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Scientific American Editor-in-Chief Resigns After MAGA Meltdown Went Viral

Scientific American Editor-in-Chief Resigns After MAGA Meltdown Went Viral

We celebrate the opportunity this once respected science publication has to reconfigure itself and begin refocusing on rigorous science.

Legal Insurrection readers may recall that shortly after President-Elect Donald Trump emerged as the winner on election night, Scientific American Editor-in-Chief Laura Helmuth lost all sense of professional decorum and scientific objectivity and had herself a spectacular social media meltdown.

In a social media rant, Helmuth raged against Trump supporters, some of whom are likely to be science-curious potential readers of her publication. As a reminder, here is what it looked like:

This is not a good look for someone supposed to have scientific objectivity or professional decorum. Many who read the screed called for her resignation.

Subsequently, Helmuth disavowed the remarks and locked her X.com account. But the damage was done, and now she has resigned.

Posting on Bluesky, an X rival, Helmuth said Thursday that she’s “decided to leave Scientific American after an exciting 4.5 years as editor in chief” without mentioning her previous comments.

In a series of now-deleted posts on the same platform, she called Trump voters the “meanest, dumbest, most bigoted” group and “fascists” following the former president’s reelection last week. Her comments went viral on X and were criticized on the increasingly right-wing platform.

Helmuth had apologized in a separate post, calling them “offensive and inappropriate” and that they don’t “reflect the position” of Scientific American.

This event is the latest episode in the magazine’s descent into woke madness. It included Scientific American endorsing Kamala Harris for president, marking only the second time for such an endorsement in its 179-year history.

Other low-lights from the magazine’s stack of articles:

Previously, Helmuth had been slammed for peddling gender pseudoscience on Twitter, which was brilliantly debunked by Evolutionary biologist Colin Wright. Wright reviewed the exchange once her resignation was announced.

The bosses at the publication seem undisturbed by this departure. In reporting this news, NPR digs at many of us who are delighted by this resignation.

In an emailed statement to NPR, Kimberly Lau, president of Scientific American, confirmed Helmuth’s resignation, stating, “Laura Helmuth has decided to move on from her position as editor in chief. We thank Laura for her four years leading Scientific American, during which time the magazine won major science communication awards and established a reimagined digital newsroom. We wish her well in the future.”

Conservatives on X, the social media platform where Helmuth’s comments gained traction, celebrated her departure as the downfall of another “woke” crusader.

No, we are not celebrating her downfall. We are celebrating the opportunity for this once-respected science publication to reconfigure itself and begin refocusing on rigorous science.

You can’t be woke and be a serious scientist. Hopefully, the executives at Scientific American will now appoint someone who understands the value of hard data, solid reasoning, and honest debate and discussion over theories.

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Comments

Maybe they could replace her with someone like Joy Reid. I think Reid has the rigorous training and disinterested detachment required by Scientific American.

These post don’t reflect my colleagues my a$$. Hold them all accountable. She is the tip of the iceberg. Time to clean house everywhere. It is spring time.

Scientific American was all in on global warming hysteria 30 years ago.

I predict this person will be replaced with someone even worse.

As I have written here before, SA has been on the decline for a very long time. Helmuth is really nothing new– simply the culmination of a long-term degradation of a once serious science magazine aimed at the educated public. Not really all that scholarly as the authors tended to avoid equations. Well known in the industry that equations will reduce readership. Americans are weak in the mathematics area, so equations, logarithms and the like scare them. It’s a challenge to write on a technical subject and avoid equations. I know first hand having had to write reports for managers and government bureaucrats. It can be done. Put the hard stuff in an appendix and use evocative language. Even technical books fall short. One of the best is Feynman’s Lectures, and an obscure book called “Wind Waves” by Blair Kinsman. His chapter on stochastic processes is about the best there is in explaining a difficult abstract subject.

So who will replace Helmuth? Be prepared for someone even worse as the rot in SA and other publications has become pervasive. Today we are in a worse state than even the old Soviet Union in the Lysenko era. Stalin left the mathematicians alone. Not us. Even the American Mathematical Society has brought in racism accusations. Let’s see what happens over the next several years. I’m not optimistic.

    rhhardin in reply to oden. | November 16, 2024 at 11:34 am

    “Water Waves” N.F.Barber 1969 is probably the best, high school level covers it all. A.M.Yaglom “An Introduction to the Theory of Stationary Random Functions” (1962) was what I used for that.

      MajorWood in reply to rhhardin. | November 16, 2024 at 12:37 pm

      J. E. Gordon’s “The New Science of Strong Materials.” If there is one book which explains everything. I think of it every time I look up at the 12×18 Doug Fir beam that spans the mochahut.

        I have that too, and yes it’s excellent. Material science is a key area for modern technology. It’s often the limiting factor in engineering. To wit: wind turbines. Betz’s law reveals that that no wind turbine can capture more than 59.3% of the kinetic energy of the incoming wind. Real world turbines operate close to that limit, so to get more energy you need to make the blades bigger. But strength of material limits that. Thus the whole wind energy entetprise depends on material science.

      Old Patzer in reply to rhhardin. | November 16, 2024 at 12:43 pm

      The Yagloms (A.M. and I.M.) were excellent writers who could make a subject simple and appealing without trivializing it. Every talented high school student should read their series on geometric transformations.

