waterthrowaway 1 week ago

As a physical oceanographer, the destruction of these observing systems is horrific.

It is hard to stress enough how intentionally OMB is trying to disassemble American science. The new (proposed) OMB guidelines prohibit international collaboration without pre approval for example. They also codify a political grant approval process. https://arstechnica.com/science/2026/05/the-office-of-manage...

Additionally, OMB is not releasing the congressional appropriated funds that they are required to. This is currently tanking the post-doctoral researcher market and eventually will wipe out a generation of researchers if it isn’t stopped. https://grant-witness.us/funding_curves_nsf.html

Please call your elected representatives! It is so so important! https://5calls.org/issue/federal-financial-assistance-scienc...

  • WhitneyLand 1 week ago

    OMB = “Office of Management and Budget”.

    It’s a White House office run by Russell Vought, highly ideological maga institutionalist.

    • ceejayoz 1 week ago

      (and one of the authors of Project 2025)

    • tadfisher 1 week ago

      Also famous for being a principal architect and author of Project 2025, which explicitly calls for impoundment as a mechanism for expanding presidential authority to control the Federal budget for political purposes.

      • FrustratedMonky 1 week ago

        In order to usher in their Theocratic Dictatorship, they need to have an un-educated population. This is the start. I hope it takes a few generations and the tide can be turned. But at this rate, the US might end within the next couple years, not decades.

        I don't think they are really even trying to hide it. Project 2025 was pretty obvious road map.

        • gwerbin 1 week ago

          It's not even about an uneducated population. It's about preventing research that might be inconvenient politically. Ocean sensors provide evidence of climate change and the current political agenda is to suppress evidence of climate change.

          • jauntywundrkind 1 week ago

            anyone knowing anything is dangerous to fascists. unmoored radicalism does not appreciate competent people.

            destroying the professional class and reducing everyone to serfs has been an active ongoing never-closed plot against America that has never been snuffed out, and that is having it's day. the Business Plot people walk among us, and here, 93 years latter, they are getting the hollowing out of the state and any possible upstanding world anchored in anything good that they've worked for. these people, these people, these people.

            • gwerbin 1 week ago

              I fully 100% agree with this, but in this case I don't think there is much consideration for the education system one way or another. I'm not saying it's not happening, I just think it's a distinct project, carried out using different methods, by different actors and agencies than what we see here.

        • quantified 1 week ago

          Also trying to indebt the government so much as to prevent anything useful from being restored.

    • pupppet 1 week ago

      I thought it might be Orange Man Baby.

    • msie 1 week ago

      Sadly, he will not be jailed for all the destruction he has caused. Can we send him the repair bill after he's out of office?

    • SilverElfin 1 week ago

      He’s a self described Christian nationalist. He literally believes the laws should reflect Christian morals and views. Like a right wing sharia. And that’s what Project 2025 includes. Things like age verification for porn are meant to be backdoor porn bans, and also meant to hurt gay and lesbian culture. But it’s based on a puritanical Christian theocratic sort of view.

  • epistasis 1 week ago

    The other thing they've done is make it possible to cancel any grant at any time if it goes against the politics of the current executive administration.

    Science has flourished in the US precisely because it could proceed without whimsical political picking and choosing, entire areas of science have flourished that would never have happened otherwise.

    That's not to say that politics is completely out of science, Congress has done things like ban any research money for gun safety, for example. But that had to make it through Congress, a vote across party lines, instead of just being the political whim of some bureaucrat that can cancel whatever they want whenever they want.

    For every issue you read about here on HN, there are about 10 other policy changes designed to destroy the US's scientific infrastructure. It doesn't get much attention because of all the other chaos going on, and scientists tend to be pretty quiet and try to stay apolitical, but it is truly a full-on crisis in the scientific research community right now. You won't see immediate effects, but in 10-20 years when China zooms ahead of the US on all research fronts and the US is left out of key technology and science directions, we will feel it then.

    • btown 1 week ago

      And the non-cancellable nature of grants is not just a nice-to-have, it's absolutely critical for research with upfront capital costs (buying equipment, building labs, etc.)

      The very _fact_ that this is a policy is disrupting research, even if specific grants haven't been cancelled. Some universities are stepping in to backstop, but it's a powerful chilling effect.

      • epistasis 1 week ago

        Some of the specific grants that have been cancelled are shocking in the negative effect they will have on the ecosystem. Cutting off Sean Eddy, a giant in DNA analysis, just baffles the mind:

        https://www.npr.org/2026/05/11/nx-s1-5807995/some-researcher...

        There's not even any political angle to pursue here, it is just lighting knowledge on fire with no grander purpose.

        • pvaldes 1 week ago

          Understandable, as DNA analysis takes all the fun from raping people without consequences, making it much more inconvenient to hide. Criminals from the entire planet hate DNA analysis with passion. War criminals and sex criminals specially.

        • vkou 1 week ago

          > There's not even any political angle to pursue here, it is just lighting knowledge on fire with no grander purpose.

          Fucking with people who are capable of reading and writing is the political angle. Pol Pot took this sort of logic a few steps further in Cambodia a few decades ago.

          MAGA, meanwhile, is only 'considering' suspending things like habeas corpus.

      • Loquebantur 1 week ago

        People here are missing that they're not dismantling random things. There is a system to it, the objective of which is far more sinister than mere ideology.

        The sensors in question here are crucial to monitor the Atlantic Meridional Overturning Circulation (AMOC).

        They don't want that monitored because it is currently breaking down. Not some arbitrary far away time, now.

        The science of this gets astroturfed into some nonsense "we don't really know". We do.

        But conveniently, now the data to show this to the incredulous won't exist.

        • smackeyacky 1 week ago

          When did evidence ever change the minds of the incredulous? The whole debate has become so polluted by the forces who want no action on climate change we can’t even use the original description any more.

    • saalweachter 1 week ago

      A professor I worked for in college was a big fan of how the US funding was fragmented, with some coming from the NSF, some from NIH, Energy Ag, each branch of the military... if one department had a loon in charge, the others would keep things running smoothly.

      • epistasis 1 week ago

        Yeah, that was one massive benefit of the fragmentation of scientific funding, just like how in the private sector there's a great diversity of funders, of employers, etc. etc. etc.

        All that's now been reduced to a single kill switch at the very top, and they're trying to change all the non-political positions into political appointees so that they have control not only with a veto at the top, but control of every single decision along the entire way, without any of that pesky scientific merit getting in the way.

    • Duwensatzaj 1 week ago

      >Science has flourished in the US precisely because it could proceed without whimsical political picking and choosing

      Please don't take this as a defense of the Trump administration pulling these ocean sensors, but the previous administration also had political demands on grants. One of the better articles about this I've found is "Politicizing science funding undermines public trust in science, academic freedom, and the unbiased generation of knowledge" - https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/research-metrics-and-an...

      This ended up getting grants cancelled because they'd throw in a line so the DEI checkbox would get checked, and then Cruz went through with a hacksaw and cancelled the grant for it, as Scott Alexander found - https://www.astralcodexten.com/p/only-about-40-of-the-cruz-w...

      • dragant 1 week ago

        This is a good point but its apple vs oranges. This administration is literally politicizing and destroying science funding.

