Science & Identify Politics Conflict from inside the Progressive Left … – National Review
Progressives claim to love science, but what they truly love is power.To be a good progressive is to adhere simultaneously to two incompatible notions: one, that science provides the final word on any question about which scientists offer any opinion; two, that the scientific method is illegitimate, a tool of the sundry atavistic forces conspiring to keep down the female, the black, the brown, the poor, the gay, the disabled, the gender-fluid everybody except Mitt Romney.
If you were looking at the college campuses with the right kind of eyes in the Eighties and Nineties, you could have seen this coming.
The more philosophically self-aware progressives have long been ensorceled by the belief that science or, really, Science could be pressed into service bearing loads of social management too heavy for a mere bureaucracy. The Soviet Union invested a great deal of its scarce capital in something it called Soviet cybernetics, a sort of Stone Age attempt at using what wed now call Big Data to analyze and solve social problems, especially those related to the management of economic production. The old Marxists took their scientific socialism seriously.
In the English-speaking world, progressives, under the influence not only of political philosophers such as John Dewey but also of the engineer and management theorist Frederick Winslow Taylor, fell into something like a cult of expertise. Experts under the tutelage of Science could, would, and should decide . . . almost everything. How much steel should U.S. firms produce? How should they produce it? What should the line workers at the factory be paid? What about their supervisors? Taylors Principles of Scientific Management, published in 1911, provides a testament to the ambitions of the Progressive Era: He and his contemporaries believed that, using such new technological tools as stopwatches and motion-picture cameras, one could study industrial processes at the most granular level how a certain employee turns a certain screw and produce a single, best way of performing any task.
There is a great deal of ideology embedded in that belief, along with a great many political assumptions, but Taylor and the others denied that they were engaged in any sort of politics at all: Their business, as they saw it, was Science. There is a reasonably straight line from early-20th-century progressivism to contemporary, Barack Obamastyle pragmatism, which is dishonestly and glibly characterized as simply doing what works. In reality it means doing what I want done, in the most convenient way.
But managerial progressivism, with its implicit faith in hierarchy and its inescapable elitism (not everybody gets a Ph.D. from Harvard), was always set for conflict with the more populist and emotional tendencies on the left that came to prominence in the Sixties, political currents originating largely in issues of identity (from black power to Chicano power to what we used to call womens liberation). Such concerns exist uneasily alongside a managerial progressivism based on the wisdom of people who were and are overwhelmingly white, male, and highly educated, working in institutions built by (and, the identity Left would argue, for) people who were overwhelmingly white, male, and highly educated. For years, this played out as old-fashioned progressive elites exercising a kind of managerial veto over the wilder ambitions of the identity Left: Bernie Sanders proposes reorganizing the American economy around the cultivation of organic hemp, and somebody responsible tells him, No.
This gave the identity Left a very strong incentive to work to undermine the prestige of Science, a project that was undertaken with great enthusiasm back during the heyday of postmodernism. The academic world endures a lot of voguish nonsense about African science and feminist mathematics and queer physics (My early postulate is that queer physics speaks about knowledge-making in physics that takes the form of subverting the hegemony of a dominant and mainstream discourse). The extreme, Foucauldian version of that analysis was ridiculous and lame and easy to write off if you were not an academic. But the more moderate version of that view became quite mainstream: We may not hear very much about feminist physics, but we hear about womens ways of knowing, gay perspectives on this, black perspectives on that, etc., as if there were not as many black perspectives as there are black people. Michel Foucaults lurking malice was reinvented as the motive force in the rhetoric of intersectionality, the belief that the oppression of people with certain characteristics (black, gay, disabled, etc.) isnt a matrix of attitudes and discrete episodes but a complex nest of social relationships that can, conveniently, explain anything the phlogiston of identity politics.
The Indiana Jones heuristic the search for fact is science, the search for Truth is philosophy can go only so far in finessing the inherent conflict between science, which is organized around assumptions of objectivity, and the poisonous identity politics holding as its fundamental principle that everything is subjective. The scientific view is that true is true and false is false, irrespective of any particular demographic or political characteristics of the speaker. (Though these of course may provide grounds for skepticism: Who paid for your study? is not an entirely unreasonable question.)
