Barack Obama, the Communist

Certainly, everyone has someone to thank for helping them get to where they are. As Isaac Newton once said, “If I have seen further, it is by standing on the shoulders of giants.” However, we still give Newton credit for his work. Certainly, others laid the foundation that Newton built off of, but he still pushed mathematics and physics to, at the time, unimaginable heights. Nikola Tesla, Albert Einstein, and Richard Feynman can claim similar distinctions. For that, we recognize them as geniuses.

We can apply this sentiment to other fields of science as well- Linus Pauling won the Nobel Prize (twice- once in Chemistry, and once in Peace) for his contributions. We don’t offer the Nobel Prize to the people who started the project- we offer it to the person who found the answer and finished it. That’s why Watson and Crick were so excited when they beat Pauling to the finish in elucidating the structure of DNA.

And this sentiment extends to the business world. We give patents and the accompanying profits to the person who actually develops something useful for us, not to the people who tried, but didn’t get quite far enough. We can extend this concept to every human endeavor: People deserve credit for what they offer to society. This is a fundamental aspect of morality, and is the defining feature of Capitalism.

And yet, not everyone agrees. Notably, just last night, President Obama said, “If you’ve got a business — you didn’t build that. Somebody else made that happen.” He’s taking a page out of the Communist Manifesto by declaring that Society deserves credit for all of your accomplishments, and you don’t. This is consistent with his previous statements that, despite the weak economy, “The private sector is doing fine. Where we’re seeing weaknesses in our economy have to do with state and local government.” This also matches the sentiments expressed when he said, “I do think at a certain point you’ve made enough money.”

These statements should offend anyone who believes that individuals deserve credit for their own accomplishments. Barack Obama’s rhetoric speaks towards a complete rejection of Capitalism altogether. He will continue to lie and pay lip service to Capitalism when it’s demanded of him. But it’s clear that his view of individual accomplishment is purely a Communist one.

The Struggle of a Libertarian Scientist

I understand Progressives. I really do. I can identify with their struggle.

Obama is a man with a vision. He wants to change the world. He sees things that need to happen in order to make the world a better place, and if only we all agreed with him, then it could happen. I understand that. I feel the same way. So when people just don’t understand, then what’s a man to do?

The easy way is use the existing societal structure to accumulate power through whatever means necessary, and then force them to follow you. As a scientist, I understand this tempting possibility- it would be so easy to get on the government dole and just live out my life in relative financial security while pursuing technological and societal advancements that I believe will change the world for the better.

But being a Libertarian, I have to ask, is that the right way to do things? Do I have a right to use the taxpayers’ money for my own goals like that? It’s the low-risk, yet unimaginative approach. Tempting, but morally questionable. I know I can make the world a better place with my research. But is it right to do so at the expense of others without their consent? Could I ever be satisfied with myself as a conscientious human being knowing that I’m living off of money taken by force?

And of course, such a deal with the devil comes with a cost- you have to work within the system. You’re subject to the whims of politics. Nothing you create is your own, because it belongs to the people. You do not receive the profits of your creations to reinvest, leaving you dependent on the government for survival and continuation of your professional activities. Obama faces these same problems in the form of an obstinate Congress and strict judicial system. The separation of powers is an important check against totalitarian dictatorship, and that is the system which Obama must work within, often to the detriment of his goals.

But there has got to be a better way. Why should I spend all my time justifying myself to government bureaucrats who get paid more than me when I know my research capabilities are worth paying for, and I know my vision for the future has great value to people? I know that if I could work on my goals full-time, I could create something that would make people happier and more prosperous. So if that is true, then why would I need to use force to obtain financial support? Shouldn’t I be able to find willing contributors?

That’s when it hit me- There is a way to do this. People have been doing this for centuries. It’s called “entrepreneurship.” I could found a business, or an organization, or a foundation. It’s risky. It’s not easy. It might fail. But it’s the right way to do things, and great virtue allows for great rewards. If I can convince the government to give me money for my projects, then I can convince a few millionaires to invest in my vision and put my ventures on the path to self-sustainability. And if I can’t do either one, then I’m screwed either way.

Of course, the path is strewn with many fatal obstacles- a dire warning comes from the fate of Solyndra and other start-ups aborted in their youth. But if I succeed, then I can show the world that there is a better way to innovate than through force. I can show the other scientists how to create value without making everyone participate. I can show the Progressives like Obama that they’d be better off creating something of their own to help others rather than taking resources created by others to help others.

This is how someone can be both a scientist and a morally righteous Libertarian. This is how real innovation happens.

Funding Science

Obama’s lead science adviser, Dr. John P. Holdren, gave a speech here last night. He spoke at length about how the Obama is the president most committed to helping science in all of US history. He threw around all kinds of dollar figures and percentage increases in various budgets, and talked about how hard he’s working to “defend science from the current Congress.” I was not impressed, and I would like to explain why.

