Gore Urges Scientists
to Be More Active
December 15, 2006 — By Alicia Chang, Associated Press
SAN FRANCISCO -- Former Vice President
Al Gore said Thursday there was a "temptation" to suppress scientific
findings that don't agree with policy and urged scientists to take a more
active role in communicating research with the public.
Without specifically naming the Bush administration, Gore lamented that
policymakers used to take science into account in their decision-making,
but that's not the case anymore. He said "earth science has been singled
out" and ignored by government, particularly work dealing with climate
change.
"There is a greater temptation to ignore inconvenient truths, to set aside
knowledge that might challenge a prevailing policy," Gore said during an
hour-long speech before a crowd of earth and space scientists during an
American Geophysical Union meeting.
Gore cited a recent article by The Associated Press, which reported that
new rules at the U.S. Geological Survey required the screening of
scientific papers or prepared talks by agency scientists.
Earlier this year, prominent NASA climate scientist James Hansen accused
the Bush administration of trying to silence him after a speech he gave on
global warming. Two federal agencies last month launched an investigation
into whether the administration tried to prevent government scientists
from speaking freely about climate change.
Some scientists and climate models are predicting that unchecked
human-caused global warming over the next century is expected to raise sea
levels and cause extremes in temperatures.
Gore, who stars in the global warming documentary "An Inconvenient Truth,"
urged scientists to educate the public about what he calls the "climate
crisis" and to summon the courage to fight back when "important truths are
being ignored, resisted or censored."
Gore, who was greeted with a standing ovation, did not take questions from
scientists or reporters.
Gore, who lost his 2000 White House bid to President Bush, recently
stepped back into the spotlight, crisscrossing the country to promote his
book and movie and fueling speculation of another run in 2008. Gore has
said he has not completely ruled it out.
Source: Associated Press