At the same time, the identity Left has its uses for Science. For one thing, it was a convenient cudgel to use against conservative-leaning Christians distressed by certain implications of evolution or discombobulated by the possibility that homosexuality is a phenomenon with roots that are biological rather than diabolical. That sort of thing is usually the stuff of low-value conversation: A certain kind of eternal adolescent never stops getting a thrill out of scandalizing his retrograde Lutheran grandmother. But if you have a sufficient number of such interactions and we have no shortage of them they can become a part of the tribal identity that is the real basis of our politics, however much we might pretend that what we are really talking about is public policy. As the identity Left moved out of the communes and into the suburbs and progressivism became much more strongly associated with the interests and habits of affluent, educated, coastal elites, professing ones love of Science became an exercise in telegraphing status.
But if it were really about science, wed be hearing more from scientists and less from people who have batty, superstitious attitudes about modern agriculture and evidence-based medicine. You will not hear Democrats complaining about the fact that the Affordable Care Act clears the way for subsidizing such hokum as acupuncture and homeopathy. Seventh-day Adventists may make some claims about the world that sound ridiculous from the scientific point of view, but so do practitioners of yoga and sweat-lodge enthusiasts. The public adoration of Science isnt about science.
Which brings us to the recent March for Science and the popular poster boy for all things Science, Bill Nye. The March for Science was no such thing; in the main, it was a march for the one thing almost every faction of the Left can agree on: a larger public sector. Progressives are culturally at home in large institutions (universities, federal agencies, Fortune 500 HR departments), and they have learned how to game those systems pretty well. More funding for science means a lot of funding for things tangentially related to science and a lot of comfortable sinecures related to science in the vaguest way: A great many people with degrees in womens studies or Latino studies have jobs in science as community-outreach coordinators and program officers with responsibilities that might charitably be described as light. Its a safe bet that $100 spent on science gets you about $17.50 worth of astrophysics with the balance going to community development, paid political activism, and overhead. That is not an argument against spending on science it is an argument for better and more responsibly run programs.
And that would be a fine argument to have, if we could have an argument. Which we cant.
Charles Murray, who wrote one of the worlds most famous books bringing scientific research to bear on social questions, has in effect been forbidden to speak at college campuses. In one of the most shameful spectacles of contemporary academic malfeasance, Bert Johnson, the chairman of the political-science department at Middlebury, has apologized for the episode in which Murray was prevented from speaking on campus by rioters: Professor Johnson apologized to the rioters for having had the poor judgment to invite someone to campus whose views are at variance with their own. It could be that Murrays work represents poor science; some respected parties have made exactly that argument. But what does Science have to say about the disputation of claims?
The postmodernists were correct in one thing: There is some politics built into the scientific method, in that the scientific method assumes an environment in which people are at liberty to speak, debate, and publish a liberty with which the American Left, particularly on college campuses, is at war. They are not interested in debate or conversation. They are interested in silencing those who disagree with them, and they have high-profile allies: Democratic prosecutors around the country are working to criminalize the holding of nonconformist views about global warming (some prominent activists have openly called for jailing climate deniers), and Howard Dean has taken up the novel argument that the First Amendment does not actually protect political speech with which he disagrees. (It is, he insists, hate speech, a legally null term in the American context.) Dean has argued that the federal laws governing the conduct of political campaigns could and should be used to regulate all public speaking.
The partisans of Science believe themselves to be part of an eternal war between Galileo and the Inquisition, but they have in fact chosen the Inquisitions side. They have chosen the side of the Censor and the Index so long as they get to choose who serves as Censor and who manages the Index. That is how they have reconciled Science and its claims of objective fact with identity politics and its denial of the same: They are engaged in neither the pursuit of fact nor the pursuit of Truth only the pursuit of Power.
READ MORE: Science vs. Science! The Left Hijacks Science The Lefts New Cure-All: Science
Kevin D. Williamson is National Reviews roving correspondent. This story first appeared in the May 15, 2017, issue of National Review.
