Dr. Schweitzer served at the White House during the Clinton Administration as Assistant Director for International Affairs in the Office of Science and Technology Policy. Dr. Schweitzer was responsible for providing scientific and technological policy advice and analysis for Al Gore, President Clinton and President Clinton's Science Advisor, and to coordinate the U.S. government's international science and technology cooperation. He worked with the president's cabinet and 22 U.S. Government technical agencies, and with countries throughout the world, in a broad range of fields including biology, physics, chemistry, geophysics, agriculture, oceanography and marine sciences. He was instrumental in establishing the permanent Global Forum on Science and Technology at the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development to promote greater international scientific collaboration.

Blog Entries by Jeff Schweitzer

An Octopus Garden on 61 Virginis

2 Comments | Posted December 18, 2009 | 05:04 PM (EST)


Humanity's greatest problem is hubris derived from religious arrogance in believing that mankind was made in god's image. For millennia, people of nearly all cultures have been taught that humans are special in the eyes of their god or gods, and that the world is made for their benefit and...

Read Post

Asheville Atheism Attacked Anew

87 Comments | Posted December 15, 2009 | 03:45 PM (EST)


I woke up this morning fairly convinced I was living in the 21st century. But I began doubting my conclusion, and perhaps my sanity, when I read in the Washington Post that the election of Councilman Cecil Bothwell in Asheville, North Carolina, was being contested because he does not believe...

Read Post

Climate Change and Jesus in a Burnt Toast

8 Comments | Posted December 10, 2009 | 03:53 PM (EST)


Critics of climate change gleefully point to hacked emails originating from British scientists at the University of East Anglia that purportedly provide evidence of climatologists manipulating data to mask a decline in global temperatures.  Global warming skeptics believe they have proof now that climate change is a liberal plot.  They...

Read Post

Getting Ahead...By Giving It

9 Comments | Posted November 24, 2009 | 06:29 PM (EST)


If my title is too ambiguous, allow me to clarify in stating that new research shows fellatio is a good thing, for those among us still unaware.  I offer this bit of exciting news in hopes that I have discovered the key to reducing the irrational anger and hostility emanating...

Read Post

Tomares, Typhoons and Terrorism

7 Comments | Posted November 23, 2009 | 01:55 AM (EST)


Blind determinism is humankind’s greatest disease.  The first and most dangerous symptom of the malady is religion, which began by confusing correlation with causation as first-order determinism.  Doing a dance in hopes of rain just prior to a deluge convinced primitives that dancing caused the precipitation.   A Cro-Magnon mind would...

Read Post

War Dead and Differential Grief

10 Comments | Posted November 11, 2009 | 10:00 PM (EST)


More than 5100 American soldiers have been killed in Iraq and Afghanistan. 

Consider those deaths.  Then consider the 13 who died at Fort Hood.

In 2007, the bloodiest year in our two ongoing wars, 1021 soldiers died, an average of more than 2.5 per day, every day of...

Read Post

You Can't Say "Sorry" When Millions Die from Your Mistake

48 Comments | Posted November 9, 2009 | 09:02 PM (EST)


The most depressing statistic I have read in recent years is embedded in a 2009 Gallup survey showing that 41% of Americans believe that climate change is exaggerated or a hoax, up from 38% two years ago.  Worse, the number of Americans who agree that the scientists are correct...

Read Post

Death from Cluelessness: State Killing Machines and the Penalty of Indifference

35 Comments | Posted October 21, 2009 | 02:34 PM (EST)


Nobody has ever shown that a lifetime in jail without parole is any less a deterrent to future crime compared with the threat of death.  As a general rule, violent crime rates in countries with no death penalty are lower than in the United States.

In supporting the death penalty,...

Read Post

Blind Faith: Supreme Court Meltdown

2 Comments | Posted October 8, 2009 | 11:43 AM (EST)


Justice Antonin Scalia revealed today an extraordinary bias that fundamentally threatens our secular government.  Scalia seemed truly baffled that a Christian cross represents Christianity!  He was puzzled that a cross was not broadly representative of Islam, Judaism or no religion at all.  The Catholic justice went on to proclaim that...

