When the Biden administration stepped in last year to block seven oil and gas leases in Alaska, it said it was doing so in part to recognize the “Indigenous Knowledge” of the Native Americans who originally inhabited the land.
The move was indicative of the administration’s embrace in late 2022 of “Indigenous Knowledge”—that is, Native American folk wisdom—as part of their scientific assessments. [emphasis, links added]
So when Secretary of the Interior Deb Haaland [pictured above] announced on Sept. 6, 2023, that the entire United States Arctic Ocean was off limits to new oil and gas leasing, and canceled seven oil and gas leases issued by former president Donald Trump after a review, she cited “the best available science” and said the decision was also a “recognition of the Indigenous Knowledge of the original stewards of this area.”
That announcement has prompted a scientific integrity complaint by Protect the Public’s Trust, a watchdog group. “Indigenous Knowledge,” the complaint says, privileges “subjective beliefs over and above evidence derived from the application of the scientific method.”
“The American public can rightly hold serious concerns that the Biden administration’s decision making, through the use of Indigenous Knowledge, is susceptible to manipulation without even the pretense of adhering to scientific principles,” Protect the Public’s Trust director Michael Chamberlain wrote in the complaint.
Haaland’s remarks are the latest example of how “Indigenous Knowledge,” a pseudoscience that posits native people possess unique insights into the laws of the universe, has pervaded the federal government.
A variety of federal agencies have hosted “Indigenous Knowledge” seminars. And Health and Human Services is poised to order all of its sub-agencies, which include the Food and Drug Administration and the Center for Disease Control, to incorporate “Indigenous Knowledge” into its decision-making at some point this year.
The Department of the Interior did not respond to a request for comment.
Biden administration officials, in memos and public records, conflate “Indigenous Knowledge” with the scientific method.
Federal agencies, White House records state, are encouraged to consider the “spiritual wisdom” of native peoples when issuing new rules or regulations.
“The elevation of subjective beliefs over and above evidence derived via the scientific method flies in the face of the Biden administration’s purported fealty to science,” Chamberlain told the Washington Free Beacon.
Considering “Indigenous Knowledge” may also run afoul of federal law, Protect the Public’s Trust notes in its complaint. The research released by federal agencies, including the Department of the Interior, is governed by a 2001 bill called the Information Quality Act.
The Information Quality Act dictates what kind of data sources the federal government may use when it issues new rules.
“Indigenous Knowledge” is not mentioned anywhere in that law’s text and the Department of the Interior’s guidelines state that “information released by the Department will be developed only from reliable data sources based on accepted practices and policies.”
Read rest at Free Beacon
Biden dose Raindance in Whitehouse front lawn HYAH HO HO HYAH HO HO HYAH HO HO. Maybe the George of the Jungle method shoot rocks into the sky bombard clouds with rocks clouds cry make rain
How soon will Biden be inviting Pagans in Masks and Beating Drums to Dance through the Oval Office?
As the article pointed out, “Indigenous Knowledge” has no scientific or legal basis. It is just a lame excuse to do what can’t be justified by other means.
Such means is all the left can offer since they don’t have facts (in this case scientific) to back up their decisions.
Biden to Consult the Star Sign to Determan how we use our Natural resources. Proof isn’t in the right mind too far gone into Lala Land