Inside the Desperate Conservative Obsession With Taking Down Neil deGrasse Tyson
Tom Boggioni
There is a cottage industry, scarcely larger than a hamlet, of conservative writers and self-declared "influencers," whose goal
du jour is to take down astrophysicist and popular really really smart guy Neil deGrasse Tyson. Tyson, whose fan base is as wide and deep and as boundless as the universe, annoys and scares the bejeebers out of the 27 percent of America who find the acceptance of anthropogenic climate change, to say nothing of science, to be as distasteful as military enlistment, exercise and a proper diet.
It is probably safe to say that there are more than a few industrialists out there
***coughkochbroscough*** who have said, “Bring me the head of Neil deGrasse Tyson and I will fund your cute little blog surreptitiously through one of my phoney-baloney grassroots fronts or bullshit think tanks or foundations.”
For the most part, conservatives were fine with Tyson when he stuck to talking about space and black holes and other otherworldly stuff. But this past year he stuck his toe into
the climate change non-debate and you would have thought he wanted to sex up a Duggar daughter, such was the umbrage.
And so it came to pass that Sean Davis, co-founder of the Federalist with Ben Domenech, came up with what he believes is
Neil deGrasse Tyson’s gotcha moment. It was a comment Tyson made in a free-wheeling speech in which he paraphrased a quote he believed former President George W. Bush made regarding a Bible passage about the stars following 9/11. If you are to believe Davis—which would be dumb—Tyson’s comment was actually worse than 9/11.
Why is this important? It’s really not.
The whole point is that Davis is trying to diminish and discredit Tyson, a popular scientist and public intellectual. What Davis is indulging in here is attempting to poison the Tyson well of knowledge in much the same way Dan Rather was ruined by
the Killian documents when he attempted to show that George W. Bush no-showed for his cushy National Guard gig his dad finagled for him in order to stay out of the Vietnam war. Within hours after presenting the documents on
60 Minutes, bloggers who had previously never shown a flair for typography suddenly were revealed to be kerning experts, and the pile-on began and nobody would come within a country mile of investigating Bush’s no-show. There are those who believe the documents came from Karl Rove with visions of
the Canuck letter dancing in his head. By pulling the chair out from under Rather, Bush’s military service, or lack of it, was taken off the table.
Davis is attempting the same trick with Tyson, hoping to paint him as a liar and therefore untrustworthy in all matters scientific. If Tyson has a history of fabrications, how can he be trusted on anything? Game, set, LOL.
Which is ironic, of course, since Davis’ partner at the Federalist is the aforementioned Ben Domenech; most famous for being fired by the
Washington Post and disappeared by National Review Online for
being a plagiarist. Scuffling around a bit after his firing, Ben sucked the wingnut welfare teat for a bit, appearing here and there until enough distance was put between himself and his cuttin’ and pastin’ past where he could found the Federalist with Davis and even be invited on the Chris Hayes show as someone whose opinion should be heard.
Once a grifter, always a grfter and Domenech was recently found to be doing some pay for play, when he wrote in favor of the government of Malaysia after fellow RedState founder-turned-lobbyist Josh Trevino slipped him
a $36,000 honorarium for his troubles.
That the attack by Davis came from the co-founder of a website with a history of ethical flexibility that would make a Romanian gymnast envious is probably no surprise. Also unsurprising is that such thin gruel was only sucked up by Sparklepants Rich Lowry at National Review and
some yokel at National Reviews’ evil-er twin, Breitbart.com. What is surprising is that Lowry wants to weigh in on climate change again, since that has
not worked out well for him in the past.
So there you have it.
Who are you gonna believe? The scientist guy, or the guy who partners with a scam artist?
See? Two can play that smear game.