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| Richard Baker/Getty Images | 
Stanford,
 Calif. — THE good news got pretty much drowned out this month: Yes, 
2016 is on track to become the hottest year on record, but thankfully 
also the third year in a row to see relatively flat growth in global 
greenhouse gas emissions. With global economic growth on the order of 3 
percent a year, we may well have turned a corner toward a sustainable 
climate economy.
The
 bad news, of course, is that the world’s wealthiest nation, home to 
many of the scholars scrambling to reverse global warming, has elected a
 new president with little or no interest in the topic. Or an active 
disinterest. Donald J. Trump is surrounding himself with advisers who 
are likely to do little to challenge his notion of climate change as a 
Chinese hoax. People like to think of us as living in an age of 
information, but a better descriptor might be “the age of ignorance.”
How did we get into this predicament? Why are we about to inaugurate the most anti-science administration in American history?
As
 a graduate student at Harvard in the 1970s and early 1980s, I was 
astonished to find how little concern there was for the beliefs of 
ordinary Americans. I was in the history of science department, where 
all the talk was of Einstein and Darwin and Newton, with the occasional 
glance at the “reception” of such ideas in the larger literate populace.
I
 had grown up in a small town in Texas, and later in Kansas City, where 
the people I knew often talked about nature and God’s glory and 
corruption and the good life. At Harvard, though, I was puzzled that my 
professors seemed to have little interest in people outside the 
vanguard, the kinds of people I had come from, many of whom were 
fundamentalist Christians, people of solid faith but often in desperate 
conditions. Why was there so little interest in what they thought or 
believed? That’s Point 1.
Point
 2: Early in my career as a historian, I was further bothered by how 
little attention was given to science as an instrument of popular 
deception. We like to think of science as the opposite of ignorance, the
 light that washes away the darkness, but there’s much more to that 
story.
Here
 my Harvard years were more illuminating. I got into a crowd of 
appropriately radicalized students, and started to better understand the
 place of science in the arc of human history. I learned about how 
science has not always been the saving grace we like to imagine; science
 gives rise as easily to nuclear bombs and bioweapons as to penicillin 
and the iPad. I taught for several years in the biology department, 
where I learned that cigarette makers had been giving millions of 
dollars to Harvard and other elite institutions to curry favor.
I
 also started understanding how science could be used as an instrument 
of deception — and to create or perpetuate ignorance. That is important,
 because while scholars were ignoring what Karl Marx dismissively called
 “the idiocy of rural life” (Point 1), tobacco and soft drink and oil 
companies facing taxation and regulation were busily disseminating 
mythologies about their products, to keep potential regulators at bay 
(Point 2).
The
 denialist conspiracy of the cigarette industry was crucial in this 
context, since science was one of the instruments used by Big Tobacco to
 carry out its denial (and distraction) campaign. Cigarette makers had 
met at the Plaza Hotel in New York City on Dec. 14, 1953, to plan a 
strategy to rebut the evidence that cigarettes were causing cancer and 
other maladies. The strategy was pure genius: The claim would be that it
 had not been “proved” that cigarettes really cause disease, so there 
was room for honest doubt. Cigarette makers promised to finance research
 to get to the truth, while privately acknowledging (in a notorious 
Brown & Williamson document from 1969) that “Doubt is our product.”
For
 decades thereafter, cigarette makers poured hundreds of millions of 
dollars into basic biomedical research, exploring things like genetic 
and viral or occupational causes of cancer — anything but tobacco. 
Research financed by the industry led to over 7,000 publications in 
peer-reviewed medical literature and 10 Nobel Prizes. Including 
consulting relationships, my research shows that at least 25 Nobel 
laureates have taken money from the cigarette industry over the past 
half-century. (Full disclosure: I’ve testified against that industry in 
dozens of tobacco trials.)
Now
 we know that many other industries have learned from Big Tobacco’s 
playbook. Physicians hired by the National Football League have 
questioned the evidence that concussions can cause brain disease, and 
soda sellers have financed research to deny that sugar causes obesity. 
And climate deniers have conducted a kind of scavenger hunt for oddities
 that appear to challenge the overwhelming consensus of climate 
scientists.
This
 latter fact might be little more than a historical quirk, were it not 
for the fact that we’ll soon have a president whose understanding of 
science is more like that of the people in the towns where I grew up 
than those scholars who taught me about Darwin and Einstein at Harvard.
We
 now live in a world where ignorance of a very dangerous sort is being 
deliberately manufactured, to protect certain kinds of unfettered 
corporate enterprise. The global climate catastrophe gets short shrift, 
largely because powerful fossil fuel producers still have enormous 
political clout, following decades-long campaigns to sow doubt about 
whether anthropogenic emissions are really causing planetary warming. 
Trust in science suffers, but also trust in government. And that is not 
an accident. Climate deniers are not so much anti-science as 
anti-regulation and anti-government.
Jeff Nesbit, in his recent book, “Poison Tea: How Big Oil and Big Tobacco Invented the Tea Party and Captured the G.O.P.,”
 documents how Big Tobacco joined with Big Oil in the early 1990s to 
create anti-tax front groups. These AstroTurf organizations waged a 
concerted effort to defend the unencumbered sale of cigarettes and 
petro-products. The breathtaking idea was to protect tobacco and oil 
from regulation and taxes by starting a movement that would combat all regulation and all taxes.
Part
 of the strategy, according to Mr. Nesbit, who worked for a group 
involved in the effort and witnessed firsthand the beginning of this 
devil’s dance, was to sow doubt by corrupting expertise, while 
simultaneously capturing the high ground of open-mindedness and even 
caution itself, with the deceptive mantra: “We need more research.” Much
 of the climate denial now embraced by people like Mr. Trump was first 
expressed in the disinformation campaigns of Big Oil — campaigns modeled
 closely on Big Tobacco’s strategies.
We
 sometimes hear that those who ignore history are doomed to repeat it, 
but a “repeat” is perhaps now the least of our worries. Judging purely 
from his transition team, Mr. Trump’s administration could be more 
hostile to modern science — and especially earth and environmental 
sciences — than any we have ever had. Whole agencies could go on the 
chopping block or face deliberate evisceration. President Obama’s Clean 
Power Plan may be in jeopardy, along with funding for the Environmental 
Protection Agency and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric 
Administration. Grumblings can even be heard from Europe that if the 
Paris climate accord is abandoned, the United States may face carbon 
taxes on its export goods. Ignorance and its diabolic facilitator — the 
corruption of expertise — both have real-world costs that we ignore at 
our peril.
*Robert N. Proctor
 is a professor of the history of science at Stanford and the author of 
“Golden Holocaust: Origins of the Cigarette Catastrophe and the Case for
 Abolition.”

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