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United States Science

US Science Agencies on Track To Hit 25-Year Funding Low (nature.com) 108

Lawmakers in the United States last year passed bipartisan legislation intended to maintain US competitiveness with countries such as China by boosting funding for science and innovation. But concerns are mounting that the US Congress will fail to deliver on its promises. From a report: The money allotted to a handful of major US science agencies that had been targeted for a budget boost is likely to fall short of the legislation's goals by more than US$7 billion in 2024, according to a report. And overall funding for those agencies will continue to hover at a 25-year low.

"We're leaving scientific opportunities on the table," says Matt Hourihan, who led the analysis for the Federation of American Scientists, an advocacy group based in Washington DC. "If we drop this ball, others will be happy to pick it up." It was precisely this fear that drove members of Congress to come together to pass the CHIPS and Science Act of 2022. The legislation promised one of the largest increases in US science funding in a long time, totalling some $280 billion over five years. Much of the spending mandated by the bill was focused on semiconductor research and manufacturing -- areas in which other countries, particularly China, have dominated. Lawmakers also authorized investments in other science and innovation programmes, but these were not mandated, and need to be approved by Congress during an appropriations process each year.

That process has become increasingly contentious as political polarization in the United States has risen over the past few decades. Disputes about overall spending levels and funding for various social programmes have led to repeated delays in crafting the annual budget, at times forcing the government to shut down. This year is a prime example: Republicans, who control the US House of Representatives, blocked legislation that would have allowed the government to increase the federal debt limit and pay its bills, until they were able to secure an agreement with the Democrats in May to limit spending. And last month, a handful of extreme right-wing Republicans sought to close the government down as they pushed for further spending cuts.

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US Science Agencies on Track To Hit 25-Year Funding Low

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  • Let's Be Honest (Score:5, Insightful)

    by careysub ( 976506 ) on Friday October 06, 2023 @03:19PM (#63906863)

    That process has become increasingly contentious as political polarization in the United States has risen over the past few decades.

    It isn't "political polarization" - it is right-wing hostility to science and well, facts in all forms.

    • The Republicans can't even get along in their own party and when one of them does try to cooperate and compromise to work together for the betterment of the people (you know, what politicians are supposed to do) they essentially kill them off. The GOP has become the party of useless do nothing clowns. Not that I care for the Dems all that much but they do try to actually govern and move forward.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      True. The extreme right (the US has a mainstream right-wing party and an extremist right-wing party) hates facts, because they make them look really, really bad. So instead of fixing their ways and actually trying to be halfway decent people, they try to suppress facts and thereby Science.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    The problem is that the funding sources don't care about science; they want "The Science" to excuse what they plan on doing.

    I want to trust the government, I do. But I don't. They'll give cash to anyone claiming men can be women, ffs.

  • facts (Score:5, Insightful)

    by pitch2cv ( 1473939 ) on Friday October 06, 2023 @03:29PM (#63906901)

    Who needs science when one can just believe something to be true, counterfactual or not.

    Who needs science when Potus can make up 'alternative' facts, right. At least he didn't get re-elected.

    Anyone checked on schooling grades lately?
    It's a sad.

    • and having relatively recently put a kid through college they're not fake either. The kids are way, way better educated then their parents & grandparents.

      But, well, it was a baby boom. That means there are a *lot* of "Fox News Grandpas" who left the truth behind years and years ago. In 6-8 years they'll be too old to vote (nursing home residence don't usually) and if we're still a democracy the kids'll start cleaning up the mess the last generation or two left behind.
  • by Eunomion ( 8640039 ) on Friday October 06, 2023 @03:29PM (#63906903)
    Of course, by "the beast," they mean (and have always meant) the United States of America.
  • Appropriations begin in the House - that is what the constitution says.

    The games where the senate takes a house bill and hollows it out and stuffs it with their own appropriations is nothing less than a violation of their oath of office. Just like senate offers advice and consent for appointments but does not put people forward themselves, so it is supposed to be with appropriations.

    The whole thing where the senate demands the house include funding for this or that is anti-democratic bs. It should not be v

    • It has to go that way partly because of the filibuster, if you can't pass anything without 60 votes then you have to start shoring up those votes ahead of time otherwise what's the point of the House doing anything if it will immediately die and they have to start over. If the Senate can pass things with 51 votes the whole calculus becomes a lot different.

      If the House, Senate and White House have to agree on a bill to pass it, what's your alternative? Why let the House off the hook when it's just like what

  • "short of the legislation's goals by more than US$7 billion in 2024"
    Didn't the government just spend 9B more to pay the college costs for a select 125,000 lucky elites.
    Announces an Additional $9 Billion in Student Debt Relief [ed.gov]
  • by Hoi Polloi ( 522990 ) on Friday October 06, 2023 @04:35PM (#63907079) Journal

    I'd say science knowledge in the US is at a 100 yr low

  • ...it's for research into preventing hair loss & prolonging erections; you'll get all the money you want.
  • The summary wasn't very clear about what went wrong. Here's a quote from the linked article, that seems to explain:

    The CHIPS act authorized three agencies — the National Science Foundation (NSF), the US Department of Energy (DoE) Office of Science and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) — to receive a total of $26.8 billion in the fiscal year 2024. ... As it stands, however, appropriations bills pending in Congress mean that these agencies are likely to receive only a litt

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  • By colliding with out delusions, misconceptions and non-understanding of reality. Of course that crap should be defunded! Beliefs over facts, delusions over understanding and wishful thinking over rational plans! It is the American way.

  • Likely that a large part of the antipathy to science agencies is that they have been "weaponized" to enforce leftist ideology. For example, NSF has DEI programs, CDC wanted to declare guns a "health emergency," NIH had a part in the lab leak fiasco, via Fauci and others. Is EPA a science agency? Right. NOAA is pushing climate "hysteria."

  • Hard sciences have been ideologically subverted, with a hard pivot to addressing fake issues of inclusion and diversity rather than legitimate research. No funding until marxist woke subhumans are kicked out and adults are brought back in.

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