        • Duwensatzaj 1 week ago

          Agreed on the second part, it's pretty terrible. Just absolutely wasteful, and the proposed centralization of research funding is the wrong direction.

          Disagree on the first. It wasn't as crude, but the politicization was absolutely there.

  • xg15 1 week ago

    Can anyone explain that "anti-science" crusade to me? This doesn't seem to have any effect than reduce America's standing in the world.

    • adithyareddy 1 week ago

      They're ideological goals, not technical ones. If they don't make sense to you it's because you're not viewing it through their ideological lens.

    • Isamu 1 week ago

      I think this is part of an anti-climate change agenda, which is about protecting fossil fuel investments. Not sure that it is broadly anti-science, except maybe in the sense of being against public funding broadly.

    • fhdkweig 1 week ago

      Studying the ocean temperatures verifies that climate change is not a hoax. "He" is making money off fossil fuels. That is enough of a reason for being anti-science. This is the same guy that decided that the COVID numbers would go down if we just stopped measuring them. Burying his head in the sand is his go-to solution for all problems.

    • CamperBob2 1 week ago

      Once you start asking what Trump would do differently if he actually were an agent or captive of hostile foreign interests, the rest will begin to make more sense.

    • justin66 1 week ago

      They're isolationists. They do not care about America's standing in the world.

    • quantified 1 week ago

      If you believe that our leadership is being influenced by actors such as Vladimir Putin, then you see that this is intended.

    • wnevets 1 week ago

      > reduce America's standing in the world.

      That is the goal.

      • jackyinger 1 week ago

        A small price to pay to increase the standing of a select few. /s

        • red-iron-pine 1 week ago

          the cyberpunk dystopia won't build itself

    • toomuchtodo 1 week ago

      If we do not have objective facts and data, the truth is whatever the loudest person says it is.

    • epistasis 1 week ago

      Pretty much every single part of Project 2025 is designed to reduce America's standing in the world, not just the anti-science parts of it.

      It's a general trend across all authoritarian regimes; it's harder to be authoritarian with lots of international connections, with lots of strength and partnerships.

      Autarky, authoritarianism, isolation, all go together (along with weak economies, etc., but the goal isn't to have the biggest amount of pie, the goal is to be able to control all the pie slices and take the biggest portion, even if the pie is far smaller.)

      • jaybrendansmith 1 week ago

        When do we get to the part where we all collectively wake up and realize they are the enemy of the American People? You know, the part with the guillotines?

    • naturalmovement 1 week ago

      There's a lot of collateral damage that could have been avoided if millions weren't being squandered on dubious "science" like studying grooming habits of trans aboriginals in the Central African Republic (a made-up scenario, but there are many like it).

      At some point the baby's going to be thrown out with the bath water until the course is corrected.

      • epistasis 1 week ago

        > a made-up scenario, but there are many like it)

        There are many made-up scenarios, but not many real examples of what you are using to justify the weakening of the entire nation.

        And the fact that you had to fabricate something is literally proof of it. Now, go find any supposed "waste" and you'll find that, again, the science has been completely misrepresented to the public by an anti-science media source that was focused on creating fake propaganda rather than properly informing the public.

        Seriously. Prove me wrong, go find all this bath water that you claim exists, post it here!

      • pesus 1 week ago

        Instead of getting upset about made up scenarios, why don't you find some real scenarios? Like the one this thread is discussing, for instance.

      • enragedcacti 1 week ago

        Seriously, when our tax dollars pay for idiots to play around with lizard spit[1] all day, why should we trust anything they want to fund?

        [1] https://biomedical-sciences.uq.edu.au/article/2024/04/rise-o...

        • triceratops 1 week ago

          Should've added an /s there

          • Nevermark 5 days ago

            This link is much funnier if you don't give the punchline away. /s or /h or /ffs?

            I am still trying to figure out how being against science, higher education, new energy, skilled South Korean workers, and for tariff-of-the-day lotteries, crypto grifts, Chinese-made "American-manufactured" phones, random wars and red hats is pro-manufacturing, pro-domestic investment and balancing the budget.

            It's the "new math" of economics. I can't keep up.

      • Itoldmyselfso 1 week ago

        There's nobody gatekeeping what can be studied and what can't. You claim millions are being wasted; by who? Is the goverment funding the studies you deem as wasted? If so you'd think that rather than making up a study you'd be able to give a single example. Should be very easy if millions are being wasted on these what I'd assume you'd call "bogus" studies.

      • evan_ 1 week ago

        Aren't you in any way concerned that you can't give a real example of the sort of thing you're talking about, and have to make one up? This should be the wake-up call that makes you re-evaluate your priors.

        The reality is that reactionaries often describe "useless" scientific endeavors like "condoms for worms" that end up being the only thing stopping parasitic screwworms from infesting the US cattle herd, which will end up costing us hundreds of millions of dollars to resolve- and spike the already-high cost of beef for decades.

        • bsdetector 6 days ago

          Anyone that wants to see real examples can turn on showdead in preferences.

      • preg_match 1 week ago

        A lot of this “dubious science” isn’t dubious at all. Rather, people just have a political view on it. Like climate change is considered dubious science by the right. It’s not, but that’s how they view it.

      • Sabinus 1 week ago

        To me this argument sounds like, " the Dems funded too much trans science so you made us defund climate and social science and damage the rest"

        Is that about right?

      • RetroTechie 1 week ago

        Nice try to divert the discussion...

        Could you explain what's wrong with monitoring the oceans surrounding the US? Take any angle (moral, scientific, public interest, economic p.o.v.)

        Hint: in the greater scheme of things, science projects like this are ridiculously cheap.

    • throwpoaster 1 week ago

      The steel man is that you can’t peer review your way to breakthroughs that change consensus, because peer review relies on consensus, so peer review has to be made subordinate to accountable decision makers.

    • munificent 1 week ago

      The primary goal of authoritarianism is consolidation of power among a small number of elites. Anything that can reduce that power is an enemy.

      The essential weakness that the powerful elites have is that they are, by definition, outnumbered. So in order to consolidate and maintain power, they need to disturb any system that the masses can use to coordinate and form collective action.

      (It's a kid's movie, but Hopper's speech in "A Bug's Life" captures this very well: https://www.reddit.com/r/videos/comments/1hfo90u/hoppers_jus...)

      Reality has a strong consensus-creating effect. We all live in the same material world, so simply by understanding it better and sharing that understanding, we will automatically trend towards having more common ground and more agreement.

      That's a threat to elite power, so authoritarian governments have always been anti-science. They may pay it lip service, or attempt to harness it to their own ends, but they never want an entire populace that it well-educated and grounded in reality, because well-informed masses are harder to divide and conquer.

    • st-keller 1 week ago

      If you want to be an authoritarian ruler, truth is the first thing you have to eliminate! If noone knows what is true, a leader can tell you what to believe! Science is our method to determine truth! A führer cannot have that!

      • gpm 1 week ago

        More than that if you're a professor (and thus an educator for the next generation) you're now incentivized to modify your speech in favour of the authoritarian in order to keep getting funding.

        I wouldn't underestimate the degree to which funding to these is being cut because climate scientists have historically been politically opposed to certain large republican donors that make their fortunes burning fossil fuels.

      • Hikikomori 1 week ago

        It was also the first things Hitler and Mussolini did once they got power.

        • epistasis 1 week ago

          And Mao and Lenin! Stalin's efforts at this are unparalleled, honestly, and we even allied with that asshole against Hitler and Mussolini.

          All totalitarians eliminate any other source of truth, power, or influence except themselves.

    • datsci_est_2015 1 week ago

      You can read the profiles of people who run in the circles of those who have decision-making powers.

      Take for example the Wikipedia article for Liz Peek[1]:

      > Peek spent more than 20 years on Wall Street as a research analyst focused on the oil industry. She began working for Wertheim & Company in 1975 and in 1983, was one of the first women to become partner at a Wall Street investment firm.

      > Peek was the first woman elected president of the National Association of Petroleum Investment Analysts and was also a member of Institute of Chartered Financial Analysts.

      > She has written for The Fiscal Times, Fox News, the New York Sun, The Wall Street Journal, Alternate Universe, the Motley Fool, and Women on the Web and has appeared on Fox Business with Neil Cavuto and Fox & Friends. Peek contributes opinion pieces to The Hill.

      > Their son, Andrew Peek, studied at Princeton, Harvard, Johns Hopkins and the University of Texas at Austin, is a veteran of the US Army, and has worked for the Heritage Foundation and for two Republican US Senators and one Republican Congressman. He briefly served in each of the Trump administrations; as part of the State Department during Trump's first term, and as an advisor at the NSC during Trump's second term.

      Just read her opinion pieces and you’ll experience her worldview firsthand, which I can only presume comes from a foolish sense of self-righteousness for making a career out of enabling and exacerbating the fossil fuel crisis. Don’t think she would be able to sleep at night if she actually gave a shit about even learning about the potential impacts of climate change.

      And she’s a drop in the bucket - all of these people are like this.

      [1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liz_Peek

      • RetroTechie 1 week ago

        I'm thinking..

        https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Planck%27s_principle

        Often phrased as "science progresses one funeral at a time"

        ..applies here. Each time a Big Oil executive or one of their conspirators eats it, green tech progresses.

        They worked to build today's fossil-dependent world. 20-somethings work to build a world that does without fossils (and imho they're doing ok there).

        • datsci_est_2015 1 week ago

          Yeah, with the added factor that the US has large swaths of wealth that were accumulated from exploitation of the commons. In this case, natural resources with negative externalities tied to their extraction and consumption.

          It creates a sense of entitlement, as well as enforces a certain type of world view that justifies their actions. How would you feel if your entire career was being invalidated by those who you consider intellectually and culturally inferior political enemies?

  • sulam 1 week ago

    Unfortunately as a resident of the SF Bay Area, calling my elected representative is next to useless. :/

    • undersuit 1 week ago

      Blame 'The Reapportionment Act of 1929', the representatives capped their number and denied you adequate representation.

      If you did call you may get a response from one of your representative's staff, the number which are granted is based on the population of your state.

    • triceratops 1 week ago

      That's what they want you to think.

  • frogperson 1 week ago

    The elected reps are captured by business interests. Citizens united means the best marketing team wins every election. The reps do not work for citizens, why would they? Voting has been nullified, democracy is dead.

    • phyzix5761 1 week ago

      We haven't started the Democracy phase yet in the US. It's a constitutional republic and its working exactly as designed by the founding fathers. The wealthy elite stay in control of the Senate (equivalent to the House of Lords) and the citizens get to have their say in the House (equivalent to the House of Commons). In this system nothing becomes law unless approved by the Lords of the Senate.

      This started as an Aristocracy with well meaning participants but its evolved into an Oligarchy just as anacyclosis[1] predicts. The next stage is Democracy and then that, eventually, crumbles into mob rule (Ochlocracy).

      [1] https://anacyclosis.org/portfolio/what-is-anacyclosis/

      • 20after4 1 week ago

        It feels more like we've jumped straight to mob rule (with tinges of oligarchy, which are not new really)

    • red-iron-pine 1 week ago

      US business interests are fine with the US funding science they can use

      these are foreign interests, and it's 100% clear who is behind it.

  • pstuart 1 week ago

    It's borderline evil. The only reason they are doing this is to silence the science that contradicts their agenda.

    I get the part about old school corruption where your cronies get to steal from the government (hello Big Coal/Big Oil), but to figuratively shit on the people of the world out of spite takes it to a whole new level...of evil.

  • 20after4 1 week ago

    I live in a red state. Our elected representatives are in on it.

20after4 1 week ago

Look at all of the headlines coming out of the department of energy:

https://www.energy.gov/newsroom

Lots of them related to coal and LNG.

Most prominently: https://www.energy.gov/articles/energy-department-invest-350...

The policy of the federal government is anti renewable energy and pro coal, pro oil.

Oil executives are profiting from the situation with Iran. These guys don't want us to have cheap renewable energy. They want us to keep paying their tolls and they don't want anyone to have access to evidence that could continue exposing the damage they've done to the environment.

  • scottyah 1 week ago

    The DoE is posting misinformation constantly, they seem to just be old oil people. Idk how they're still flying under the radar.

    • gwerbin 1 week ago

      None of it is under the radar anymore, they have a radicalized supporter base and increasingly dictatorial control over the basic functioning of government. Subtlety is no longer necessary under those conditions.

arjie 1 week ago

The scales of money at play always seem so strange. Oh a few hundred million for ocean sensors, or about what a few OpenAI / Cursor employees or a few hundred FAANG employees could personally fund if they desired to do so.

  • vel0city 1 week ago

    Its not even about saving money. If they just wanted to save money they'd just stop paying attention to the data coming in, retask/lay off the people working on it, and let the buoys stay out there. A dumb idea to me, but at least that's consistent. Let other organizations decide to manage the buoys. While I'd prefer for the government to do it, it could be possible to have other groups fund such things. It would be a lot cheaper, easier, and allow for a smoother transition with no lost data for some other org or government to take over the project.

    Instead, we're paying money to pull the sensors out of the water. We're actively spending money to blind ourselves to things we know are growing areas of concern.

    • Jtsummers 1 week ago

      This is the strangest part to me. They will spend millions and several years to dismantle a system that, realistically, could also just be abandoned. Not that we should leave more random, unused equipment out in the world, but if this were really about cost savings, and given this administration does not care at all about the environment, then leaving the equipment in place was the best option by their stated rationale.

      • fanatic2pope 1 week ago

        If they just abandon them then a subsequent administration can simply re-activate them without being forced to spend even more money.

      • Sharlin 1 week ago

        Astronaut meme: it was never about cost savings

      • insane_dreamer 1 week ago

        it's not strange or random idiocy

        they are intentionally making it difficult for the next administration to flip the switch back on to monitoring again; it would now require $100s of millions to reconstruct the system, money that may not be easy to get congress/taxpayers to agree to

    • curt15 1 week ago

      In what world is more spending for less data a good deal?

      • 20after4 1 week ago

        If you are in the oil, gas and coal business and the money spent is coming out of someone else's pocket then it's a great deal.

    • lastofthemojito 1 week ago

      It's also (according to some in Congress) an illegal action as Congress authorized and funded the project:

      https://www.pbs.org/newshour/science/lawmakers-fight-to-stop...