      I have A. M. Yaglom, and it’s excellent. One in the Prentice Hall Series of Russian math books translated by Richard Silverman. I met Silverman’s son by accident on bus many years ago and we had a great conversation. His father was followed by the FBI, and harassed. I used Silverman’s books in grad school, so they contributed to US national defense. Hear that FBI! Silverman’s translations were crafted for the American reader with appropriate English language references– a tremendous benefit for someone who does not read Russian and have access to Russian libraries. If I were teaching a course in Stochastic processes I would have the students first read Chapter 7 in Kinsman as an intro. Then read “An Introduction to Stochastic Modeling by Taylor and Karlin. Side note. Karlin’s other books are not good to learn from. His daughter took his course and complained to daddy. So he wrote up some excellent notes for her which eventually became the Taylor-Karlin book. So Karlin was capable of writing clearly, but didn’t at first.

    Old Patzer in reply to oden. | November 16, 2024 at 12:41 pm

    It is sad but not surprising that the AMS has gone woke. I recently dropped out of the ACM (Association for Computing Machinery) for similar reasons. The last straw was when their CEO openly stated that nominations for their once-prestigious awards should take DEI “factors” into account. So instead of recognizing excellence, they will go by skin color and what kind of sex you have. No thanks!

    maxmillion in reply to oden. | November 17, 2024 at 1:24 pm

    Math IS ray-cisss, you know.

She has misspelled her name…it should be “Helminth”. Apropos.

Revisionist Science…. Neoscientific Method. Scientific Globalist.

She has decided to become a social media influencer for Thunderbird wine. – A bit of Gallo’s humor-

If there are no readers it ceases to exist, hence the transformation to People magazine where scientists display their latest attire.

The thing about being a scientist is that one generally has an expertise in one field that is beyond reproach. So when I read an article in my field that is flat-out wrong, I then assume that perhaps the other articles in other fields are flat-out wrong too. To me, National Geographic crossed that line as well years ago.

I posted awhile back about the book “Bretz’s Flood” and how there was an active campaign by forces in the USGS to denounce his findings. I use it as an example to counter climate change enthusiasts, who state “there is no way one could get all of the scientists to support something that isn’t true.” Not on could you, but it has been done, and by one of the .gov agencies who is cheerleading climate change at the moment.

Iraq’s parliament just voted to legalize child rape down to age 9.

And American women are focused on … what?

Remarkable stuff

What a world.

    Arthur Chester in reply to Arthur Chester. | November 16, 2024 at 12:41 pm

    Maybe Scientific American next editor can do a special edition devoted to:

    the various positive and negative effects of getting legally raped regularly from age 9 and up

    and the various positive or negative effects of being required by law to cover up face hair body etc

    and the various positive and negative effects of being strangled to death by one’s family members – for flirting with a different religion suitor, or for converting

    or the positive and negative effects of surviving or not surviving the dawn surprise attack massacres of October 7, 2023.

For someone of sufficient age and interests, the phrase “Helmuth speaking for Boskone” will resonate. 🙂

I subscribed to SA for over 50 years. But when I saw the article trashing EO Wilson (whom I knew in grad school), written by an author who didn’t even have the background to criticize his work, I canceled my subscription.

In case you hadn’t noticed, many years ago nearly all the SA articles were written by real scientists covering their fields. Now, nearly all the articles are written by “award-winning science journalists.” The writers are ill-equipped to judge what is real and important vs what is improbable hype.

Looking at her rant it is endemic of the woke culture general. Mentally damaged people who have never really grown up. What sane adult at her age is STILL raging about high school?

    Br2336 in reply to NotCoach. | November 16, 2024 at 2:38 pm

    Good question. Maybe the answer to your question is related to my own question: Why do so many young adults in the U.S. spend so much time playing? And traveling? And sleeping in motels/hotels? As if playing games had anything to do with:

    -learning an employable skill
    -getting a “higher” education
    -growing up and out of a h.s. mindset

    Maybe this Scientific American editor thinks and acts like a high schooler because she spent so much time behaving like a high schooler whilst she was supposed to be getting her higher education.

    Maybe Americans as a group need to grow up. It’s not that difficult.

    Just a thought.

      steves59 in reply to Br2336. | November 16, 2024 at 9:32 pm

      “Maybe Americans as a group need to grow up. It’s not that difficult.”

      Most Americans are ALREADY grown up. You clearly mistake the small minority of woke garbage Proggy screamers as “Americans.”
      The rest of us are much more likely not to make that mistake.
      You seem to be someone who doesn’t know much about “Americans as a group,” given the tenor of many of your posts.

        Br2336 in reply to steves59. | November 17, 2024 at 11:41 am

        Grown-ups live within their means.

        Br2336 in reply to steves59. | November 17, 2024 at 11:53 am

        Grown-ups make sure that their children prepare themselves for adulthood.

        Adults support themselves — for food, for clothing, for shelter.

        American teens waste enormous amounts of time playing childish games usually with balls.

        American adults do not encourage their children to learn real job skills

        Americans do not learn second or third languages — something that is routine virtually everywhere else.

        You want more examples?

        Br2336 in reply to steves59. | November 17, 2024 at 12:02 pm

        The U.S. has an enormous addiction problem. That’s not a sign of grown-up behavior.

        Is the U.S. citizenry seeking to make sure that their teens make it to adulthood drug-free?

        No.

        Not very grown-up, I dare suggest.

        Not very grown up at all.

    Martin in reply to NotCoach. | November 16, 2024 at 3:48 pm

    All of the writers in Hollywood. Every single TV series has had a Prom for the 30 year old characters. I don’t mean 30 year olds play high school kids. 30 year old characters. The writers are still angry about their own high school Prom.

“Scientific American Editor-in-Chief Laura Helmuth lost all sense of professional decorum and scientific objectivity”

How can you lose something you never had?

Another instance of Trump solving problems before his inauguration.

We’ve learned the cancellation game well. Badger the miscreant to obtain an apology, then refuse to accept it (“rings hollow”) and demand more.
Your rules, Democrats — bring ’em on, I’m no high-roader.

I wasn’t aware Scientific America was still being published.