Heather Cox Richardson points out that Trump’s desire to cut the federal budgets threatens to undermine cancer research. Cutting cancer research? Yes. Is cancer research a “Marxist radical lunatic” or DEI activity?
Cancer research is important for all of us, regardless of our political views, or lack thereof. Why in the world would Trump want to cut its funding?
Yesterday the National Institutes of Health under the Trump administration announced a new policy that will dramatically change the way the United States funds medical research. Now, when a researcher working at a university receives a federal grant for research, that money includes funds to maintain equipment and facilities and to pay support staff that keep labs functioning. That indirect funding is built into university budgets for funding expensive research labs, and last year reached about 26% of the grant money distributed. Going forward, the administration says it will cap the permitted amount of indirect funding at 15%.
NIH is the nation’s primary agency for research in medicine, health, and behavior. NIH grants are fiercely competitive; only about 20% of applications succeed. When a researcher applies for one, their proposal is evaluated first by a panel of their scholarly peers and then, if it passes that level, an advisory council, which might ask for more information before awarding a grant. Once awarded and accepted, an NIH grant carries strict requirements for reporting and auditing, as well as record retention.
In 2023, NIH distributed about $35 billion through about 50,000 grants to over 300,000 researchers at universities, medical schools, and other research institutions. Every dollar of NIH funding generated about $2.46 in economic activity. For every $100 million of funding, research supported by NIH generates 76 patents, which produce 20% more economic value than other U.S. patents and create opportunities for about $600 million in future research and development.
As Christina Jewett and Sheryl Gay Stolberg of the New York Times explained, the authors of Project 2025 called for the cuts outlined in the new policy, claiming those cuts would “reduce federal taxpayer subsidization of leftist agendas.” Dr. David A. Baltrus of the University of Arizona told Jewett and Stolberg that the new policy is “going to destroy research universities in the short term, and I don’t know after that. They rely on the money. They budget for the money. The universities were making decisions expecting the money to be there.”
Although Baltrus works in agricultural research, focusing on keeping E. coli bacteria out of crops like sprouts and lettuce, cancer research is the top area in which NIH grants are awarded.
Anthropologist Erin Kane figured out what the new NIH policy would mean for states by looking at institutions that received more than $10 million in grants in 2024 and figuring out what percentage of their indirect costs would not be eligible for grant money under the new formula. Six schools in New York won $2.4 billion, including $953 million for indirect costs. The new indirect rate would allow only $220 million for overhead, a loss of $723 million.
States across the country will experience significant losses. Eight Florida schools received about $673 million, $231 million for indirect costs. The new indirect rate would limit that funding to $66 million, a loss of $165 million. Six schools in Ohio received a total of about $700 million; they would lose $194 million. Four schools in Missouri received a total of about $830 million; they would lose $212 million.

People do understand that Trump has no power to cut the budget, right? Congress controls the budget. I’ve often been told to “take a civics course” on this blog – that seems like basic civics knowledge.
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Dienne,
Congress seems quite willing to abandon its powers to Musk and DOGE. Republicans control Congress. Have you heard them complain about Musk shuttering USAID or telling thousands of career civil servants that they are fired?
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So how come when Democrats had a majority – even a supermajority – they still couldn’t get anything done because of Republican obsructionism, but Democrats can’t obstruct Republicans to prevent a Constitutional crisis and existential threat to our democracy? Have you heard of a filibuster? But not only are they not doing that, they’re actually voting **FOR** Republican policies and nominees!
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When did Democrats have a supermajority in both houses? In the 1960s?
A filibuster is a good delaying tactic but eventually it is futile if the other side has a majority of votes.
Why don’t you take your great ideas and share with Schumer and Jeffries?
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So, Dienne…
Neither party has ever had a supermajority of Congress.
The difference this time is that the House isn’t interested in using its constitutional powers. Mike Johnson is happy to be Trump’s toady.
The whole idea of checks and balances rests on the idea that each branch will not allow other branches to usurp their powers. The House is uninterested with its Republican majority. They prefer to let Trump run wild.
I know you think you’re being all clever and everything but it’s pretty obvious what’s happening. Trump has cowed his party into whatever he wants. Elon will use pocket change to primary anyone who opposes Trump’s policies. Republicans either agree with Trump or are afraid of him. Democrats have a minority and have begun doing small things to resist but their power is limited.
Personally, I’m content to watch Trump voters suffer from his policies. Prices won’t decrease. Billionaires will get tax breaks. Deportations won’t increase much but they will be very highlighted in social media to give the impression that the numbers are up. Trump and Musk will gut the social safety net (which is not great for rural America).
Hope they enjoy the consequences.
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OMG, do you people even live on the same planet? Yes, Democrats had a supermajority of Congress during Obama’s first term. Short-lived, yes, but look what Republicans have done in three weeks.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/111th_United_States_Congress#:~:text=In%20the%20November%202008%20elections,January%2020%2C%202009%2C%20this%20gave
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“Personally, I’m content to watch Trump voters suffer from his policies.”
So, it’s only Trump voters who are suffering? So you’re saying there’s not a nationwide existential threat to our democracy? Make up your minds!
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Wikipedia isn’t defining supermajority correctly. A supermajoritu has the ability to override executive branch vetoes. Filibuster-proof and supermajority aren’t the same thing. Additionally, Democrats didn’t just take orders from Obama like Republicans do from Trump.
Second, everyone will suffer. Trump voters were duped. Conned. Just hoping they get what they voted for.
This exchange is typical of posting conversations. Instead of being angry an uncivil, perhaps you could just converse.
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So, Dienne…
Neither party has ever had a supermajority of Congress.
The difference this time is that the House isn’t interested in using its constitutional powers. Mike Johnson is happy to be Trump’s toady.
The whole idea of checks and balances rests on the idea that each branch will not allow other branches to usurp their powers. The House is uninterested with its Republican majority. They prefer to let Trump run wild.
I know you think you’re being all clever and everything but it’s pretty obvious what’s happening. Trump has cowed his party into whatever he wants. Elon will use pocket change to primary anyone who opposes Trump’s policies. Republicans either agree with Trump or are afraid of him. Democrats have a minority and have begun doing small things to resist but their power is limited.
Personally, I’m content to watch Trump voters suffer from his policies. Prices won’t decrease. Billionaires will get tax breaks. Deportations won’t increase much but they will be very highlighted in social media to give the impression that the numbers are up. Trump and Musk will gut the social safety net (which is not great for rural America).
Hope they enjoy the consequences.
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It’s going full moron libertarian. “Let the private sector do it.”
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About cancer research, Trump hates science and scientists because they have this reputation for telling it like it is. (Give them a Sharpie like yours, Donald, and let them go about their business.)
But why listen to Trump? It’s not only the lying; it’s that he takes any word or concept that anyone uses, even just to raise a question, and changes its meaning to suit the destructing and self-grooming that he and his minions are doing. Just listen to him. It’s like trying to understand a hairball of words.
Yesterday, when a reporter asked about his attack on the Constitution, he used the term “balance of power” to refer to his relationship with Musk, and to what Musk is doing. Trump has a balance of power with Musk.
And people just look at him with “that look,” I would refer to as the look of desperate resignation. NOTHING is going in, only trash is coming out; and there are so many handles to grasp, no one knows which one to start with.
Do you think his “owning GAZA” is a travesty? Try his owning and screwing around with the meaning of language at every turn–to his warped advantage.
Also, everyone seems to know what an intellectual dolt Trump is, and most now have rhetorical skateboards to deal with it. But Musk has a reputation for being intelligent . . . when his intelligence has apparently left the building.
