United Kingdom - May 14
by Staff
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In the United States at the moment, competing lobby groups are trying to buy changes to legislation. The fossil fuel companies – hiding as ever behind trade associations, PR companies and fake thinktanks – are trying to derail the new clean energy and security bill. The new bill seeks, at long last, to cap carbon emissions in the world's most powerful country. Without it, there is precious little chance of achieving a meaningful global deal to prevent climate breakdown. Environmental groups are seeking to defend the bill. In both cases the strategy is the same: to spend as much money as possible buying advertisements. Money really does talk in the United States: you can hear it every time you turn on the radio.
The peers, who were speaking at an event in parliament on science policy, said they felt that in some areas green campaign groups were a hindrance to environmental causes. "Much of the green movement isn't a green movement at all, it's a political movement," said Lord May, who is a former government chief scientific adviser and president of the Royal Society. He singled out Greenpeace as an environmental campaign group that had "transmogrified" into one with primarily an anti-globalisation stance. ... Lord Krebs, the former chairman of the Food Standards Agency and current principal of Jesus College Oxford also criticised Greenpeace, saying that it had been set up to peddle fear on environmental issues. "Greenpeace is a multinational corporation just like Monsanto or Tesco. They have very effective marketing departments... Their product is worry because worry is what recruits members," he said. He added that in some areas, such as warning about the effects of climate change, such an approach was justified, but that Greenpeace sometimes chose the wrong issues – for example, nuclear power and GM crops. Sauven said Greenpeace's resources are a "tiny fraction" of those of Monsanto or Tesco's. "With very few resources, we are a very effective campaigning organisation," he said, adding that he would prefer to take the comments as a compliment. "I can live with that one." It's ironic that the worst insult that Lord Krebs can come up with is to be like a multinational corporation. -BA
Why is the Medical Research Council run by an arms manufacturer? Why is the Natural Environment Research Council run by the head of a construction company? Why is the chairman of a real estate firm in charge of higher education funding for England? Because our universities are being turned by the government into corporate research departments. No longer may they pursue knowledge for its own sake: now the highest ambition to which they must aspire is finding better ways to make money. At the end of last month, unremarked by the media, a quiet intellectual revolution took place. The research councils, which provide 90% of the funding for academic research in Britain(1), introduced a new requirement for people seeking grants: now they must describe the economic impact of the work they want to conduct. The councils define impact as the "demonstrable contribution" that research can make to society and the economy(2). But how do you demonstrate the impact of blue skies research before it has been conducted? The idea, the government says, is to transfer knowledge from the universities to industry, boosting the UK's economy and helping to lift us out of recession. There's nothing wrong, in principle, with commercialising scientific discoveries. But imposing this condition on the pursuit of all knowledge does not enrich us; it impoverishes us, reducing the wonders of the universe to figures in an accountant's ledger. Picture Charles Darwin trying to fill out his application form before embarking on the Beagle. "Explain how the research has the potential to impact on the nation's health, wealth or culture. For example: fostering global economic performance, and specifically the economic competitiveness of the United Kingdom ... What are the realistic timescales for the benefits to be realised?"(3) If Darwin had been dependent on a grant from a British research council, he would never have set sail.
... Liberal Democrat Tom Brake says he saw what he believed to be two plain-clothes police officers go through a police cordon after presenting their ID cards. Brake, who along with hundreds of others was corralled behind police lines near Bank tube station in the City of London on the day of the protests, says he was informed by people in the crowd that the men had been seen to throw bottles at the police and had encouraged others to do the same shortly before they passed through the cordon. ... Amos added: "He was pretty much inciting the crowd. He could not be called an observer. I don't believe in conspiracy theories but this really struck me. Hopefully, a review of video evidence will clear this up." The surprise for me is how heavy-handed the British police seem to be - the Guardian has been covering their expensive and intrusive strategy for some time now. Why so much police presence in a country that is so politically placid? Is it paranoia? Or do the authorities foresee the snwoballing of events like the G20 demonstrations? Right now I'd vote for a culture of paranoia, rather than any serious threats from disorders. Overrreaction is a mistake from from the police point of view, since it causes middle-of-the-road people to become radicalized when they are caught up in events. As George Monbiot says, "a liberal is a conservative who has been twatted [hit] by the police." -BA |
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