Go here to read the rest:
Science & Identify Politics Conflict from inside the Progressive Left ... - National Review
- The Democrats' problem in the Senate is not progressives | Weekly roundup for November 2, 2025 - Strength In Numbers | G. Elliott Morris - November 3rd, 2025 [November 3rd, 2025]
 - An open letter to my sister - and my fellow white progressives | opinion - York Daily Record - October 31st, 2025 [October 31st, 2025]
 - German Progressives Raise the Specter of the Far Right - FSSPX News - October 31st, 2025 [October 31st, 2025]
 - Why progressives still find Graham Platner appealing - The Boston Globe - October 30th, 2025 [October 30th, 2025]
 - Heritage Action Cites Marxist Occupation of Our Streets to Support Cruz Bill Targeting Progressives - People For the American Way - October 30th, 2025 [October 30th, 2025]
 - Progressives Rally Behind Katie Wilson in Home Stretch to Mayoral Election - The Urbanist - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
 - Progressives will tear the Union apart if it keeps Farage out - The Telegraph - October 28th, 2025 [October 28th, 2025]
 - Do Conservatives and Progressives Differ from the Brain? Cognitive Rigidity is Key - - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
 - What Progressives Keep Getting Wrong - The Atlantic - October 26th, 2025 [October 26th, 2025]
 - Opinion: In Amherst Town Elections Its Progressives vs. Neoliberals - Amherst Indy - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
 - Local opinion: Progressives in city government aren't the problem - Arizona Daily Star - October 24th, 2025 [October 24th, 2025]
 - Progressives Have Democrats Right Where They Want Them: Broke - National Review - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
 - Young progressives say they feel uninspired by Democrats. Will the state party listen? - IndyStar - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
 - How Progressives Broke The Constitution And Praised Themselves For It OpEd - Eurasia Review - October 23rd, 2025 [October 23rd, 2025]
 - Ignore progressives: Child-welfare probes work saving kids - New York Post - October 21st, 2025 [October 21st, 2025]
 - Victor Davis Hanson: Trump is trying to redirect what progressives altered about American life - AOL.com - October 19th, 2025 [October 19th, 2025]
 - No 'Abundance' of caution: Populists and progressives are winning the argument among Democrats - Washington Examiner - October 19th, 2025 [October 19th, 2025]
 - Can the ACLU Serve Progressives, Libertarians, and Conservatives? - Reason Magazine - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
 - America vs China Bombing vs Building: Who wins? Progressives: time to be aggressive. - Daily Kos - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
 - The Defeatism Among Progressives is a Gift To The Fascists; Knock it Off. - Daily Kos - October 17th, 2025 [October 17th, 2025]
 - In a New Book, Gene Nichol Calls On North Carolina Progressives to Get Up Off the Mat - INDY Week - October 15th, 2025 [October 15th, 2025]
 - Seattle nonprofit will bus advocates to Spokane to campaign for local progressives - Yahoo - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
 - Seattle nonprofit will bus advocates to Spokane to campaign for local progressives - The Center Square - October 11th, 2025 [October 11th, 2025]
 - Exclusive | Zohran Mamdani PACs raked in thousands from media allies, progressives with ties to radicals - New York Post - October 9th, 2025 [October 9th, 2025]
 - Why progressives may not be as 'woke' as they think - CBC - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
 - DeepDive: With progressives birthrates falling, Canadas future (might be) Conservative - The Hub | More Signal. Less Noise. - October 7th, 2025 [October 7th, 2025]
 - How progressives should respond to the Manchester synagogue stabbings - MSNBC News - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
 - Progressives and the Supreme Court: The Case for Disengagement Is Misguided - Election Law Blog - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
 - Progressives Organize 'Shutdown Showdown' to Defend Healthcare From Trump and GOP - Common Dreams - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
 - After Manchester, progressives should know this: Jewish people feel very alone. We need you to stand with us - The Guardian - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
 - Appointed by President Donald Trump during his first term, Associate US Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh is one of six justices in the court's... - October 4th, 2025 [October 4th, 2025]
 - What Progressives Should Be Thinking About Social Security Reform - American Enterprise Institute - October 2nd, 2025 [October 2nd, 2025]
 - The international progressives: A source of hope for the world trading system - Peterson Institute for International Economics - September 25th, 2025 [September 25th, 2025]
 - Progressives Can Lead With a Just Foreign Policy. First, They Must Confront Their Mistakes. - The Century Foundation - September 23rd, 2025 [September 23rd, 2025]
 - Why Welsh progressives must unite to stop Reform - Nation.Cymru - September 23rd, 2025 [September 23rd, 2025]
 - Progressives grapples with how to respond to vitriol, blame following Kirk's death - NPR - September 17th, 2025 [September 17th, 2025]
