Science denial isn't good for any political party or any citizens of this world.
Unfortunately, in the US science gets hijacked by regulation. Regulation is fairly well defined along party lines.
Ciao
I just think the world is complicated. I have strong concerns about over-regulation (I'm not the hippy that many here may think I am), but I'm fairly deferential to pretty clear cut cases where the potential benefits outweigh the costs. In the previous thread referenced, I noted
New Jersey's decision to restrict neonicotinoid pesticides for non-agricultural use (and only then in emergency uses), over concerns that they are
significantly contributing to our current collapse of bee/pollinator populations.
There are critics of the lab studies (as you can see in the citations), and I have no doubt that they are perfectly reasonable folks. However, it is not feasible to run an experiment on a large scale, because you can't put thousands of acres of farmland in a lab, and even then, you'd need to run that experiment a dozen or so times to get real, conclusive
statistically rigorous theory. For all practical purposes, it's impossible to do without large scale regulations.
Still, the
declining population of pollinator species is a crisis,
especially in the United States and Europe. So is the answer to do nothing in the face of "well these pesticides probably contribute to this crisis, but we're not sure, and we're not sure how much exactly" to do nothing? It's a tough call. However, when they are only being used to simply prettify a purely recreational activity, I think it's pretty reasonable. I also think it's reasonable to still allow them in serious agricultural situations where they are known to help, because cause we're not sure how much of an impact they actually have.
Science is hard. Politics is hard. I think being flexible and reasonable in the face of frustrating situation like this is entirely appropriate. It's entirely plausible that neonicotinoid pesticides, in the amounts we're using on golf courses aren't actually contributing the crisis at all, and it would be perfectly fine to keep using them... but we're just talking about making golf courses a tiny bit less pretty. On the other hand, if they are impacting pollinator populations, I hope we'd all agree that we should stop using them immediately. This is a classic asymmetric outcome, where we have little to lose, but huge potential to gain. Making these types of bets should benefit us in the long run. Nassim Taleb refers to these asymmetric payout games (in the game-theory sense) as
Seneca's Barbell in his book
Antifragile: Things That Gain from Disorder, which I would obviously recommend for folks interested in philosophy and finance.