The latest attempt to pressure the American Museum of Natural History to sever ties with billionaire Rebekah Mercer asks for her to exit through the gift shop.
A New York-based political stunt group calling itself the Clean Money Project planted spoof gifts in the museum store and staged fake exhibit signs on Monday in a bid to highlight the hypocrisy of allowing Mercer, a major donor, to remain on its board of directors.
The group put postcards on display with Mercerβs picture and the words βclimate change denier and museum board memberβ alongside Isaac Newton with the slogan βglobal warming is a mythβ and Albert Einstein facetiously quoted as saying, βThereβs no way to prove climate change is related to fossil fuels.β The group posted a video of the stunt on YouTube.
Mercer has donated $4.1 million to the museum over the past four years through her familyβs foundation, and has sat on the board since 2013.
The Long Island heiress to her fatherβs hedge fund fortune also funded and orchestrated candidate Donald Trumpβs presidential campaign, bankrolled the right-wing news site Breitbart and donated millions to climate change denial think tanks. More than 200 scientists launched a campaign in January demanding that the museum remove Mercer, whom they called an βanti-science propagandist,β from the board.
A similar effort in 2015 forced fossil fuel billionaire David Koch, one of the top financiers behind the climate denial movement, to leave the museum board.
The stunt this week was not connected to the campaign. A member of the group spoke on condition of anonymity to prevent security officials from identifying him in future projects, but HuffPost confirmed his identity.
βWe want Rebekah Mercer off the board, and we do think the Natural History Museum is complicit in allowing these people to be two-faced,β he said. βTheyβre giving them credibility when they are spending much more money battling science and undermining science.β
The satirical products also included bottled βfracking waterβ branded with the Koch brothersβ name and flammability warnings, a 2019 calendar celebrating the βbeauty of CO2β with photos of smokestacks, and an empty two-foot box advertising a βhome fracking setβ that looked like a kidsβ chemistry kit.
In various wings of the museum, the group left behind framed signs proclaiming a new βBreitbart evolution wingβ sponsored by Mercer and a Koch Enterprises-funded βfossil-fuel appreciation wing.β
βThe Museum doesnβt have anything to add to the information you already have,β Roberto Lebron, a museum spokesman, said in regards to the groupβs stunt via email Wedensday.
The Mercer Family Foundation has donated generously to climate misinformation groups in recent years, contributing nearly $5.9 million to the Heartland Institute, a leading proponent of climate science denial, between 2008 and 2016, according to previously unreleased tax filings reviewed and published by HuffPost in January.
The foundation increased spending on climate denial in recent years. The family gave $150,000 to the CO2 Coalition, an organization born from the ashes of the defunct George C. Marshall Institute, which denied global warming and lobbied against the science behind acid rain and carcinogens in cigarette smoke. It also provided $125,000 to the Arizona-based Center for the Study of Carbon Dioxide and Global Change, an oil-funded think tank run by former Peabody Energy executive Craig Idso.
The foundation donated nearly $2.3 million to the Donors Trust, a fundraising organization nicknamed βthe dark-money ATM of the conservative movementβ that does not take an official position on climate change but has for years directed money to denial proponents.
In a rare and widely derided public statement in February, Mercer dismissed accusations that she is βanti-scienceβ as βabsurd smears.β
βI oppose politicized science, in which researchers cannot study certain subjects β or even ask certain questions β for fear of career-ending backlash and persecution,β she wrote in an op-ed published in The Wall Street Journal. βThese beliefs shape my philanthropy and my political activity.β
Mercer did not respond to a request for comment on Wednesday.