Molly Hankwitz on Wed, 26 Apr 2017 22:23:27 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> Why I won't support the March for Science |
To demonstrate how progressive a scientific mind can be... "The real purpose of Socialism is to get past the predatory phase of human development." --Albert Einstein So, what does socialist science look like? In response to Michael: It is good to meet you. Perhaps you are one of the lab coat long-haired scientists pictured with Ant Farm's Clean Air Bubble in a photo Chip Lord put on Facebook commemorating the first Earth Day? In response to Florian and Brian's comments: I went to the Science march because it has been three weeks since my last street march and I can't make the climate march, which is more articulated on a personal level for many than a generalized march on science. We are all doing these MARCHES because they bring levels of resistance together, draw media attention to Trump's bad ideas, and in addition to flooding the White House with postcards, calling Trumps properties to request his tax returns, signing petitions, jamming switchboards with phone calls on issues to Congress, donating money to AAAS, ACLU, joining networks against ICE and all the rest of the resistance to Trump agenda, bring us face2face with each other. I was disappointed overall, despite the turn-out, because I would have thought, as I mentioned --that higher ed, public science institutions etc would be out in force. The turn-out was good everywhere, though, for keeping the topic of funding cuts and rise of ignorance in the news! And, there are so many important fights here now ---that we need to continue to remind ourselves that not giving in is important. At the same time many valid questions remain as you both point out in terms of a political critique not of Science per se but of its appropriation and use for-profit. These same questions and even similar wording - evidence-based equals "student-learning outcomes" for instance - persist in neo-leberalized education-speak as an influence of corporate privatization, creative industries, policy, etc. Sure we can reject it outright based on their statement, but I took the idea of the march to be ---a respect for knowledge and truth! I think for the European audience/fabric/makeup of nettime - it is genuinely worth consideration whether the Trump-era will create greater influence of American corporate leadership in EUROPE or less and how we can help each other to resist this "globalization" of scientific methodology couched in profit and defense, or how we can present and write about and communicate differing models at the level of research produced and research funded? For instance, we might turn towards supporting critical investigations of medical and environmental science where human interest is served for the good of all, while considering pro-environment, anti-war activity. Respectfully, we are reeling at the degree to which the Trump WH sits around fearing and hating and "enterprising" to secure itself. We have to continue to reject it. Molly On Wed, Apr 26, 2017 at 7:04 AM Michael Goldhaber <michael@goldhaber.org> wrote: I took part on Saturday in the March for Science in SF. It wast a bit of déja vu for me, since, about 47 years ago, I helped organize and participated in the March 4, scientists' movement that became "Science for the People" (SftP), and then the first Earth Day the next year. <...> # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@kein.org # @nettime_bot tweets mail w/ sender unless #ANON is in Subject: