Science, both teaching and doing, is under attack. The recent US presidential election of a
person
and
platform
with anti-science bias exemplifies this. The study of climate processes and patterns and the role of human activities in these phenomena are at the heart of multiple global crises, and yet the
scientific results
, and the
scientists
presenting them, are
attacked
constantly
. The dissemination of knowledge on health involving reproduction and human sexuality is increasingly marked for attack (in
Russia
,
Uganda
, and the
USA
), and researchers in these areas are often the target of extensive
political pressure
. The massive attack on the science and the scientists behind vaccines, pathogen transmission, and public health during the COVID-19 pandemic and
beyond
is well
documented
, as are attacks on basic science education and the practice of science (for example, in
Hungary
and the
USA
). Even in the arena of biodiversity conservation, there is growing politicization of the
data
and political targeting of the
scientists
producing it. According to the US-based
National Association of Biology Teachers
(NABT), climate change, reproduction, vaccines, and other evidence-based scientific topics are being deemed “controversial” by school boards and state officials and are being removed from state-approved teaching resources across the country. Core research on health, climate, human biology, and biodiversity is being undermined by private foundations, governments, and anti-science ideologues.