Researchers and Doctors Rally for Science Against Trump Cuts

WAsHington- The researchers, doctors, their patients, and their supporters, from laboratories, hospitals and offices on Friday, venture to find out what they call a battle of life-saving science by the Trump administration.
In the capital of the country, a few thousand gather in the Rally Standing Rally. The organizers said that similar gatherings were planned in more than 30 American cities.
It was expected that politicians, scientists, musicians, doctors and their patients were expected to explain that firefighting, budgets, grants in health, climate, science and other government agencies in the first 47 days in the Trump administration in his post is not at risk except the future but the present.
“The flag is being attacked in the United States,” said the co -organizer of the Colette Delaola Rally, who demanded a doctorate in clinical psychology. “We won’t stand here and take it.”
“The American scientific progress and the front movement are the public good, and the public good stops at the present time,” said Delaola.
The former National Health Director said that health and science developments occur faster than ever Francis CollinsWhich helped in the appointment of the human genome. He said that the financing discounts exposed to the progress of Alzheimer’s disease, diabetes and cancer.
“It is a very bad time with all the promise and momentum,” Collins said.
“I am very concerned about my country now,” said Collins before setting up a original song on his guitar.
Emily Whitheed, and The first patient gets a new type of treatment for rare cancerI told the crowd that at the age of five it was sent to showcase death, but the Treatment of TV “my immune system science to overcome cancer” and it has been free of diseases for nearly 13 years.
“I stand for science because science saved my life.”
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On Friday, Washington was in the Lincoln Memorial Monument, in light of the statue of the president who established the National Academy of Sciences in 1863. Some of the expected speakers study the giant currencies that the genetic genetic galaxies of life in humans and the atmosphere of warming.
“We look at the most aggressive government to combat science that the United States had at all,” said astronomer Phil Elette of the loud crowd, who was carrying signs that Nardi Donald Trump, Elon Musk and Minister of Health Robert Kennedy Junior said.
The signs included “Ellen Etrus outside the DNA of the United States”, “in the evidence that we trust”, “Science is the vaccine of ignorance” and “epidemiologist”.
Bill Nelson, Nobel Prize -winning biologist, Victor Ambros, Bill Nai, scienceman, former NASA president Bill Nelson, a group of other politicians, and patients – some of them suffer from rare diseases – would take in talking about their work and the importance of scientific research.
Nelson said that from 7 million miles from Earth, NASA has proven that science could transform the potential asteroids of the planet. On his satellite journey nearly 40 years ago, he looked at Earth and had “a feeling of awe that wants to be a better host of what we have presented.”
The marches were mostly organized by graduate students and vocational scientists early. Delaola said dozens of other protests were planned all over the world, including more than 30 in France.
“The discounts in financing science affect the world,” she said.
The demonstrators gathered all over the city hall in Philadelphia, home to the internationally recognized and recognized healthcare institutions and that 1 in 6 of every 6 doctors in the United States received medical training.
“As a doctor, I stand for all sexually transformed patients, and uninterrupted patients who are also targeted,” said CEDRIC BIEN-GUND, a infectious pathologist at the University of Pennsylvania. “There was a lot of fear and silence, whether between our patients or among all our employees. It is really frustrated.”
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Isabella Omali from Philadelphia contributed.