Tens of thousands of people turned out in cities across the United States and beyond on Saturday for Earth Day events billed as a “celebration of science” to counter what organisers say is a growing disregard for evidence-based knowledge in Washington.
In hundreds of ‘March for Science’ events from Boston to Sydney, Australia, engineers, researchers and teachers took a break from the lab to apply their ingenuity to colourful protest placards.
Demonstrators carried signs like “There Is No Planet B”, “No One Is Above Peer Review”, “Revenge of the Nerds” and “Make Science Great Again”, a play on US President Donald Trump’s campaign promise to Make America Great Again’. Other signs featured mathematical formulas in a display of geek humour.
While the events were non-partisan according to organisers, many marchers were in effect protesting Trump’s proposal to sharply cut federal science and research budgets and his administration’s scepticism about climate change and the need to slow global warming.
The marches put a new twist on the traditional Earth Day activities, the aim of which was to reaffirm “the vital role science plays in our democracy,” according to the march’s website.
Festivities at one of the largest events on Washington’s National Mall included scientific “teach-ins” and musical performances.
“It’s important to show this administration that we care about facts,” said Chris Taylor, 24, who was part of an early crowd of about 15,000 who gathered on Washington’s Mall for teach-ins on topics like climate change, water quality and sustainable food.
“It just seems like they’re not really concerned about economic growth or creating new technologies, just catering to massive corporations,” said Taylor, who is earning a PhD in robotics at George Mason University in Virginia.
In Los Angeles, at least 12,000 people joined the March for Science, police said. Some demonstrators walked in lab coats while others shaded themselves under umbrellas and signs as temperatures neared 32C.
A fervent but good-natured anti-Trump tone was evident on San Francisco’s waterfront, where thousands gathered near The Exploratorium science museum ahead of a march to city hall.
Many carried signs emblazoned with slogans such as “Pruitt Plus Trump Equals Bad Chemistry”, a reference to Scott Pruitt, the new head of the Environmental Protection Agency, who has questioned the scientific consensus on global warming.
March for Science is the latest in a series of national demonstrations staged since Trump’s inauguration nearly 100 days ago.
Previous marches and protests have focused on a range of partisan issues, from abortion rights to immigration policy.
The White House did not respond to a request for comment on Saturday’s marches, but Trump released a statement on his approach to environmental issues.
“My administration is reducing unnecessary burdens on American workers and American companies, while being mindful that our actions must also protect the environment,” Trump said.
“Rigorous science is critical to my administration’s efforts to achieve the twin goals of economic growth and environmental protection,” said the president, who passed dozens of protesters as his motorcade made its way to Walter Reed National Military Medical Center outside Washington.
In the past, Trump has said climate change was a hoax that was stifling policies to foster economic growth.
His administration is considering withdrawing from the Paris Agreement, a global accord aimed at reducing global emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases.
Last year the United States, under president Barack Obama, joined more than 190 other countries in signing the pact. Trump’s proposed 2018 budget calls for deep spending cuts by government science agencies, including a 31% reduction for the Environmental Protection Agency.
The scientific community’s direct involvement in a national policy debate has stirred some criticism about whether scientists should get involved in politics.
But organisers have defended the march as crucial because of the threat posed by discrediting scientific consensus and restricting research.
“As scientists, as human beings, our mandate is clear — it’s to stand up for what we know to be true,” said Kellan Baker, a senior fellow at Johns Hopkins School of Public Health and one of the speakers on the National Mall.
That theme was echoed by many who showed up in Washington for teach-ins, which organisers said were a centrepiece of the initial Earth Day held in 1970 to call attention to the environment.
“Science isn’t respected and it needs to be,” said Sarah Binkow, 22, a civil engineer who travelled from Michigan to attend the Washington rally.






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