Dear MAGAs, is this how you “Make America Great, Again”? (Article ran in the March 14th Florida Sun-Sentinel.)
NIH funding cuts are creating a lost generation of scientists
Lisa Jarvis, Bloomberg OpinionThe Trump administration’s attacks on science and funding at the National Institutes of Health will set research and training for future scientists back a generation.
This might sound melodramatic to anyone not intimately familiar with the world of academic training and research. But in just two months the administration has cut off opportunities at every phase in a scientist’s career.
Unless funding and the freedom to pursue science without political bias are restored, biomedical research in the U.S. will become less ambitious, less competitive and result in fewer breakthroughs.
To recap: In his first days in office, President Donald Trump targeted the NIH, which spends more than 80% of its $48 billion budget on grants and other funding to universities and hospitals around the country.
That funding ground to a halt, and damage was amplified two weeks later when the administration excised $4 billion in overhead costs from NIH grants — money that institutions rely on to run their facilities and pay support staff.
That was followed by job cuts at the agency — reportedly nearly 1,200 of them, in areas spanning Alzheimer’s research to cancer. (Some of these moves have been halted, at least temporarily, by the courts.)
More recently, scores of NIH grants were terminated because they didn’t align with the administration’s political ideology. Flagged topics include research on LGBT+ health, gender identity, diversity, equity and inclusion; vaccine hesitancy; and mRNA vaccines.
Now, Trump seems to be using the NIH to punish universities that he feels have defied him. On Monday, the agency said it was terminating $250 million in grants to Columbia University, a move that will have a seismic impact on study and researchers there.
Summer research programs at NIH and in university labs — experiences that help pull undergraduates into science careers — have been canceled.
Graduate school admissions are being paused or cut back. Widespread hiring freezes are leaving postdoctoral researchers, on the cusp of launching their careers, in limbo.
Assistant professors awaiting the NIH’s final approval on their first major grant, known as an R01, a critical step toward securing tenure, are worried their once promising careers are being snuffed out.
Even well-established scientists tell me they’ve made lists of people in their labs to cut if the money doesn’t flow soon. I’m told some in the twilight of their careers are cutting back hours to preserve funding or are considering retirement.
The entire pipeline of biomedical scientists, supported in one way or the other by the funding at NIH, is being culled.
Unsurprisingly, morale — both at NIH and at the long list of institutions the agency funds — is in the basement. One researcher at a prominent New York-based cancer hospital told me he hasn’t been sleeping. A health equity researcher at Northwestern University, whose work hits on all of the buzzwords that Trump wants eradicated from federal government, teared up when describing what the situation means for the students she mentors.
Making a career in science has always been exceptionally hard, she says, “and in this environment, it’s just making it impossible. I’m afraid we’re going to lose some of the best minds.”
(Many researchers asked not to be named out of fear about the status of funding under review at NIH.)
Ashley de Marchena, an autism expert at Drexel University, said the funding uncertainty led one of her trainees to look for a job rather than pursue a doctoral degree.
Not only is the time and taxpayer investment in building their research skills lost, but the student, who is neurodivergent, is someone whose unique perspective should be nurtured, not pushed into another career path.
“So many entry points (to research) are gone now,”says Julianne Meisner, an epidemiologist in the University of Washington’s Department of Global Health.
She recently advised a student finishing her master’s degree to consider applying to PhD programs abroad. They might offer less money, but they bring more certainty. And those institutes clearly see an opportunity to siphon some of America’s brightest: at least one French university is advertising itself to U.S. students as a “safe place for science.”
Meanwhile, those who persist are shrinking their ambitions to fit a more hostile environment. A theme I heard over and over again is that researchers will do less bold science, ask fewer questions, make fewer discoveries.
There’s little sign that the damage will be repaired once new leadership is in place at NIH. During his Senate confirmation hearing last week, Jay Bhattacharya, Trump’s pick to lead the agency, seemed unruffled by the turmoil. If anything, his equivocation about the upheaval suggests he’s on board with whatever changes those above him demand next.
