In another attempt to concentrate power, U.S. President Donald Trump recently signed an executive order to "restore gold standard science” in federal research and policy.
It sounds reasonable given the instances of bad or faked science being published, including high-profile papers on Alzheimer’s drug development and one misleadingly claim that hydroxychloroquine would cure COVID-19. In the last decade, scientists themselves have grown concerned about the large number of studies whose promising results couldn’t be replicated.
However, researchers dedicated to reforming their field say the president’s plan isn’t a solution. It’s a way to give government officials the power to reject evidence they disagree with — without any accountability or transparency.
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