Versuchen GOLD - Frei
Scientists unable to keep politics out of their labs
Los Angeles Times
|September 15, 2025
There’s a scene in the movie “Oppenheimer” in which Ernest Lawrence, the inventor of the cyclotron and head of his own lab at UC Berkeley, reacts angrily when he discovers his friend J. Robert Oppenheimer trying to recruit lab assistants toa communist-linked campus labor union.

VIROLOGISTS Robert Garry and Kristian Andersen listen as House Republicans criticize their findings.
It’s one of the few scenes in this largely factual film that may actually have downplayed the real event. Lawrence was beyond furious at Oppenheimer for bringing politics—and left-wing politics at that — into the lab. For Lawrence —whose personal journey would transform him from New Deal liberalism to solid Republican conservatism — ascientific lab was no place for anything but pure science, uninfected by politics.
It’s one of the tragedies of Lawrence's life and career that he ultimately was unable to keep his lab politics-free. He would be swept up in UC’s capitulation to the 1950s red scare in California, which culminated in the mandate that all faculty sign an anticommunist loyalty oath.
In acceding to the mandate by requiring his lab staff to sign the oath in order to assuage the right-wingers on the UC Board of Regents, Lawrence — the most famous and eminent scientist on the Berkeley faculty — discovered that in aturbocharged partisan atmosphere, no science laboratory could keep politics from crashing through the door.
Scientists in today’s America are relearning that lesson. Two who learned it the hard way are Peter Hotez, an eminent vaccinol-ogist affiliated with Baylor College of Medicine, and Michael E. Mann, a climatologist and geophysicist at the University of Pennsylvania. They've collaborated on anew book, “Science Under Siege,” that analyzes the forces fueling the politicization of science and its consequences and map outa possible path out of the wilderness.
Both come to the topic via personal experience. After Hotez’s frequent television appearances speaking out against mi:formation and disinformation about vaccines, he and his family came under attack.
“This translated into death threats and in-person confrontations at his lectures and even at his home,” they write.
Diese Geschichte stammt aus der September 15, 2025-Ausgabe von Los Angeles Times.
Abonnieren Sie Magzter GOLD, um auf Tausende kuratierter Premium-Geschichten und über 9.000 Zeitschriften und Zeitungen zuzugreifen.
Sie sind bereits Abonnent? Anmelden
WEITERE GESCHICHTEN VON Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times
Trump asks Supreme Court to allow a two-gender passport policy
President Trump’s administration asked the Supreme Court on Friday to let it enforce a passport policy for transgender and nonbinary people that requires male or female sex designations based on birth certificates.
1 mins
September 20, 2025

Los Angeles Times
Amnesty International wants help for deportees
Rights group says Eswatini must give five men sent there access to lawyers.
2 mins
September 20, 2025

Los Angeles Times
Weird science? Sure, it may get you an Ig Nobel
A team ofresearchers from Japan wondered if painting cows with zebra-like stripes would prevent flies from biting them.
3 mins
September 20, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Trump says he'll designate antifa as a terrorist group
President Trump said Thursday that he plans to designate antifa as a “major terrorist organization.”
2 mins
September 20, 2025

Los Angeles Times
Law would override zoning to allow high-rise housing near transit
The bill by Sen. Scott Wiener (D-San Francisco) verges on extraordinary, not only because of the size of the buildings it would allow but because it takes county and city elected officials mostly out of the equation on many construction projects.
2 mins
September 20, 2025

Los Angeles Times
House passes resolution honoring Charlie Kirk
Democrats' vote was split, with some saying measure elevated views they opposed.
3 mins
September 20, 2025

Los Angeles Times
High-rises near transit could expand
Legislation would override local zoning to help address state's housing shortage.
3 mins
September 20, 2025
Los Angeles Times
Relievers find way to grind out victory
On a night the Dodgers (86-67) managed only two runs off Giants ace Logan Webb — both of which came in a sixth-inning rally keyed by a Shohei Ohtani double, Freeman RBI single and dropped ball at the plate by Giants catcher Patrick Bailey — the bullpen was forced to pick up the slack.
3 mins
September 20, 2025

Los Angeles Times
LMU rescinds recognition of its faculty union
Staffers are in shock after Jesuit university decides to invoke ‘religious exemption.’
5 mins
September 20, 2025
Los Angeles Times
400-plus arrested so far in federal immigration crackdown in Chicago
Immigration enforcement officials have arrested more than 400 people as part of an operation in the Chicago area that launched a little less than two weeks ago, a top Immigration and Customs Enforcement official said Friday.
1 mins
September 20, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size