      But that just seems like par for the course for the current administration, whether it's tariffs or ballrooms or ocean sensors - do the illegal thing ASAP, let the courts argue for months or years, and maaaaaybe get a slap on the wrist sometime way in the future.

      • autoexec 1 week ago

        > do the illegal thing ASAP, let the courts argue for months or years, and maaaaaybe get a slap on the wrist sometime way in the future.

        don't forget that the courts have already decided that anything this president does is legally okay because he's immune from punishment for breaking any law as long as they decide the illegal activity was an "official act".

      • AngryData 1 week ago

        Congress isn't toothless so I just don't see how I can believe anything but that the majority of congress, whether they claim opposition or not, is onboard with this nonsense. They are completely out of touch and it seems like they are just playing a game of PR hot potato to avoid taking any real action.

        • Gud 1 week ago

          Out of touch with whom? Not with the people who put them there.

      • gwerbin 1 week ago

        Well the majority party in Congress could put a stop to it at any time. The fact that they don't, and haven't just on about any related issue, tells you everything you need to know. They just don't want to put their names on it in case public opinion sours, then they can at least try to keep their jobs and claim innocence.

    • EA-3167 1 week ago

      "Don't Look Up" was a documentary.

    • goatlover 1 week ago

      This administration is extremely wasteful despite the mantra about reducing waste, fraud and abuse. In fact it's done the opposite of all three things.

  • rjrjrjrj 1 week ago

    These sensors and a bunch of other scientific research for a thousand years, or pointless war with Iran for 3 months.

    • _fs 1 week ago

      Cost has nothing to do with it. This was all laid out in the project 2025 manifesto. Burn it all down with no regard to money previously invested. Makes it harder for future administrations to rebuild. Halting the collection of data is not enough. Maintenance is 5% or less of the cost to deploy new. If they destroy it, it makes the cost to rebuild (including having to re-seek congressional approval) that much harder and time consuming.

      • gwerbin 1 week ago

        And if they do accidentally destroy something that they want, it can be rebuilt by a private contractor friendly to the administration.

    • autoexec 1 week ago

      The war is making a lot of money for trump and his family, the science was just making some of Trump's biggest bribers look bad.

  • dwroberts 1 week ago

    The US military budget is 900 billion dollars. The government can afford a few hundred million for some sensors, it should not need private sector patrons

    • echelon 1 week ago

      > The US military budget is 900 billion dollars.

      And we're about to pay over a third of that to Iran?

      • pesus 1 week ago

        Is it actually coming out of the military budget? I assumed we were just going to get taxed for it, or they'd pull it from some other places that actually needs the funds.

        Alternatively, they could just increase the military budget by 300 billion (or more).

        • morkalork 1 week ago

          It's a good measure of scale. The USA is paying Iran an amount that is 1/3rd of its military budget in reparations because they "won".

          • throwawaypath 1 week ago

            No, that was fake news. The 300 billion dollars isn't coming from the US.

            • amanaplanacanal 1 week ago

              How would you even know that? We haven't seen the agreement yet.

              • throwawaypath 1 week ago

                >We haven't seen the agreement yet.

                Which why the $300 million claim is fake news.

                • amanaplanacanal 1 week ago

                  That 300 billion number came from JD Vance. Do you think he lied, or what?

                  • Hikikomori 1 week ago

                    He also said trump is America's Hitler, but that turned out to be true. But would argue is America's Hitler and Jimmy saville.

                  • throwawaypath 1 week ago

                    >That 300 billion number came from JD Vance.

                    No it didn't, that is fake news. Please provide an unbiased source where JD Vance claims the US will be paying Iran $300 billion.

                    • amanaplanacanal 1 week ago

                      "Walk through some of this. The Iranians are saying that they're gonna have access to a $300 billion reconstruction fund, true or false?" O'Keefe began.

                      "Well, Ed, that's the sort of thing they could have access to, funded by the Gulf coast coalition, so long as they honor their end of the obligation. I think that one of the things you're going to see, Ed—and people have to be skeptical of this—is that the hardliners in the Iranian system will overemphasize the benefits that Iran gets, while underemphasizing all the things that they have to concede and all the things they have to provide in order to get these benefits," Vance replied.

                      NBC news. He said the "Gulf Coast coalition", but it's unclear exactly who is going to be paying into that.

        • sejje 1 week ago

          My understanding was that the US green-lighted a 300-billion investment from neighboring countries to rebuild.

          • burkaman 1 week ago

            Nobody outside the administration knows what the US has greenlit, and a detailed peace agreement likely doesn't exist yet.

      • throwawaypath 1 week ago

        No, that was fake news. The 300 billion dollars isn't coming from the US.

        • fhdkweig 1 week ago

          Specifically, it is unfreezing previously frozen/stolen assets that belong to Iran.

          • Jtsummers 1 week ago

            That's only part of it, the US and allies are reportedly going to set up a $300 billion fund for Iran, the particular terms of accessing it aren't clear at this point. GP is correct in that the US is not putting up $300 billion, but it will be putting up part of that money. The US fought and lost a war and Iran comes out ahead, and the US and its allies come out worse and poorer.

            • throwawaypath 1 week ago

              >The US fought and lost a war and Iran comes out ahead, and the US and its allies come out worse and poorer.

              That is also fake news. The US did not lose the war: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2026_Iran_war

              • Jtsummers 1 week ago

                > That is also fake news.

                You keep using those words, but it's clear you don't know what they mean (or what anything means). Enjoy your trolling.

                • throwawaypath 1 week ago

                  >You keep using those words, but it's clear you don't know what they mean

                  Don't project your inability to discern fake news on others.

                  >(or what anything means)

                  Cringe.

                  >Enjoy your trolling.

                  Enjoy your fake news delusions.

    • mandeepj 1 week ago

      > The US military budget is 900 billion dollars.

      The new budget proposal is $1.5T

      • hxtk 1 week ago

        That number, incidentally, is the entire NATO military budget. Which scares me because I can imagine someone planning on taking action that would result in the dissolution of NATO thinking they can make up the difference that way and choosing that number with that in mind.

    • justin66 1 week ago

      The government has already paid for the sensors.

  • hdgvhicv 1 week ago

    It’s nothing to do with money, that’s always the libertarian excuse, and HN laps it up far more than the rest of the word.

    • pesus 1 week ago

      Whatever delusions I once held that software engineers are above average intelligence were completely eradicated by seeing how many HN commenters eagerly bought into the obvious lies about DOGE and their goals (amongst other things). It was embarrassing. They sure seem to be a lot quieter about that now, though.

      • Gud 1 week ago

        hackers used to be a large percentage of software engineers and are indeed intelligent people with an open mind.

        However since ~2005 their percentage of the total has gone from ~25% to <1% as computers became less of a hobby and a way to make money.

    • ToucanLoucan 1 week ago

      Have to sternly disagree: at least on the conservative side, it is thoroughly lapped up. Right wingers the world over constantly vote to fuck themselves and the rest of us over with this never ending whingeing about debt, spending, pork, what have you. On this particular issue it's even less surprising since the only thing perhaps a right winger wants to hear less about than government spending is climate change.

