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Home Market Research Economy

Why Taxpayers Are Right to Reject Immoral Research

by TheAdviserMagazine
16 hours ago
in Economy
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Why Taxpayers Are Right to Reject Immoral Research
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Whenever taxpayers object to being forced to bankroll research they consider immoral, the standard retort arrives on cue: “Don’t politicize science.” But public funding is already the politicization of science. The moment research is financed by compulsory taxation, it is no longer a purely scholarly enterprise, it becomes a state project—filtered through bureaucracies, grant incentives, and the ideological needs of the regime that signs the checks.

That is why citizens not only may but should demand cuts to public funding for research they reject—whether on moral, religious, prudential, or philosophical grounds. Not because the public must enforce one uniform morality, but because coerced funding makes everyone a participant. In a free society, you may refuse to buy what you find wicked. Under government science, you are billed anyway.

Recent Events Prove the Point: Funding Choices Are Moral and Political

Consider the US government’s newest turn on human fetal tissue. On January 22, 2026, NIH issued a policy ending the use of NIH funds for research using human fetal tissue from elective abortions, applying broadly to intramural and extramural funding mechanisms. The Associated Press described it as an expansion of restrictions from Trump’s first term, while noting that some researchers argue fetal tissue is “irreplaceable” in certain lines of biomedical inquiry.

Whether one cheers or laments the change, the crucial fact remains: the scientific establishment did not “discover” a neutral answer here. A political authority made a funding decision—about what kinds of methods and materials are acceptable for taxpayer-backed research. That is unavoidable under state patronage, and it’s intellectually dishonest to pretend otherwise.

The same pattern appears in the animal-testing arena. NIH has publicly committed to expanding “human-based” research technologies while reducing animal use, while also clarifying that animal models still have a role in the current research system. In parallel, Reuters reported that the FDA announced plans to phase out animal testing in certain drug-development contexts in favor of “human-relevant methods” such as computational models and organ-like structures.

Again: these are value-laden judgments about ethics, risk tolerance, and what counts as acceptable evidence. The public is not “corrupting science” by having opinions about them. The public is responding to the reality that government has already turned science into a public policy instrument.

Praising Past Defunding Is Not “Anti-Science”—It’s Anti-Compulsion

There is nothing incoherent about saying: “You are free to do that research—just not with my money.” That is not censorship. It is the opposite: it preserves pluralism by moving contested projects into the realm of voluntary support.

The 2019-2020 fetal-tissue episode illustrates how quickly “apolitical science” becomes a struggle over conscience. NIH’s 2019 notice added extra requirements and review considerations for extramural proposals involving fetal tissue from elective abortions. In 2020, the NIH Human Fetal Tissue Research Ethics Advisory Board reviewed 14 proposals and recommended withholding funds for 13 of them. One may dispute the board’s composition or conclusions—but the mechanism itself underscores the central truth: tax-funded research is inevitably governed by political and ethical criteria.

From a libertarian standpoint, this is not a bug, it’s a signal that the whole model is morally confused. A coerced funding system guarantees permanent conflict because it conscripts people into supporting agendas they would never choose voluntarily.

So yes—praise the defunding. Not because every defunding decision will be wise, but because every decision that shrinks coerced complicity moves society one step closer to the only stable solution: separation of science and state.

Objection: “But Then Anyone Can Defund Anything They Dislike!”

Correct—and that is precisely why public funding is such a destructive arrangement. If your neighbor may forcibly draft your income for his preferred research priorities, then you are not living under “neutral science.” You are living under an ideological tug-of-war administered by grant committees and agency heads.

Rothbard made the underlying economic point decades ago: resources are scarce, and allocating more to “science” necessarily means allocating less to other goods. In a market, those tradeoffs are disciplined by prices and voluntary demand; in a political system, they are decided by institutional power. Stephan Kinsella has argued that the “under-provision” story—only the state can fund basic research—is largely mythmaking, ignoring the historical role of private individuals and firms in producing major breakthroughs.

The deeper libertarian critique is not merely economic, it is political. Once science is patronized by the state, it becomes a career ladder, a grant economy, and a prestige machine tied to bureaucratic priorities. That is not an incidental distortion; it is the predictable result of subsidy.

Defunding Is Also a Check on the “Ministry of Opinion”

There is a second reason citizens should aggressively contest public research funding: the modern scientific establishment frequently serves as a legitimating class for state power. Rothbard’s Anatomy of the State emphasizes that the state relies on intellectuals to generate ideological support and stigmatize fundamental dissent. In a previous article, I applied that framework to academia as a “ministry of opinion,” describing how taxpayer-supported institutions can function as court intellectuals—manufacturing “consensus” that conveniently aligns with expanding administrative control.

In this light, the fight over fetal tissue and animal testing is not only about biomedical technique. It is about whether the public will continue financing a sprawling system that 1) claims moral authority; 2) demands deference (“trust the experts”); and, 3) is structurally intertwined with agencies that write rules, shape messaging, and channel public behavior.

If you want to reduce the state’s ability to mold public opinion through credentialed authority, you don’t start by begging the grant-funded priesthood to be more humble. You start by tightening the purse strings.

Expand the Cuts—Then Finish the Job

Defunding research you oppose is defensible on two levels:

Conscience: you should not be forced to subsidize what you consider wrongful;Institutional realism: public funding creates a politicized scientific class aligned with state priorities

So expand the principle. Citizens should feel free—indeed obligated—to scrutinize and oppose public funding for projects they judge unethical, wasteful, dangerous, or propagandistic. The inevitable objection—“this will politicize science”—should be met with the only serious reply: public funding already did.

But don’t stop at selective cuts. Selective cuts are a pressure valve; they are not a resolution. The resolution is structural: move scientific research to voluntary funding, competitive institutions, and genuine pluralism—where persuasion replaces compulsion, and moral disagreements don’t require political domination.

In other words, demand the defunding of what you reject today, not as a final answer, but as a step toward a society in which no one can force you to fund what you condemn—and no scientific caste can plausibly claim to speak as the “neutral” voice of the state.



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