I mean, I will use the covid pandemic as an example. Respective experts in their fields were all to quick to run into the fray from their keyboards. "Trust the science" and "defer to the experts" were common sayings. But, the respective experts were often wrong, and worse, their fray into policy and politics further eroded public trust in the scientist. Things were presented as 100%, but history is showing a much different story... Masking didn't really do anything, the MRNA shot probably wasn't needed in people under 20 (and may have caused some real heart issues), closing schools was pretty awful, etc. Did very smart, highly credentialed people not learn these lessons?
We are also seeing now with WPATH and the Cass review. It's also looking like the WPATH had tremendous disagreement but was presented as consensus. It looks like DOD influenced WPATH. The "science is settled" crowd are not policy experts.
Personally, when we fray into the political arena, we look foolish. As psychologists, I call on us to rise above the political fray. I also think there is a tendency to view politics as important. They're really not that important. Innovation, leading by example, building relationships, winning friendships is how we should wish/hope to exert influence. Focus on the street and not performative online protesting.
So this post is mostly you saying you don’t believe in science based on your comments about science , masking, and vaccines. This is akin to : it didn’t turn out to work as well as experts thought so it didn’t do anything and they shouldn’t have trusted science to at least try to figure out what would be helpful. And they should have kept quiet.
Also I doubt many scientists care if they look foolish. And I certainly do not care if people want to criticize psychologists for doing the same. Opinions aren’t a substitute for expertise and knowledge.
What’s next people saying surgeons aren’t to be trusted and anyone can do what they do?
People can believe the earth is flat or believe that cars currently can run on fairy dust . In both cases they’re wrong but they can still believe it. We want these folks making laws and regulations that affect us all?
Should scientists have said nothing and just let more people die while they tried to figure it out?
Should we sit back while talking head politicians are spewing anti science, anti education, and anti rights nonsense while also having the power to push for legislation to further their “opinions” to shape law.
Science is wrong sometimes but the beauty of science is that’s part of the process.
Again this isn’t politics as normal. Creating distrust in science isn’t politics, trying to take away rights of people for being a woman or being non-heterosexual isn’t politics, telling people to inject bleach into their veins isn’t politics. It’s a problem.
We should design a social psychology experiment to examine the tendency of people to think things are getting worse. Anti-science bias has been a thing since science was a thing. Probably even before. I imagine the first hunter gatherer that said we could just stay in one place and plant some seeds instead of wandering around was ridiculed. Good ideas are contagious though so it seems that no matter how much some try to stifle them, they persist.
Apathetic? If I was really worried that Trump is going to start a fourth reich then maybe I would do something but I don’t think that’s the case. In my mind, the more valid concerns are that he will move the country too far to the right because that is where some of his support comes from such as ultra conservative nutjobs or Christian fundamentalists or that he is a bombastic jerk that doesn’t represent our country well. I am pretty middle of the road so I see the hyperbolic nonsense at both extremes. Another valid concern is the wealth gap and how our economic system is structured. Excessive power in the bureaucratic state aligning with corporate interests. Shift in the media delivery systems from corporate media to independent media. The increase of AI and how that will shift things. There is a lot going on so psychology as a field should stay our own course and not get into it. That is really where we would be most helpful as we go through societal change.
I think it would be a great study.
You mean anti science like throwing out the Chevron deference? Or some states trying to ban certain science topics in the classroom? There’s people in public office pushing these approaches, they’re also the ones tasked with addressing and legislating growing wealth gaps, economic issues, and corporate interests.
Bad ideas are contagious too as is misinformation especially in the growing influence of social media.
Centuries ago if you “believed “ in science you were at risk for imprisonment or execution. In current times anti science presents in the form of laws and legislation.
On lack of concern about a fourth reich , you have a former president saying he’d be a dictator on day one if reelected. He also quoted Hitler loosely by saying immigrants were poisoning the blood of America. I’m sorry but If that’s not concerning then what is for the folks on here who think “eh it’s just politics.”
This kind of dangerous rhetoric and policy ideas can leech into all areas of day to day life. Just the other day one of the facilities I do work in , there was a doctor and NP who were talking about wondering what’s going on as they had at least two patients tell them to leave and demanded “someone else” because they didn’t trust “ immigrants.” Does that concern anyone?
And look at the end of the day I’m not missing the point some make that in our work we should be above the fray. We should be able to keep that from our day to day work with clients and patients and provide unbiased, equal, and professional services and care to them. And to the point of making change in the streets so to speak, I think that goes a long way to maintaining trust and modeling what being able to put personal ideology and “politics” aside.
Much like the scientists who realized their ethical and scientific responsibility to speak up in regard to misinformation about COVID and threats to public health and safety , so too should psychologists and others with knowledge and expertise backed by evidence.
Sometimes they’re wrong and sometimes we’re wrong but often times it’s better to say something than nothing when the stakes are high. People are still going to have their opinions and may dismiss what we have to say but are we going to let opinions silence the right to make statements based on expertise and knowledge?
I understand there’s some sense of hope here from some that if we just keep out of it, we’ll be safe from misinformation and distrust of our profession. And I’d love for that to be correct.