      The entire debt ceiling bullshit is political theatre and always has been. We didn't even have a debt ceiling for the majority of our existence as a nation, and since it's creation by right wingers, it has been used as a bludgeon by right wingers to kneecap anything that stood to benefit the civil good of our country. Austerity politics have been deployed here and elsewhere to great effect to destroy social programs, demonize those who need them, and reallocate trillions of dollars to the private sector to provide the same services the public sector did, but worse, and while enriching greedy assholes the entire way. And the whole way it has been done by an enthusiastic and approving portion of the public who can be persuaded to feel outrage that seventy cents of their yearly taxes are going to some program in some far off part of the country they'll never see.

      Meanwhile the actual national debt soars, and under who? Yep, fucking right wingers again. And every time we want to do something science and evidence backed like give the homeless somewhere to live, we're met with a chorus of WHO'S GONNA PAY FOR IT, but every goddamn time there's another country full of brown kids to blow the fuck off the face of the Earth, we always, always have money for that.

      It's disgusting and I hate it here.

      • autoexec 1 week ago

        > Meanwhile the actual national debt soars, and under who? Yep, fucking right wingers again.

        Exactly. If the people on the right cared at all about government spending they'd never vote republican again, which just shows us that they don't actually care about government spending. They don't seem to want to talk about the things they really do care about too loudly though.

  • righthand 1 week ago

    Lol Big Tech employees don’t have desires beyond money at any cost.

bbbrad 1 week ago

Read the article, but I'm still not seeing why the U.S. is pulling these sensors. Anyone have any insight?

  • ezfe 1 week ago

    Because they're scientific instruments to collect data

    • square_usual 1 week ago

      Specifically climate data, which can be used to argue for climate change action.

      • tetha 1 week ago

        As the old joke went, the easiest way to not have detected covid cases in the country is to stop testing. Very simple, very effective.

        • warkdarrior 1 week ago

          Not an actual joke, this was Trump's idea during his first term.

          • jermaustin1 1 week ago

            And not old... literally only 6 years ago.

          • Sabinus 1 week ago

            Another one was when the popular perception was that Obama did more drone strikes than Trump did.

            In fact, Trump had authorised more than Obama did. Trump had just stopped the reporting of the drone strikes.

  • SilverElfin 1 week ago

    It’s to avoid collecting data that would point to major climate change issues. Things like disruption of currents that circulate across oceans. It’s really a dishonest move. We already paid to have this network of sensors, and they’re supposed to run for another 20 years. Instead they will spend 2 years visiting all this infrastructure that we have in place, and pulling it out of the oceans.

  • cactacea 1 week ago

    Science is evil and must be destroyed at all costs.

    • groundzeros2015 1 week ago

      Applying even an ounce of argumentative empathy will make you more convincing and psychologically healthier.

      • arbitrary_name 1 week ago

        it is extremely difficult to do in cases like this. again, why are we pulling the sensors? why not leave them in place and stop paying for maintenance?

        why not find alternate funding mechanisms?

        because we know who these people are, and what their motives are. they show us time and and time again.

        empathy is something to be used against us.

        • groundzeros2015 1 week ago

          Well. Even if you want to attribute a bad motive that would give more clarity. Maybe the people involved in these projects have expressed disagreement with the admin, so they don’t want to pay them.

          What’s so important about these particular sensors that any change in resourcing is a categorical evil?

      • caconym_ 1 week ago

        How would you explain it? It seems either entirely ideological on the part of its architects, cynically designed to appeal to a political base that has been inculcated with that ideology, or cynically designed to enrich its architects' political and business allies under cover of appealing to a political base that has been inculcated with that ideology. Possibly some combination of those three. But the core issue is opposition to and misrepresentation of scientific consensus, on the part of an administration that has referred to its political opponents as "the enemy from within".

  • hydrolox 1 week ago

    do you expect there to be logic behind it?

    • JohnMakin 1 week ago

      I hope there isn't, because if there is, it has a lot of implications that are unpleasant to think about.

      • 20after4 1 week ago

        Best start thinking about those implications because it is unwise to underestimate what is coming.

      • insane_dreamer 1 week ago

        Vought, Miller and others in the Admin, are evil, but not stupid. This is intentionally destroying the system to make it very difficult for a future administration to get it going again.

  • mort96 1 week ago

    It's in the republican party's interest to ensure there's as little data as possible showing any form of climate anomalies. Their party platform is that climate change is not real, and Trump is personally a big fan of coal power.

    • goatlover 1 week ago

      And it's not even a secret, Trump, his officials and supporters all say this.

  • shimman 1 week ago

    [flagged]

    • hdgvhicv 1 week ago

      For simple minded people like Trump and his followers yes. For the ones pulling his strings they have motives and reasons beyond the idiots they put in as a figurehead.

  • clintonb 1 week ago

    The current administration doesn’t care about climate change, or believes it’s a hoax. Given this, they see no need to fund research and data gathering that tells them otherwise.

    • exe34 1 week ago

      No, they are attacking any and all forms of data collection that can be connected to climate change - even if it's not specifically for climate change.

      https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng-interactive/2026/may/...

    • francisofascii 1 week ago

      That is a charatable interpretation. A more negative take is they are purposely suppressing the evidence.

      • nom 1 week ago

        That is exactly what is happening.

        Records of environmental data are a huge pain in the ass for those invested in fossil energy and adjacent industries.

        The truth is hurting business and they seem to be going on a rampage actively killing it at the roots. Stop collecting and recording data, destroy and hide the existing data and close the institutions.

    • ActorNightly 1 week ago

      To be fair, the public in large also dgaf about climate change.

      Honestly, at this point, having natural disasters with destruction and death is probably the only way to make people care.

      • taylortbb 1 week ago

        > Honestly, at this point, having natural disasters with destruction and death is probably the only way to make people care

        We already have them. People just claim they're chance effects with no connection to climate change.

        The problem with refuting it is that they are chance events, there's no way to definitively say "this was caused by climate change", because it's always possible it would have happened anyways. It's the upwards trend in frequency and severity that we can definitively point and say "that's caused by climate change", but that's too abstract for most people to understand.

      • burkaman 1 week ago

        This is not true, most people care about climate change, even in the US (https://climatecommunication.yale.edu/visualizations-data/yc...). Maybe you think "if they care then why are they still driving/flying/eating meat/whatever" and I sympathize, but climate change is not an issue that will be solved by individuals taking responsibility, in the same way that wars still happen even when the vast majority of the population oppose them.

        If you're wondering why they don't at least vote for someone who cares about climate change, I don't know. But claiming people don't care at all is not true and is self-defeating, because it makes people who do care think "I guess I'm in the minority, there's no point in trying".

        • triceratops 1 week ago

          > If you're wondering why they don't at least vote for someone who cares about climate change, I don't know

          People are single-issue voters on pointless shit like abortion and bathrooms. Where are all the single-issue climate change voters?

        • ActorNightly 1 week ago

          >I guess I'm in the minority, there's no point in trying

          Thats exactly how it is.

          Look at the current politics discourse. Even now, in the presence of ordinary people, there can be a conservative who supports Trump, but you are supposed to be "nice" to them, because its all just political opinions, and those ordinary people are removed from the real destruction of lives that the current administration carried out for many people.