 - Progressives can never be wrong - The Spectator - September 17th, 2025 [September 17th, 2025]
 - Progressives grapples with how to respond to vitriol, blame following Kirk's death - VPM - September 17th, 2025 [September 17th, 2025]
 - Column: The U.S. birthrate is falling it's time progressives stop ignoring it - - The Daily Tar Heel - September 17th, 2025 [September 17th, 2025]
 - Phelim McAleer: After Charlie Kirk's assassination, Donald Trump must take on and win this war with the progressives - Belfast News Letter - September 17th, 2025 [September 17th, 2025]
 - Opinion | White nationalists are filling a void left by retreating progressives - The Spec - September 13th, 2025 [September 13th, 2025]
 - Organizers hope new political group Elevate Oak Park will offer alternative to progressives in power - Chicago Tribune - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
 - Senate Republicans plan filibuster changes that could leave progressives torn - The Boston Globe - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
 - Progressives NIMBYs Threaten Affordable Housing In New York And L.A. - Forbes - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
 - EU Leader Calls to Sanction Israel as U.S. Progressives Push to End Arms Sales - The Intercept - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
 - Glenn Beck Exposes Progressives Plot to Rewrite America and Erase God from Its Foundation - Charisma Magazine Online - September 11th, 2025 [September 11th, 2025]
 - Progressives Throw Their Support To Jawando For County Executive - Montgomery Community Media - September 5th, 2025 [September 5th, 2025]
 - Progressives Are Headed for Self-Imposed Extinction - AMAC - September 3rd, 2025 [September 3rd, 2025]
 - The Revenge of the States: How Progressives Learned to Love Federalism - La Voce di New York - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
 - How a small band of determined progressives is being heard in a deep-red Missouri county - Columbia Missourian - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
 - Thunberg and Like-Minded Progressives Sail to GazaAgain - The European Conservative - September 1st, 2025 [September 1st, 2025]
 - Progressives underestimate the danger of subway disorder - UnHerd - August 29th, 2025 [August 29th, 2025]
 - Democrats withdraw two-state resolution to avoid clash with progressives on Israel and Palestinians - The Forward - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
 - The far right are feeding off anger. Progressives must do the same - TheNational.scot - August 27th, 2025 [August 27th, 2025]
 - How Progressives Hijack Democratic Governance (yet another way!) - MacIver Institute - August 26th, 2025 [August 26th, 2025]
 - Debate over empathy highlights differing views of Christian conservatives, progressives - OregonLive.com - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - News4JAX - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
 - Jurado breaks with progressives on housing bill: Im not willing to gamble losing Boyle Heights - Boyle Heights Beat - August 22nd, 2025 [August 22nd, 2025]
 - Zohran Mamdani's primary win empowers progressives to run for office - Fox News - August 20th, 2025 [August 20th, 2025]
 - Democrat warns US progressives against moving toward the center: It lost me the election - The Guardian - August 20th, 2025 [August 20th, 2025]
 - In Trump's Redistricting Push, Democrats Find An Aggressive Identity And Progressives Are On Board - HuffPost - August 20th, 2025 [August 20th, 2025]
 - Progressives Well-Positioned for Burien Council Takeover - The Urbanist - August 20th, 2025 [August 20th, 2025]
 - Democratic Progressives Push Filibuster Threat - MSN - August 20th, 2025 [August 20th, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - Northeast Mississippi Daily Journal - August 20th, 2025 [August 20th, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - The Spec - August 20th, 2025 [August 20th, 2025]
 - In Trumps redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - The Boston Globe - August 20th, 2025 [August 20th, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - Los Angeles Times - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - Bedford Gazette - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - The Lufkin Daily News - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - The Daily Review - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - WV News - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - Citizen Tribune - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - MSN - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - The Daily Item - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - Herald-Banner - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - thedailystar.com - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
 - In Trump's redistricting push, Democrats find an aggressive identity and progressives are on board - The Tribune-Democrat - August 18th, 2025 [August 18th, 2025]
 - Four Policies Progressives Are Backing for the Next Big Transportation Bill - Streetsblog USA - August 14th, 2025 [August 14th, 2025]
 - John Nichols on Progressives and the Trump Administration - C-SPAN - August 14th, 2025 [August 14th, 2025]
 - Progressives think jailing criminals doesnt affect crime - Washington Examiner - August 14th, 2025 [August 14th, 2025]