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Opinion | The Uncertain Fate of the Young American Scientist

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Opinion | The Uncertain Fate of the Young American Scientist

This American brain trust has resulted in over 400 Nobel laureates, more than any other country in the world. As of 2023, an estimated 1.2 million people around the world held a Ph.D in science, engineering or health earned at an American institution. The United States accounts for 27 percent of the world’s total research and development activity — the most of any nation — though China, at 22 percent, is closing in. This is still far ahead of the next largest players: Japan (7 percent), Germany (6 percent) and South Korea (4 percent).

This investment has been essential to our economy. More than 408,000 jobs are supported by N.I.H. grants. It’s estimated that every dollar of N.I.H. funding produces $2.56 in economic activity.

So much of that success is because the U.S. government was willing to support the kind of basic science work that takes years, even generations, before resulting in monumental breakthroughs. Hundreds of millions of federal dollars established the groundwork for key breakthroughs in mRNA technology before the Covid-19 pandemic, which helpedset up Operation Warp Speed for success. Ozempic and other GLP-1 drugs were inspired in part by N.I.H.-supported research into Gila monster venom in the 1980s; without that work, we might not have the current weight-loss revolution decades later. Fifty years ago, less than 60 percent of children diagnosed with pediatric cancer survived after five years. Now, thanks to treatments funded and spearheaded by the N.I.H., that survival rate is 85 percent.

America had also been an attractive destination for science because of its express support for free inquiry — the ability of researchers to study what mattered most to them, even if there wasn’t a straight path to success and profit. That commitment appears to be crumbling. “I mourn a world in which science must defend itself through its end products, rather than its underlying search for truth and beauty,” said Daniel Bauman, a 25-year-old Stanford University graduate student studying evolution. “When efficiency is mandated, current and future careers are lost or abandoned. If science funding is made contingent on immediately beneficial results, who will be left to tell the story of nature? Will anyone even be listening?”

Young scientists’ careers are inextricably tied to the grant application cycle. Carole LaBonne, a molecular biologist at Northwestern University, recently told the podcast Odd Lots to think of labs as small businesses that run on very tight operating margins. A grant that provides funding for, say, four years would need to be renewed in year three. And if you can’t do that, people must be let go quickly — which almost always means junior members of the lab. Peter Jacobs, a senior scientist at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, is unsure whether D.O.E. and N.S.F. grants that help fund his program will be renewed — he’s not certain he can keep on his three postdocs, all of whom are already looking at other positions, including in Europe or Asia.

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Video: Transgender Athletes Barred From Women’s Olympic Events

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Video: Transgender Athletes Barred From Women’s Olympic Events

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Transgender Athletes Barred From Women’s Olympic Events

The International Olympic Committee announced a ban on transgender athletes competing in women’s events. The rule, which will go into effect during the 2028 Olympics, will require athletes to undergo genetic testing.

The scientific evidence is very clear. Male chromosomes give performance advantages in sports that rely on strength, power or endurance. At the Olympic Games, even the smallest margins can be the difference between victory and defeat. So it’s absolutely clear that it would not be fair for biological males to compete in the female category. In addition, in some sports, it would simply not be safe. Every athlete must be treated with dignity and respect, and athletes will only need to be screened once in their lifetime. The I.O.C. recognizes the importance of widespread participation in grassroots and recreational sports programs, and the impact that sport has in society. However, the Olympic Games has a focus on elite sport, and in elite sport we must ensure the fairness, safety and integrity of all competitions within the Games.

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The International Olympic Committee announced a ban on transgender athletes competing in women’s events. The rule, which will go into effect during the 2028 Olympics, will require athletes to undergo genetic testing.

By Monika Cvorak and Daniel Fetherston

March 26, 2026

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Video: Trader Joe’s Dip Head-to-Head Taste Test

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Video: Trader Joe’s Dip Head-to-Head Taste Test

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Save yourself from the vorp! Emmy Cho visited the Wirecutter kitchen to help us crown the best dip from Trader Joe’s. Watch the full YouTube episode before your next TJ’s run for all the dip tips.

March 23, 2026

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Video: Tasting Six Mystery Chips

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Which of these uniquely-flavored potato chips would be your favorite? