Vincent294 on Thu Mar 16, 2017 9:03 am

    663 posts | registered
  8. Oblig:

    BUT HER EMAILS
    BUT BERNIE
    6479 posts | registered
  9. The "outrage" comes from people addicted to spending taxpayer dollars.

    I'm not surprised that Ars parrots their thinking, which is that King Government rules all and must be allowed to expand.


    Or people who know history and realize how much modern science had its foundation in government-supported research? Strange how more defense pork spending is good though.

    Weak trolling is weak.

    Last edited by JoeManco on Thu Mar 16, 2017 9:13 am

    144 posts | registered
  10. Research dollars are some of the most productive dollars the Government spends. They actually have an ROI and create all those nice high-paying jobs that communities like.

    So of course Il Douche wants to slaughter research. No coal in sight.

    <edit>

    Anyone else struck by how Russian this budget is? All military, nothing else.
    2964 posts | registered
  11. From the White House Budget Blueprint:
    Quote:
    The Administration will take an evidence-based approach to improving programs and services—using real, hard data to identify poorly performing organizations and programs.


    I'd be lying if I said that I didn't actually laugh a little when I read this line.
    3094 posts | registered
  12. The "outrage" comes from people addicted to spending taxpayer dollars.


    To be frank, after three successive administrations failing to properly fund and manage the military, I fear the $54 billion won't be enough.


    The irony in the troll comment is beyond limits.
    1948 posts | registered
  13. The "outrage" comes from people addicted to spending taxpayer dollars.

    I'm not surprised that Ars parrots their thinking, which is that King Government rules all and must be allowed to expand.

    Uh, no. The outrage comes from the fact that an enormous amount of science funding (and especially funding in high-risk areas or subjects that don't have obvious immediate benefits) comes from "King Government", with that funding being the primary target of these cuts rather than excess regulations.
    5798 posts | registered
  14. JoeManco wrote:
    The "outrage" comes from people addicted to spending taxpayer dollars.

    I'm not surprised that Ars parrots their thinking, which is that King Government rules all and must be allowed to expand.


    Or people who know history and realize how much modern science had its foundation in government-supported research? Strange how more defense pork spending is good though.

    Weak trolling is weakl.


    It's strange, national defense is in the Constitution; gimme projects like the NEA aren't.

    I'd say it falls under "promote the general welfare"
    3094 posts | registered
  15. This coprolitic president is just... ugh.
    499 posts | registered
  16. The "outrage" comes from people addicted to spending taxpayer dollars.

    I'm not surprised that Ars parrots their thinking, which is that King Government rules all and must be allowed to expand.

    To be frank, after three successive administrations failing to properly fund and manage the military, I fear the $54 billion won't be enough.

    "only three of 58 Army brigade combat teams are ready to fight tonight; less than half of the air force is ready; the marine corps has not met its goal for flight hours since 2012, and half of the navy’s aircraft are grounded for parts or maintenance."


    If the government wont encourage investment, who will?

    Private enterprise only cares about profit. They won't research something that doesn't immediately lead to some kind of profit motive. The government is not a for profit business. It is suppose to work to the benefit of the people. What research is done now will not immediately lead to direct monetary benefits, but it can deepen our knowledge which in itself is a benefit.

    Every other major player is investing heavily in scientific research for future expansion. If the US won't do it, they will lose out as a result.
    510 posts | registered
  17. Oletros wrote:
    The "outrage" comes from people addicted to spending taxpayer dollars.


    To be frank, after three successive administrations failing to properly fund and manage the military, I fear the $54 billion won't be enough.


    The irony in the troll comment is beyond limits.


    Were the words I used too large for you to comprehend?

    The ctrl-left denies all forms of reality.


    My mother language is not Englis, but I think that the word is long, not large.