          Same with global warming. People are far removed from the real effects, so most people just don't actually care.

          And in the same way that all the anti vaxxers who got covid and urged others to take the vaccine before they died, people need to get hit over the head with reality before they start to care.

          The only way forward that doesn't involve mass famine/death is some low level societal control that forces people to behave for fear of real consequences.

  • dgellow 1 week ago

    Im not sure if you know but the current US government is very much anti-science

  • exe34 1 week ago

    Any data that can even remotely be tied to the climate could be used against the Turd Reich. The Fuhrer cannot allow it.

  • mullingitover 1 week ago

    There's no point in spending taxpayer money understanding what may or may not happen in the future, when we already know what will happen: Jesus is coming back. We need to spend on the military for the final battle of Armageddon.

    ^ Literally the beliefs of the most influential part of the political base of the administration.

    • anon_shill 1 week ago

      Is this from Bannon and co.? What is their rationale for being militaristic during a return of Jesus? Wouldn't Jesus not like that very much?

      • burkaman 1 week ago

        There is no way to know what Jesus would or wouldn't like. Most religious people interpret their chosen text in whatever way best fits their preferences and lifestyle. In this case, they like war, so that means Jesus also likes war: https://jonathanlarsen.substack.com/p/us-troops-were-told-ir.... It is trivial to find Bible verses supporting war if that's what you're looking for: https://www.biblestudytools.com/topical-verses/bible-verses-....

        • mullingitover 1 week ago

          This is known as 'negotiating with the text' and people get extremely mad when you describe what they're doing.

      • steve_adams_86 1 week ago

        I don't think they literally believe it. They ostensibly espouse this for political purposes, but it doesn't appear they believe in any permanent objective or thing other than their own power and profit.

        • mullingitover 1 week ago

          > I don't think they literally believe it.

          They do.

          Source: They raised me.

          I grew up experiencing things like getting an earful any time a nature show said something that contradicted young Earth creationism.

      • 0xbadcafebee 1 week ago

        It's not, it's Hegseth and others that are Christian Zionists. This is not "christians who like zionism", it's a specific evangelical sect that interprets global conflicts as literal fulfillments of biblical prophecy. The popular tenants of Christian Zionists include that women should be subservient to men, homosexuals are evil, white christians should rule supreme, the confederates got a bad rap, COVID and global warming are a conspiracy, and the big kicker: armageddon is coming and we must prepare the way for Jesus to rule the earth. In order to do that they need to wage holy war / WW3 so that Jesus can come back, defeat everyone, and make a new Earth and rule over it. This is why Hegseth said he's fighting a holy war, why he has Crusader tattoos, etc. It's the Christian version of Islamic Extremism. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Douglas_Wilson_(theologian) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Hagee)

        “He urged us to tell our troops that this was ‘all part of God’s divine plan’ and he specifically referenced numerous citations out of the Book of Revelation referring to Armageddon and the imminent return of Jesus Christ,” the NCO wrote in the email. “He said that ‘President Trump has been anointed by Jesus to light the signal fire in Iran to cause Armageddon and mark his return to Earth.’" - https://www.military.com/daily-news/2026/03/06/lawmakers-wan...

  • tjohns 1 week ago

    Dismantling monitoring programs which show evidence of climate change is one of the Project 2025 priorities.

    Specifically, their plan calls for downsizing the Office of Oceanic and Atmospheric Research (Mandate for Leadership, Project 2025, p. 676), and breaking up NOAA (p. 674), because they view these agencies as a source of "climate alarmism" and that "the preponderance of its climate-change research should be disbanded."

  • 0xbadcafebee 1 week ago

    Political strategy. Step one of controlling a population is to stop information flow; you can't stop something bad happening if you don't know about it. Since the party in charge thinks climate change is a hoax, all efforts at slowing climate change are therefore bad. So you remove the tools people use to document and respond to climate change, and now everything is fixed, in your world view.

  • cyberax 1 week ago

    "See no evil, hear no evil" - literally.

  • jordanb 1 week ago

    Because they're Woke sensors that are collecting woke lies about the Chinese Climate Change Hoax of course.

    Also Accuweather paid a lot of money for this president and they are very interested in not having the US government compete against them with free, high-quality weather forecasting.

    • lm2s 1 week ago

      Now this would be more credible to me.

  • jandrewrogers 1 week ago

    It doesn't make much sense.

    There are massive gaps in our current climate models because we have almost no data about subsurface ocean dynamics. Many of the assumptions about the oceanic environment in climate models were demonstrated to not match empirical measurement a few decades ago but we don't have enough oceanic data to come up with a coherent model for the observed dynamics. Without a plausible model for these dynamics, any predictions made from climate models have a high probability of being significantly incorrect.

    These sensor networks were the first step toward collecting some data that would allow us to develop a plausible model for subsurface ocean dynamics. To be clear, we are probably still a couple decades out from this in any case but removing these sensor networks from operation definitely won't help. There are very few efforts to collect this data at scale, I believe this was one of the largest.

    Most people don't realize how critical subsurface sensor networks are to building accurate climate models.

  • pvaldes 1 week ago

    > Why they do this?

    Because it damages USA. As other thousands of nonsensical choices in the last years, America always, consistently, ends scammed milked, and holding the shorter straw. Everything in this government is designed specifically to the inch to humiliate and destroy US. Acting exactly like foreign enemy agents for fun and profit.

    Or maybe because it could be used (in theory) to register submarine's position.

    Or maybe somebody expects to benefit from the climate change in some way, and couldn't care less if half of the planet became inhabitable in the process. There aren't many other reasonable explanations.

Danox 1 week ago

The countries on the other side of the Pacific in East Asia will just have to pick up the slack and the same applies to those on the European side of the Atlantic, just another signal of the decline of the United States.

I’m sure that the same will apply to the weather satellites above.

  • phtrivier 1 week ago

    Should Europe put sensors on the US coast to continue measuring the collapse of the AMOC ? I'm not 100% sure the US navy would enjoy that.

    Europe will find proxy measurements to confirm that, thanks in no small part to US politicians, pour climate will be even more FUed than expected.

    We won't send flowers, but, hey, that's your country, and you got lower taxes and better return on your cryptos, so "the rest of the world" can go to hell, I suppose ?

    This too shall pass, but it can't pass fast enough.

fancyfredbot 1 week ago

I understand the present US administration would want to stop funding this, and that they have the power to do so.

I don't understand how that has led to the sensor network being dismantled. Surely it would have been cheaper to leave it in place and stop maintaining it?

  • adithyareddy 1 week ago

    It's not about the cost, it's about ideology. Same reason they've paid nearly $2 billion in taxpayer funds to energy developers to abandon offshore wind farm projects. The point isn't to save money, it's to stop green energy projects, which is an ideological goal. If their decisions don't make sense to you it's because you're not viewing them through their ideological lens.

    • fancyfredbot 1 week ago

      The way I thought it worked was that congress would set a budget and scientists would decide how to spend it.

      Perhaps naively I thought these scientists would want to do science and would be unwilling to steer funds away from whichever projects they liked in order to fund the removal of some sensors.

      I guess maybe the scientists who make these decisions are also partisan and happy to do as the administration asks.

