Difference between revisions of "Think tanks"

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*Richard Morin and Claudia Deane write a weekly column on Washington's think tanks for the ''Washington Post'', called "[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/politics/fedpage/columns/ideasindustry/ The Ideas Industry]."
 
*Richard Morin and Claudia Deane write a weekly column on Washington's think tanks for the ''Washington Post'', called "[http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/politics/fedpage/columns/ideasindustry/ The Ideas Industry]."
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*News from Reality: "The People We Pay to Think" [http://www.hereinreality.com/news/rand.html]

Revision as of 19:08, 18 March 2003

A think tank is an organization that claims to serve as a center for research and analysis of important public issues. In reality, many think tanks are little more than public relations fronts, usually headquartered in state or national seats of government and generating self-serving scholarship that serves the advocacy goals of their industry sponsors.

"We've got think tanks the way other towns have firehouses," says Washington Post columnist Joel Achenbach says. "This is a thoughtful town. A friend of mine worked at a think tank temporarily and the director told him when he entered, 'We are white men between the ages of 50 and 55, and we have no place else to go.' "

Funded by big business and major foundations, think tanks devise and promote policies that shape the lives of everyday Americans: Social Security privatization, tax and investment laws, regulation of everything from oil to the Internet. They supply experts to testify on Capitol Hill, write articles for the op-ed pages of newspapers, and appear as TV commentators. They advise presidential aspirants and lead orientation seminars to train incoming members of Congress.

Think tanks have a decided political leaning. There are twice as many conservative think tanks as liberal ones, and the conservative ones generally have more money. This is no accident, as one of the important functions of think tanks is to provide a backdoor way for wealthy business interests to promote their ideas. "Modern think tanks are nonprofit, tax-exempt, political idea factories where donations can be as big as the donor's checkbook and are seldom publicized," notes Tom Brazaitis, writing for the Cleveland Plain Dealer. "Technology companies give to think tanks that promote open access to the internet. Wall Street firms donate to think tanks that espouse private investment of retirement funds." So much money now flows in, that the top 20 conservative think tanks now spend more money than all of the "soft money" contributions to the Republican party.

A think tank's resident experts carry titles such as "senior fellow" or "adjunct scholar," but this does not necessarily mean that they even possess an academic degree in their area of claimed expertise. Outside funding can corrupt the integrity of academic institutions. The same corrupting influences affect think tanks, only more so. Think tanks are like universities minus the students and minus the systems of peer review and other mechanisms that academia uses to promote diversity of thought. Real academics are expected to conduct their research first and draw their conclusions second, but this process is reversed at most policy-driven think tanks. As economist Jonathan Rowe has observed, the term "think" tanks is a misnomer. His comment was directed at the conservative Heritage Foundation, but it applies equally well to many other think tanks, regardless of ideology: "They don't think; they justify."

Examples

External links

  • Richard Morin and Claudia Deane write a weekly column on Washington's think tanks for the Washington Post, called "The Ideas Industry."
  • News from Reality: "The People We Pay to Think" [1]