    The alt-trolls denies all forms of intelligence
    1948 posts | registered
  18. Quote:
    While this is just the first step in what will inevitably be extensive negotiations with Congress


    Important to keep all of this in perspective. This proposal has zero chance of passing, but it is in line with Trump's lifelong technique of asking for an enormous first offer, using the anchoring technique to set the state for further negotiations. Now everyone will focus on how crazy and "destructive" these proposals are and when Trump settles in on a far more "reasonable" number it will seem like a "win". For example, $2.6B is a crazy cut for the EPA, but if he settles on $500MM (still a very large cut) it will be seen as a progressive victory.

    There is nothing surprising at all about this budget.
    6127 posts | registered
  19. As a person who leans a bit towards the right I have to say that there is so much crazy going on with this administration right now. My dad leans super right and all I can think of between this, and healthcare and the scandal of the day with Trump is 'Good'.

    I am so glad this is happening. I hope people become so disrupted in their everyday lives that they wake up and take notice and then are moved to do something about it.

    I have tried explaining net neutrality to countless people and how the new FCC is hurting common people but I might at well bang my head against a wall.

    To be totally clear, I am so fed up with this administration's leadership. I hope other people, the people who desperately voted for this president, are as shocked/disappointed as I am that in our next election we wake up and make our votes count.

    I am running out of hope and this is my last ditch effort. That this guy pisses off so many people we get rid of him and start bringing balance back.
    5 posts | registered
  20. JoeManco wrote:
    Make the Dark Ages Great Again!

    We look back at that era and take it for granted that it won't happen to us sophisticated 'modern-era' societies. But at some point we'll notice that the pot we're sitting in has become uncomfortably hot.
    15770 posts | registered
  21. Vincent294 wrote:
    A fence and another fighter jet is so much more important than critical infrastructure, VA care, and science. Still a smaller government too, somehow.
    Edit: I forgot the //sarcasm, stop downvoting. Except you know who, a downvote from you is an endorsement.


    The budget doesn't address infrastructure, but Trump is still expecting to push for his $1 trillion plan at a later date. The increase in military funding does increase VA care, substantially. Science is definitely taking it on the chin in this proposal.
    6127 posts | registered
  22. Well, that's really good news for Russia and China. The US won't be a strong competitor for long with stupid moves like this one.

    Last edited by TechTuner777 on Thu Mar 16, 2017 9:11 am

    125 posts | registered
  23. ManuOtaku wrote:
    "The National Science Foundation, a major source of grants for fundamental research isn't even mentioned, so there's no sense of how it will fare"
    Not a surprise since for Trump and his administration they do not exist, especially their findings-conclusions.


    Just don't tell Trump that the NSF has some prime real estate in Arlington - he'll probably try and turn the NSF building into a hotel.
    486 posts | registered
  24. KAL1989 wrote:
    The "outrage" comes from people addicted to spending taxpayer dollars.

    I'm not surprised that Ars parrots their thinking, which is that King Government rules all and must be allowed to expand.

    To be frank, after three successive administrations failing to properly fund and manage the military, I fear the $54 billion won't be enough.

    "only three of 58 Army brigade combat teams are ready to fight tonight; less than half of the air force is ready; the marine corps has not met its goal for flight hours since 2012, and half of the navy’s aircraft are grounded for parts or maintenance."


    If the government wont encourage investment, who will?

    Private enterprise only cares about profit. They won't research something that doesn't immediately lead to some kind of profit motive. The government is not a for profit business. It is suppose to work to the benefit of the people. What research is done now will not immediately lead to direct benefits, but it can deepen our knowledge which in itself is a benefit.

    Every other major player is investing heavily in scientific research for future expansion. If the US won't do it, they will lose out as a result.


    Perhaps you're unaware, but the US currently has twenty trillion dollars in debt (half added by the last administration), and more than one hundred trillion in unfunded liabilities. If anything, this budget should be lambasted for not cutting deeply enough.



    Perhaps you're unaware that national debt doesn't work like personal debt. At all.
    2964 posts | registered
  25. KAL1989 wrote:
    The "outrage" comes from people addicted to spending taxpayer dollars.

    I'm not surprised that Ars parrots their thinking, which is that King Government rules all and must be allowed to expand.