Bhattacharya dodged questions about restoring fundingand instead emphasized the need to restore trust in public health, a project he believes requires “freedom” and “transparency.”
It’s hard to imagine a less trustworthy or transparent process, or one less attuned to academic freedom than what’s unfolding. Sidelining and muzzling a generation of scientists, dismantling the nation’s research apparatus and ultimately ceding scientific supremacy to China and Europedoes not seem like the right way to restore trust.
For the public, all of this might seem hard to grasp — or even care about. But eventually we will all be affected.
It’ll show up as a hit to the local economy when scientists and staff lose their jobs. It’ll take the form of a widening gap in access to equitable health care. It’ll be the Alzheimer’s treatment or cancer vaccine that never quite makes it over the finish line.
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Lisa Jarvis is a Bloomberg Opinion columnist covering biotech, health care and the pharmaceutical industry. Previously, she was executive editor of Chemical & Engineering News.
Did you ever wonder why some nations are “third world” and others are leaders? The reason is not size or language. Israel, for instance, is a first-world nation despite its tiny population and unique use of Hebrew.
The difference between a first-world nation and a third-world nation is that the third-world nations don’t practice or believe in science. It’s that simple.
And that is where the Republican party is taking us.
Rodger Malcolm Mitchell
Twitter: @rodgermitchell
Search #monetarysovereignty
Facebook: Rodger Malcolm Mitchell;
MUCK RACK: https://muckrack.com/rodger-malcolm-mitchell;
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A Government’s Sole Purpose is to Improve and Protect The People’s Lives.
MONETARY SOVEREIGNTY
Even before the Donald took over, a good chunk of America was already second-world at best. Now it is in free fall, at WARP SPEED!
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Trump famously said, “I love the poorly educated.” Apparently, he is trying to increase that number.
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In the 1970s, NASA and Nixon pivoted away from the Apollo program and towards a space truck called the shuttle. Spending was slashed and with it a little known program today that was already producing atomic powered engines for future rockets that could have gotten to Mars in a few weeks instead of 9 months, as currently “planned.”
I put planned in quotes because with Elon Musk’s Starship being good for little more than spectacular sky explosions – which panic airplane travel and what’s left of the FAA – there’s little chance of America being the first to land people on Mars.
China will do that, and maybe even with atomic rockets. America can barely send humans into low Earth orbit (LEO) now, mostly it’s just to get to the decaying space station, due to be sent to crash into the Pacific in 2030.
Now, imagine that EVERY science and technological advancement is set back 50 years like NASA’s space program was in the early 1970s when the NERVA program was shut down.
See the actual 1960s test here: https://youtu.be/j6gKFvPjGpQ?si=g-XfpPS3y_gRokvl. It’s actually much worse now, because other countries aren’t in third world status anymore.
China especially, but also Russia once it gets what it wants from Trump and Ukraine, Japan, Europe if it doesn’t have to spend all its money on replacing NATO, even tiny Israel, are all racing ahead, actively taking America’s place in STEM fields, while the brightest minds here either stagnate or become a cog in the financial pyramid and grifting schemes so embraced by Trump & company.
We are lost. There may be no way back.
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Well said, Scott. When Trump said, “I love the poorly educated,” he really meant it.
Now, he wants to bring our brightest minds down to his mental level, or perhaps deport them. When a nation is led by the stupid and evil, the nation becomes stupid and evil.
Whenever I see a TV street interview with a Trump supporter, all I can think is, “How do these people manage to dress and feed themselves without close supervision?” Remember when Trump told his MAGA base that Ukraine attacked Russia, fully confident that they would believe him?
We have entered the Disinformation Age and/or the Stultumocene (Age of the Stupid) and Malocene (Age of Evil).
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Unfortunately very true. It’s stranger than fiction, how our country has decayed (and will continue to decay even faster now)……
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