Read Post

Defending Darwin's Legacy

40 Comments | Posted September 30, 2009 | 02:24 PM (EST)


Let us set the record straight once and for all.  Darwin’s famous tome is not properly entitled, The Origin of Species

The original and correct title of Darwin’s book is, On the Origin of Species. In fact the complete title is, On the Origin of Species by Means of Natural...

Read Post

A Failure of Citizenship and the Health Care Debacle

41 Comments | Posted September 19, 2009 | 05:26 PM (EST)


If a nation expects to be ignorant and free, in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be.

Thomas Jefferson penned those words in an early debate on the role of government in education.  He went on to say:  “Universal education is the most effective...

Read Post

You Lie!

31 Comments | Posted September 11, 2009 | 02:30 PM (EST)


Imagine the setting.  Feel the history in the pomp and circumstance of a presidential entrance into the chambers of the House of Representatives.  Consider the deep respect commanded by the office of the presidency.  Tradition runs deep and all in attendance rise to their feet as our leader makes his...

Read Post

Learn Me Some Good Schooling

4 Comments | Posted September 8, 2009 | 03:44 PM (EST)


In 1986, Ronald Reagan addressed our nation’s schools with a speech that focused heavily on his administration’s political accomplishments.  He talked about inheriting a bad economy and declining defense budget, and then declared “And I think it’s fair to say that we’ve made a good deal of progress.”

In 1991,...

Read Post

Diamonds Are a God's Best Friend

40 Comments | Posted September 5, 2009 | 05:01 PM (EST)


Diamonds are abundant and not particularly valuable.  This common mineral has become an object of expensive desire through a carefully orchestrated and well funded campaign of deception perpetrated over a span of seven decades.  We have been duped.  We have been fooled into believing wrongly that these stones are rare...

Read Post

Einstein's God and the Hungry Spider

179 Comments | Posted August 28, 2009 | 10:26 AM (EST)


In the midst of his historic debate with Niels Bohr, Albert Einstein famously declared that god does not play dice with the cosmos.  Einstein was objecting to the then-new conclusions from quantum mechanics that the world was fundamentally probabilistic rather than deterministic.   The proposal that the world is inherently random...

Read Post

To Find God...Just Skip Lunch

183 Comments | Posted August 22, 2009 | 06:27 PM (EST)


For millennia peoples across the globe have searched for a means of getting closer to and finding god.  Elaborate ceremony, choreographed rituals, ornate clothing, enormous houses of worship and convoluted oral histories have all been employed to this task.  But the simple answer to god’s discovery has been right under...

Read Post

From Death Panel to Death Spiral

36 Comments | Posted August 17, 2009 | 01:44 PM (EST)


A positive feedback loop is defined as a system that responds to a disturbance in the same direction as the disturbance. With every small input the response gets amplified, growing ever larger until the system collapses. In the physical world, one of the most famous examples is the Tacoma Narrows...

Read Post

Bible Study in Public Schools: Let's Pray on It

122 Comments | Posted August 10, 2009 | 11:55 AM (EST)


The Legislature in Texas in a fit of religious fervor mandated in 2007 that starting in 2009 public schools must teach the "literature and history" of the Good Book. To avoid the obvious constitutional problems of separating Church and State, the law is carefully worded to provide a fig leaf...

Read Post

The Birth of Desperation: Irresponsible Opposition

5 Comments | Posted July 28, 2009 | 03:05 PM (EST)


Republicans are imploding, and the resulting compression into a black hole of nothingness is not pretty. Apparently nothing can escape this massive and growing object of right wing infinite density, not even light or logic. As a window into theater of the absurd, we have recently witnessed the governor of...

Read Post

Michael Jackson and Walter Cronkite

51 Comments | Posted July 20, 2009 | 10:27 AM (EST)


The concept of irony is often abused and invoked much too easily. But sometimes events conspire to provide true and rich irony that cannot be ignored. The near juxtaposition of the deaths of Michael Jackson and Walter Cronkite yield to us such an event.

Upon the death of another beloved...

Read Post