    To be frank, after three successive administrations failing to properly fund and manage the military, I fear the $54 billion won't be enough.

    "only three of 58 Army brigade combat teams are ready to fight tonight; less than half of the air force is ready; the marine corps has not met its goal for flight hours since 2012, and half of the navy’s aircraft are grounded for parts or maintenance."


    If the government wont encourage investment, who will?

    Private enterprise only cares about profit. They won't research something that doesn't immediately lead to some kind of profit motive. The government is not a for profit business. It is suppose to work to the benefit of the people. What research is done now will not immediately lead to direct benefits, but it can deepen our knowledge which in itself is a benefit.

    Every other major player is investing heavily in scientific research for future expansion. If the US won't do it, they will lose out as a result.


    Perhaps you're unaware, but the US currently has twenty trillion dollars in debt (half added by the last administration), and more than one hundred trillion in unfunded liabilities. If anything, this budget should be lambasted for not cutting deeply enough.


    So you cut funding to the things that will bring in future larger GDP growth, income, and job prospects? Instead you increase the budget for things that are giant money sinks? Yea, sure fire way to cut that debt

    Once again just looking at immediate results, not the long term goals. This is why you cant run the government as a business, it makes no sense to do so
    179 posts | registered
  26. KAL1989 wrote:
    The "outrage" comes from people addicted to spending taxpayer dollars.

    I'm not surprised that Ars parrots their thinking, which is that King Government rules all and must be allowed to expand.

    To be frank, after three successive administrations failing to properly fund and manage the military, I fear the $54 billion won't be enough.

    "only three of 58 Army brigade combat teams are ready to fight tonight; less than half of the air force is ready; the marine corps has not met its goal for flight hours since 2012, and half of the navy’s aircraft are grounded for parts or maintenance."


    If the government wont encourage investment, who will?

    Private enterprise only cares about profit. They won't research something that doesn't immediately lead to some kind of profit motive. The government is not a for profit business. It is suppose to work to the benefit of the people. What research is done now will not immediately lead to direct benefits, but it can deepen our knowledge which in itself is a benefit.

    Every other major player is investing heavily in scientific research for future expansion. If the US won't do it, they will lose out as a result.


    Perhaps you're unaware, but the US currently has twenty trillion dollars in debt (half added by the last administration), and more than one hundred trillion in unfunded liabilities. If anything, this budget should be lambasted for not cutting deeply enough.

    Perhaps, but this budget looks only at discretionary spending, which, if I recall correctly, is much less than 1/2 the total annual budget. No true debt reduction can happen without taking a good, hard, and politically suicidal look at what can be done with Social Security.
    3094 posts | registered
  27. And the rest of them just stand around him, like silent cowards. Even a group of morally corrupt people should have a line they won't cross.

    I guess we haven't hit it yet.

    Makes sense to dumb down the country so they'll all be more likely to believe "alternative facts".

    So embarrassing. Sick, bad man.
    5478 posts | registered

  28. Perhaps you're unaware, but the US currently has twenty trillion dollars in debt (half added by the last administration), and more than one hundred trillion in unfunded liabilities. If anything, this budget should be lambasted for not cutting deeply enough.


    *rolls eyes*. 2/3 of that debt is either held by governments in the US (e.g. SSTF) or by American citizens. It's the equivalent of you writing IOUs to yourself, then paying yourself interest. Of the $6 trillion that's held overseas, most of it was issued when the going rate was 2% or less, which means it's effectively free money.

    National economies are NOT the equivalent of your personal finances.

    Also, every penny cut from the domestic budget by the executive is countered by an additional penny in defense spending. Walls don't pay for themselves (and neither will Mexico). This budget does nothing to affect debt levels anyway.

    TL;DR: You have no idea WTF you're talking about. Everything you said is irrelevant or wrong.

