I haven't heard of the pair who wrote this opinion piece for New Scientist, but I reckon they're numbskulls.
First they start with a story of a minor but ineffectual environmental program by Democrats (biodegradable utensils for the cafeteria in Congress), then they acknowledge the anti-science credentials of the Right (climate change, stem cell research, creationism).
They then make this claim:
Progressives are just as bad, if not worse. Their ideology is riddled with anti-scientific feel-good fallacies designed to win hearts, not minds. Just like biodegradeable spoons, their policies often crumble in the face of reality and leave behind a big mess. Worse, anyone who questions them is condemned as anti-science.This is a big, big stretch. In fact, it's ridiculous. The anti-vaccine movement is minuscule compared to the number of people on the Right who think climate change is a socialist conspiracy. Of course anti-vaccine people are a danger to themselves and others, but the harm they can realistically cause society overall (given that I doubt they have really convinced substantial numbers of the dangers of vaccines) is nothing compared to the potential dangers of climate change.
We have all heard about the Republican war on science; we want to draw attention to the progressive war on reason.....
For example, progressive activists have championed the anti-vaccine movement, confusing parents and causing a public health disaster. They have campaigned against animal research even when it remains necessary, in some cases committing violence against scientists. Instead of embracing technological progress, such as genetically modified crops, progressives have spread fear and misinformation. They have waged war against academics who question their ideology, and they are opposed to sensible reforms in science education.
Animal research? Seriously, just how big a crisis is it for science that activists push for more and more alternatives to animal testing? There's an association in America just about Laboratory Animal Science which claims a membership of 12,000, and I recently noted that in New York tens of thousands of lab mice and rats drowned in a university basement when the former hurricane hit. Sounds like animal testing is under real threat - not.
GM food? Human biology at the molecular and genetic level, and the imprecise way genes are inserted into food (and from sources which would not arise naturally) make caution about GM reasonable. The benefits from it are also likely oversold, I reckon (same as with stem cell research, and for similar reasons - it is hard to fully understand what at going on at the cellular level).
I am not totally against GM research, particularly if it is for increasing the nutritional value of some foods. But there are clear signs that some major GM work is not well thought through and has economic motives which don't necessarily coincide with environmental health. The best example - the weed war which was pretty obviously going to be the likely outcome of Roundup tolerant crops. Recent stories on that are here and here.
I see that these guys have a book to sell on the topic of lefties and anti science. No wonder they are exaggerating.