    • gwerbin 1 week ago

      It's not an ideological goal, it's a profit goal. Ideology is just part of the propaganda engine. Isn't it funny how conservatism always seems to benefit big business? Have you ever noticed how quiet conservative politicians get when some supposedly conservative ideology ends up being bad for big business?

  • warkdarrior 1 week ago

    If you destroy the sensor network now, it is that much more expensive for a future administration to rebuild from scratch.

  • throwarayes 1 week ago

    “Have the power”

    They have power, but it’s not actually legal. Congress has mandated funds for this array, the administration wants to cripple it beyond repair before any legal action can catch up.

    • gwerbin 1 week ago

      Congress could stop it right now if they wanted to. They don't want to stop it. Authoritarian government requires a strong executive and a weak legislature.

  • greycol 1 week ago

    An apologist would argue that leaving the sensors to degrade and leach into the environment or for ones with buoyant parts to possibly break free and endanger seagoers is not better than deconstruction.

    The malicious belief would be that it's to ensure that the system can't be easily reactivated and that a non-profit couldn't offer to take over the running costs, there's also the possible "benefit" of redirecting funding that has already been allocated for marine science that would be harder to not dispense rather than arguably use it for this.

  • xboxnolifes 1 week ago

    You're looking at it from the lens of cost to government, but ignoring the lens if cost/profit for companies. Government spending isnt real spending to them, because its not their money. Government spending is only bad when if means they (the individuals) would profit less.

hyperman1 1 week ago

There is a midterm comming up in the USA. If you're living there and you're now not going to vote,I'm sorry but you're complicit. They might make it inconvenient, but you all still got some power left over there.

Afaik, either a few traditional red states turn blue and make it clear there is a limit to what's politically possible, or you're a dictatorship.

james_marks 1 week ago

The final rebuttal to “the data doesn’t lie”: pull the sensors.

  • burkaman 1 week ago

    It's a natural extension of "stop the count" and "if we stop testing right now, we'd have very few cases".

throwarayes 1 week ago

This seems to be a case of administration impounding funds authorized by Congress for this purpose. As in they’re just spending what Congress told them to.

And unfortunately SCOTUS made it harder for private groups to sue over impounding. And seems to argue only the GAOs comptroller can sue under the impoundments control act (ICA). GAO is the part of Congress that investigates when executive branch isn’t enforcing the law / spending funds. But have themselves limited ability to enforce anything.

It’s another post watergate reform eroded by Trump II. The ICA was created to stop these sorts of impoundments that happens with Nixon and earlier.

Notably members of Congress are working to pause the dismantling

https://apnews.com/article/ocean-observatories-initiative-tr...

simonerlic 1 week ago

I worked directly with the Ocean Networks Canada team for my engineering capstone project- they're a fantastic crew who are really clearly dedicated to providing open access to their data (they have a free API if you want to play with it!)

It's honestly a shame that this happened, but I hope they can use it to give a compelling argument for more funding in the future to expand the network (and make up the loss of data)

skeledrew 1 week ago

It's a leveled playing field now. No more pesky "I can provide data that shows..." to stand in the way of making things GREAT AGAIN. All arguments' strength rely on how much money is backing each, which is what makes all things GREAT. Facts are what those with power want it to be, not what some young upstarts claim from reading some machines. And that, again, is GREATNESS!!

janalsncm 1 week ago

The first thing you do when you want to improve a metric is to start measuring it.

When you don’t care about that thing anymore you stop measuring it.

fusslo 1 week ago

to be honest I always assumed scientific sensors like those also had military applications either directly or indirectly (installing listening devices at the same time as installing the scientific equipment). That'd be partly why we fund and keep them around. But I guess not!

  • behringer 1 week ago

    They do, but trump doesn't really care about military readiness.

  • bflesch 1 week ago

    This decision gives them plausible reason to send a ship to every single sensor and "remove" it, nobody knows what they replace it with. Maybe the old sensor network is compromised and snooped on by another nation, so they'd need to replace it with some better, obviously classified sensor network.

    The anti climate change angle and the pain inflicted to "liberal" climate scientists is a nice to have but maybe not main reason for this move.

    • bauldursdev 1 week ago

      Is there anything that would point to this possibly being the case?

      • bflesch 1 week ago

        Maybe it's part of the Epstein files, he was famously wearing US Coast Guard shirts ;)

        If it also contains a sensor network to detect adversary ships and submarines, it would be bad if someone else can use it to track US submarines. Or the sensors are too old and their resolution can't detect modern mini submarines or autonomous drone ships such as the ones the Ukraine is using in the black sea, so they need to be upgraded.

        These people are PR professionals and have been doing propaganda since generations. If Trump speaks about Greenland he does not mean the country but he uses it to bury another Greenland entity that he does not want to be associated with. Same with Canada the country vs. Cañada the Spanish word. Bonus is if they can ragebait their political opponents because then nobody will ever again be able to find the original story with these keywords.

        And to me this kind of story and easy anti-climate-change narrative checks all the boxes.

throwaway85825 1 week ago

Why ain't more science funded by private organizations? Relying wholly on government grants is tenuous. I've lost access to things because grants weren't renewed.

  • bakies 1 week ago

    Because the ROI is 0

heisenbit 1 week ago

Ripping out sensors is the equivalent of shooting the messenger.

jdw64 1 week ago

I cannot understand the decision to withdraw this for purely political reasons. What I don't understand about the Trump administration is that they are dismantling all of America's diplomatic power. Trump has the 'ability to become president'—self PR, black propaganda against opponents, that sort of thing. But he does not have the 'ability to run a country.'

As Professor Ed Dever said, after ten years we are only now beginning to get 'some hints,' yet they present it as if no solution has been offered. But this kind of data is long term time series data. If some of it gets damaged, it would take decades of operation again.

The value being undermined in the United States is enormous. They withdraw this simply because their supporters don't believe in climate change, for the sake of approval ratings. But this damages trust in long term research projects in the US, and America's leadership in the R&D world. If the cost is that high, why did they go to war with Iran?

There are so many things I don't understand. Why, while calling themselves a consumer nation, are they destroying the hegemony they themselves built?

True dominance requires the consent of the governed. America's status as the strongest superpower was a product of the consent of surrounding subordinate nations. That's what Antonio Gramsci talked about.

Things the US scaled back, like USAID, also created a favorable image of American imperialism. So even though the US invaded and destroyed South American countries in reality, it played a role in making people believe it was truly about freedom and progress. That is symbolic capital. But what Trump is doing now is beyond comprehension.

From a third party perspective, Trump administration policies make it look like they imagine a feudal system built on top of America as the supreme state. They are destroying long term leadership and the trust the US has built.

Some might call the Trump administration's actions 'unpretentious honesty.' But this is not honesty. It's just greed. The Trump administration seems to have created America's bankruptcy. In my view, Trump always wins. It's just not America's victory

  • 20after4 1 week ago

    >The Trump administration seems to have created America's bankruptcy. In my view, Trump always wins. It's just not America's victory

    You summed it up perfectly right there. It's not about anything good for America or really anything good at all. It's pure greed. It's doing the bidding of whoever is paying him the most. It's destroying America on purpose for the benefit of foreign and international interests. I honestly believe they are trying to engineer the most possible death and destruction so that they can swoop in an take what's left for themselves. Destroy the economy and buy everything up at bargain sale prices. Starve the people and deny them any relief. Make homelessness illegal so you can legally enslave them. Those that don't starve to death will work in the camps.