    Last edited by S_T_R on Thu Mar 16, 2017 9:16 am

    1049 posts | registered
  29. Rommel102 wrote:
    Quote:
    While this is just the first step in what will inevitably be extensive negotiations with Congress


    Important to keep all of this in perspective. This proposal has zero chance of passing, but it is in line with Trump's lifelong technique of asking for an enormous first offer, using the anchoring technique to set the state for further negotiations. Now everyone will focus on how crazy and "destructive" these proposals are and when Trump settles in on a far more "reasonable" number it will seem like a "win". For example, $2.6B is a crazy cut for the EPA, but if he settles on $500MM (still a very large cut) it will be seen as a progressive victory.

    There is nothing surprising at all about this budget.


    If you want a kitten, start out by asking for a horse.

    The fact that it is just a proposal doesn't mean it won't infuriate a lot of people. The US so much influence worldwide and are, rightly or wrongly, seen as a role-model for a lot of developing countries. Even proposing something like this will likely have far reaching effects in other economies. Markets will react to what Trump might do, not just what he has done. We've already seen evidence of this with the share price hits some companies have taken as a result of some tweets. Now we have a fully prepared document people will certainly take notice.
    217 posts | registered
  30. I'm sorry, I've tried real hard to process the events of the last few months in normal political terms, but I keep coming back to the same conclusion: that an unholy alliance of morons and the mega-rich have taken over, with the former out for revenge against anyone unlike them, and the latter out to kill the planet to make themselves even richer. And Trump is just the beginning.
    889 posts | registered
  31. hey von clownstix its going to be hard to build a wall and maintain a bigger military if everyone is dead or dying.
    3485 posts | registered
  32. JoeManco wrote:
    The "outrage" comes from people addicted to spending taxpayer dollars.

    I'm not surprised that Ars parrots their thinking, which is that King Government rules all and must be allowed to expand.


    Or people who know history and realize how much modern science had its foundation in government-supported research? Strange how more defense pork spending is good though.

    Weak trolling is weakl.


    It's strange, national defense is in the Constitution; gimme projects like the NEA aren't.


    Promoting science and art is also in the Constitution. I suggest you read the whole document not just snippets.

    Last edited by JoeManco on Thu Mar 16, 2017 9:17 am

    144 posts | registered
  33. KAL1989 wrote:
    The "outrage" comes from people addicted to spending taxpayer dollars.

    I'm not surprised that Ars parrots their thinking, which is that King Government rules all and must be allowed to expand.

    To be frank, after three successive administrations failing to properly fund and manage the military, I fear the $54 billion won't be enough.

    "only three of 58 Army brigade combat teams are ready to fight tonight; less than half of the air force is ready; the marine corps has not met its goal for flight hours since 2012, and half of the navy’s aircraft are grounded for parts or maintenance."


    If the government wont encourage investment, who will?

    Private enterprise only cares about profit. They won't research something that doesn't immediately lead to some kind of profit motive. The government is not a for profit business. It is suppose to work to the benefit of the people. What research is done now will not immediately lead to direct benefits, but it can deepen our knowledge which in itself is a benefit.

    Every other major player is investing heavily in scientific research for future expansion. If the US won't do it, they will lose out as a result.


    Perhaps you're unaware, but the US currently has twenty trillion dollars in debt (half added by the last administration), and more than one hundred trillion in unfunded liabilities. If anything, this budget should be lambasted for not cutting deeply enough.


    You seem unaware of how sovereign debt works, and how it's very much different compared to personal debt.
    3159 posts | registered
  34. Regardless of the merits of the article, it's facts, or message, I find it telling that Ars decided to use an unflattering photo of the President of the United States. That in itself shows a bias and the subjective direction of their reporting.

    If Ars wants to take the high road of superiority, at least do so on the merits of your facts, not on cheap theatrics and marketing.
    210 posts | registered
  35. I spent some time in the past trying to determine if some sort of foundation / non-profit exists that funds basic research but haven't come across anything. I'm not in the sciences myself, but it seems that funding basic research will have to start coming from other places besides the federal government. Our voters, and by extension our elected leadership, are just too unreliable at this point. What can I do to help? Where can I contribute (in an albeit, very small way)?

    Last edited by skittlesnscotch on Thu Mar 16, 2017 9:20 am

    1 post | registered

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