There is no use in multiplying examples. The point is that we are all capable of believing things which we know to be untrue, and then, when we are finally proved wrong, impudently twisting the facts so as to show that we were right. Intellectually, it is possible to carry on this process for an indefinite time: the only check on it is that sooner or later a false belief bumps up against solid reality, usually on a battlefield.
A group of researchers have proposed a March for Science. What started as a discussion on Reddit has quickly blossomed into a movement.
Organizers started a private Facebook group and Twitter account on Monday. By Wednesday afternoon, the former boasted more than 300,000 members and the latter had nearly 55,000 followers. A public Facebook page had more than 11,000 likes just five hours after going online. The explosion of support caught organizers off guard, but they’re meeting this weekend to discuss details about the date and full mission statement.
The march would be the latest in a string of actions taken by scientists following Donald Trump’s election and his inauguration as president. His administration has been widely viewed as hostile to science — from the transition period through hearings for his cabinet nominees through silencing key federal science agencies and freezing grants.
“This is not a partisan issue. People from all parts of the political spectrum should be alarmed by these efforts to deny scientific progress,” Caroline Weinberg, a medical researcher who is helping organize the march, said. “Scientific research moves us forward and we should not allow asinine policies to thwart it.”
Jonathan Foley on Scientific American blog:
So, to Mr. Trump, I would say this:
If this is all just a series of missteps, caused by over-zealous mid-level managers during a confusing presidential transition, so be it. Say so. Fix it. Get out on the public stage and affirm your commitment to facts, to truth, and to the independent pursuit of science without political interference. The vast majority of your fellow Americans would applaud you for this. It would be brave. It would be wise. And it would show some class.
But if this is actually part of your governing philosophy, I would give you a warning on behalf of my fellow scientists: Do not mess with us. Do not try to bury the truth. Do not interfere with the free and open pursuit of science. You do so at your peril.
Americans don’t look kindly on bullies, people who try to suppress the truth, or people who try to intimidate scientists and the press. In the long run, this always backfires. The dustbin of history is full of people who have tried, and failed. You will too.The next time you visit the CIA headquarters, I hope you will take a moment to notice their unofficial motto, etched in the walls of the lobby. It says, “And ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free.”(John VIII-XXXII.)
It does. And scientists like me, and Americans of all backgrounds, will always fight for it.
A message from the organizers #ScienceMarch pic.twitter.com/2h7DOJjap5
— March For Science (@MarchForScience) January 26, 2017
UPDATE:

This video is one of your best—-a lot of good information presented clearly and succinctly, but most importantly it shows scientists getting fired up and passionate about fighting back. Naomi’s comments at the end rate an OOH-Rah and Semper Fi!
Orwell nailed it with “sooner or later a false belief bumps up against solid reality, usually on a battlefield”, and the scientists have to move up to the front line with all the others fighting for “save Obamacare, social security, medicare, roe v. wade” ad infinitum so that the messages about fighting climate change and attacks on science are not lost in the “noise”. I will be at any demonstration they put on in DC if I have to crawl to get there.
PS Some GreebPeace activists climbed a crane in DC near the White House yesterday and hung a yuuuuge “Resist” banner where President Pussy Grabber could see it. It stayed up all day. Rumor has it that Pussy Grabber wanted to nuke them but was dissuaded by his military advisers—–it took them a while, but they finally got him to understand that any nuke they used would have flattened the White House as well, and messed up his hair to boot.