  • nearlyepic 1 week ago

    The reason they do this is because they are, like many other people in this country, completely driven mad by religious fervor. It seems completely irrational because it is.

    Silicon Valley is filled with people, at the top echelons of the most valuable companies in the world, who genuinely believe they have invented divine intelligence by making a mathematical model of human speech.

    Utah is for all intents and purposes a religious enclave.

    We’re just like this - I don’t know what else to say. I guess we were better at hiding it when we felt we had something to lose.

    • goatlover 1 week ago

      It's not the majority of us. Unfortunately too many people don't care and don't think elections matter so we've allowed an extremist minority to dominate, fueled by right-wing media propaganda.

      To be fair, the other party that matters has dropped the ball on too many occasions, or been complicit, so there's some reason for all the apathy. That plus winner-takes all elections leaves a lot of people feeling like their vote doesn't matter.

      • nearlyepic 1 week ago

        It’s not the majority, but it’s also not some tiny minority like you make it out to be. Half the country fought a war to protect slavery and we’ve never really reckoned with that. A lot of people are willing to ally with the crazies to get what they want, because they’re greedy. That’s the root of it.

pvaldes 1 week ago

They want to Marsform the Earth at any cost

wxw 1 week ago

> Starting this week, the Ocean Observatories Initiative will lose a network of more than 900 ocean sensors from waters off Oregon, Washington, Alaska, North Carolina and Greenland.

> By 2027, the National Science Foundation will have dismantled most of the system, which had been slated to run another 15 to 20 years.

> Scientists had seen warning signs as the Trump administration’s proposed 2026 budget included a 55% cut to the science foundation. Official word to begin shutting down arrived in early May.

Defunding science is embarassing and sad.

  • arch_deluxe 1 week ago

    Don’t forget wantonly destructive.

  • markdown 1 week ago

    Why not just sell them to some other country? Surely Canada would buy the in-place sensors and take them over.

    • verdverm 1 week ago

      They explicitly do not want them. They will pay companies to abandon renewable energy projects that have already planned / started.

    • jubilanti 1 week ago

      You think this is done to save costs? NO! This is costing more money to actively dismantle them than it would be to just abandon them. The administration is intentionally and specifically trying to destroy scientific evidence of climate change. If they just abandoned them, the next administration could reactivate and repair them.

      • hdgvhicv 1 week ago

        People in the libertarian SV techbro world actually fall for the randian crap and believe that’s what they are getting.

        And that’s the charitable interpretation.

    • pesus 1 week ago

      Beyond the regime's hatred of science, they also hate Canada, so that would never happen.

    • hristov 1 week ago

      If we sell them to another country, then that other country will gather the data and publish it. The point of the Trump administration is that the data not be gathered.

    • steve_adams_86 1 week ago

      I work for an organization that uses equipment like this. We can't afford to buy or staff this scale of equipment, and the Canadian government (DFO in particular) might have the cash to purchase the equipment but nowhere near the staff. Sensor networks are a lot of work. The ocean likes to break stuff. You need to monitor nodes extensively. It requires a broad skill set, both physically and digitally, backed by a lot of knowledge and ideally experience. These people aren't very common, so building a team to support this network outside of the USA would not be trivial.

      Maybe you could part it out to a number of orgs and governments, but I doubt the US government has much interest in putting in the labour to facilitate that. This entire project seems like it's designed to be offensive as it is to be anything else.

      It's an enormous shame.

GreenSalem 1 week ago

Rogue nation.

North Korea behaves better.

msie 1 week ago

This must be publicized as much as possible to shame Trump and Vought.

  • goatlover 1 week ago

    Russel Vought has really flown under the radar compared to most other Trump officials. He's one of the smarter and more dangerous ones.

TrackerFF 1 week ago

Let me guess, they want it privatized?

IIRC, Project 2025 argued that private companies provided more accurate weather forecasts, and thus one can just dismantle gov. agencies like NOAA and the market for such services will take care of itself.

  • jorblumesea 1 week ago

    project 2025 is also just about the wholesale destruction of the opposition, including academia.

tim-tday 1 week ago

The trump administration is anti science, anti anything that provides evidence for climate change. They’re obsessively pro fossil fuels and anti green anything.

What I’m “shocked” about is that this is news to anyone.

captainbland 1 week ago

From the playbook of COVID, it's not a problem if you just stop measuring.

deadbabe 1 week ago

What else can we say to stuff like this except fuck the United States?

  • groundzeros2015 1 week ago

    Well we could try to Figure out the motives and justification, or we can just get mad and feel smug.

    • anon_shill 1 week ago

      Here is what the National Science Foundation has to say about it:

      > "The decision to de-scope aligns with NSF's wider strategy of a nimbler approach to prioritize support for evolving scientific priorities and emerging technologies, as well as smart life cycle management within its research infrastructure portfolio."

      Seems like even if we want to understand the justifications, the people making these decisions don't care to share them with us.

      • 20after4 1 week ago

        Wow that quote is the most useless bullshit bunch of words I've seen strung together recently. It says a whole lot of nothing in the most insulting way possible. Must have been written by a highly paid consultant.

        • warkdarrior 1 week ago

          > Must have been written by a highly paid consultant.

          ChatGPT?

  • alphawhisky 1 week ago

    Speak with your money as much as you can.

  • mandolingual 1 week ago

    Fuck Trump and the slavering dolts who support him.

    • goatlover 1 week ago

      Agreed if one still supports Trump after everything in his second term.

rwyinuse 1 week ago

Perhaps EU or China could build their own network of sensors to track this stuff? It's dangerous for so much science to be dependent on a country run by anti-science idiots.

I sincerely hope that China wins the AI race, for the sake of myself and my children. The Chinese Communist party might be evil, but at least they accept fundamental natural sciences, and are actively investing in technologies that help avoiding worst climate scenarios. Buying anything American instead of EU or Chinese alternatives has become deeply unethical to me.

  • dionian 1 week ago

    we seem to be doing some pretty cool science still. like invented AI

  • Barrin92 1 week ago

    >Perhaps EU or China could build their own network of sensors to track this stuff?

    already do, the EU is in particular collects a ton of oceanographic data through for example the Copernicus Marine Service, but these particular sensors are in waters close to Oregon, Washington and Alaska, not really anything the EU or China could replace.

    In its region the US is naturally not really replaceable, it's simply a big blow to research.

    • pvaldes 4 days ago

      China will happily jump to help.

      To help themselves to be able to track the movements of US nuclear submarines anywhere in waters close to Oregon, Washington or Alaska (Or to move their own submarines freely by the area without telling to anybody except them).

      Dismantling sensors around Alaska helps Russia on an hypothetical future attempt to retake the area; and doing it around "51 state" or Greenland is the same thing for US.

hulitu 1 week ago

> U.S. pulling ocean sensors a 'shock' for Canadian research

Why ? It was good to rely on Big Brother for decades and sleep well. /s