For instance, like Trump, nothing he does matches what he says he is doing: and when you really want to FIX something, the intelligent person fixes what’s wrong with it, in incisive and intelligent fashion. The intelligent person doesn’t use the mantra: “Throw the baby out with the bathwater” as he is doing with USAID. That method is what the most unintelligent among us use.
Oh, . . . wait. Back to the difference between what Musk says he is doing and what he is actually doing. Does he think it’s intelligent, however, to be as ignorant and self-serving as a wild bear who got into someone’s kitchen? and then to think people are going to believe that you are going to self-regulate? and so you are going to get away with it? You need a history lesson, my friend.
No one blames the bear–but for a human being to act like that bear is the lowest form of humanity we can produce, if you can still call it that. Apparently according to the polls, Musk is just another over-reaching Class-A Techno Jerk who thinks his money is his ticket to plutocracy, which if Trump lives, or even if he doesn’t, is just another precursor to fascism.
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ICE should pick up Musk and deport him to S Africa
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Stephen Milker teeeted that what DOGE is doing is restoring democratic control of the bureaucracy.
WHAT??
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Diane: And THERE IT IS: they are “restoring democracy.” A complete abuse of the meaning of the very language we use. Just in the last 24 hours, Vance also said that the courts have no jurisdiction over “LEGITIMATE” executive actions.
But that’s the point–it’s the legitimacy of a specific action that is called into question, not EVERY one of them. It’s the judge who gets to say that, and in the case of the Rhode Island court, the plaintiffs happen to be the authorities of a number of States. SO, it’s evidence based.
But the LANGUAGE calls everyone to parse each word each time–It’s Orwell on a druggie high. And it’s catching on worse than bird flue–a part of the conspiracy to drive honest people crazy, and for those who trust the well-meaning of the speaker who holds such a title, to send everyone to the funny farm.
Let’s not let them. CBK
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Diane: Stephen Miller makes me laugh out loud, poor man . . . he has so much junk in his subconscious that it just has to vomit itself up from time to time. CBK
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Stephen Miller is a hateful, vile man.
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SO: Stephen (Orwell.2) Miller says DOGE is: “Restoring democratic control of the bureaucracy.”
So, we are to presume, most or all of everyone who voted for Trump meant for a pea-brain billionaire to bring his uneducated techno-jerks in to destroy the whole damned thing.
Somehow, I seriously doubt it. What other evidence do WE the People need to know that Miller thinks the American people are as stupid as he is, and gullible forever?
It’s just a matter of when they realize their trust has been severely broken, that Musk has shat in what’s left of their bank account and their political power, and so proceed to revolt. CBK
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When a society abandons the common good, it abandons democracy and progress. In an oligarchy, the ultra-wealthy have the resources to provide for all the wants or needs for their families and themselves. They don’t see themselves as part of a collective of many. They view themselves as separate from and above everyone else, particularly in a country whose tax laws allow them to hoard their resources while the ultra-wealthy pull political strings in order to disinvest in collective needs. Forty plus years of neoliberalism has brought us to this level of disenchantment and Trump.
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Retired, I think you are right. When the 1% see themselves as a protected class with no civic obligations, it hurts everyone else.
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Retired: It’s commonly called “arrogance,” or in some of the literature, “libido dominandi.” CBK
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Retired: I understand what you mean, but it’s not “society” yet. Assuming that just plays into their nefarious intent. Ditto Diane: that it’s the “1%” who happens to have a good amount of power right now. As Americans, we have a history, however, that says we can swim even if the water is full of all that stupid xxxx.
I am wondering if there aren’t some wannabee oligarchs and many more voters who have looked themselves in the mirror saying, WHAT HAVE I DONE, and WHAT ARE WE DOING? CBK
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At least the 19th century “robber barons” built some museums and parks. Our selfish nouveau riche have little inclination towards civic responsibility.
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Elon Musk builds nothing for the public. No parks, museums, universities. He wants it all. Same is true of Trump.
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Retired–yes, and libraries. CBK
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Horrific
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