I asked a question which was skillfully reworded by Dr. Ahmed Zewail to something like this (paraphrasing):

As you know, science is driven forward by the innovation of inspired individuals. When government funds science, it tends to focus on a few “big picture” goals which don’t predict a lot of new ideas (from these individuals) which haven’t yet become politically attractive. In some ways, the innovative power in this country is a zero-sum game. The government wants to fund missions to the Moon, missions to Mars, electric cars, but what about the truly unexpected ideas that the government can’t predict? You get a lot of people working on these bigger projects at the expense of diversity in scientific research. So, in the future, do you see a new model for scientific funding- a new way for scientists to get money for their research so the diversity of innovation isn’t drowned out by the goals of government?

Dr. Holdren’s response went something like this (again, paraphrasing):

Well, no, I don’t think so. I disagree that science is a zero-sum game. You see, it takes government funding to do basic research. The private sector funds a lot of research, but they look for marketable attributes when deciding what to provide funding for. What the government does, what I see its role as, is to nurture more options in science for the market to pick up and choose from. And as you know, the President is very committed to nurturing a diverse array of science, and by making that money available, we help provide the resources necessary to make use of this country’s innovation. You know, China has been increasing their scientific research budget 15-20% annually, and I used to go there at least once a year, and it’s changed dramatically. If you were airdropped into one of their universities with no sense of where you are, you might think you were right here at Caltech, or up at Stanford, just looking at the equipment and facilities they have available now. But it is the innovativeness of this country which has allowed our own country to succeed for so long, and we need to nurture that in order to maintain our prominence.

This answer disappointed me, because I think it reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of how markets work and what young researchers need. The question was meant to get at the heart of von Hayek’s local knowledge problem and how it relates to science, as a market. How can the government “nurture more options” when nobody in government actually knows what these millions of scientists know? Politicians and the people they appoint like “popular science,” because that’s the kind of science that gets more attention from the media. They don’t like science which is so theoretically focused that the potential applications are unknown.

Dr. Holdren made the point that the private sector seeks marketable science, so it isn’t very good at providing adequate funding for basic research. However, I can make the same argument about government-funded research. Government funding agencies lean towards applied research just as much as the private sector, but with different topics in mind. I experienced this first-hand when applying for the NSF Graduate Research Fellowship and NDSEG Fellowship. Government has very specific interests in mind (energy research, flexible body armor, helping poor communities), and they will almost always take research geared towards those goals above research which is just very theoretically interesting. It’s no secret among scientists that when applying for these fellowships, we compete to see who can spin their research activities to make it sound like we’re trying to help poor ghetto children. Because, you know, scientific merit is great, but that alone isn’t going to get you funding from the government.

Scientists go where the funding goes, so if the government is funding science, government interests are where scientific progress will focus, often redundantly. Dr. Holdren might object, saying that creating new funding opportunities doesn’t detract from the ones that exist independently. But it does. If the general public is given the impression that scientific funding comes from tax dollars, then they’re not as likely to contribute voluntarily. If individuals see the government as filling the role of supplying scientific funding, then they are not as likely to donate to independent funding agencies for basic research, or found their own. This is the “crowding out” effect, as applied to the market for science. “Crowding out” is a very real and significant effect of government funding, and I can cite countless examples of this effect demonstrably playing a huge part in real markets.

This assumption that “more money => better development” is such a 20th-century perspective, and I’m really saddened that the leading science adviser to the President is stuck in this mindset. More money isn’t always better when the type of funding system is flawed to begin with. I really wish Dr. Holdren and others were more willing to consider a future in which science is funded in a better way.

Microfinanced Science

Ever had an idea for an interesting project that you knew you could pull off if only you had the funding for it, but didn’t think you could qualify for any established fellowships? Alternatively, have you ever wished you could contribute directly to research projects you thought were cool without that funding being diverted towards other projects?

There exists a new method of funding research, called Research Microfinancing, which allows anyone to put up a proposal for a project, and anyone to donate to it. Here are a number of Research Microfinancing foundations:

http://sciflies.org/index.php


http://apply.fundscience.org/


http://eurekafund.org/


http://www.theopensourcescienceproject.com/microfinance.php

The way it works is you submit a proposal, complete with a proposed budget to one of these websites. Your proposal is circulated among peer-reviewers who determine whether your proposal qualifies as a serious project with an appropriate level of planning. If it qualifies, then your project is posted on their website, with a certain monetary threshold listed, determined by your proposed budget. Anyone at all can read the project details and donate to the project. Once the donation amount reaches the listed budget threshold, the money is released to the researcher, and the project can begin. Most of these foundations have a few reporting requirements to ensure the researcher is working on the proposed project, and progress is being made.

The best part about this system is that you don’t need to convince a review board that your project should be funded based on arbitrary or exacting “broader impact” requirements. If anyone- anyone at all -thinks your project is worth funding, they can contribute to it. You also retain the intellectual property rights to anything you produce.

Right now, most of these organizations are a bit underdeveloped simply because they are new, but this could be the future of scientific funding. This is a way to free scientific funding from the bureaucratic oversight of large foundations and governments, and to put control in the hands of curious individuals. What this system needs most to help it get off the ground is publicity. So if you think this is as cool as I do, spread the word!

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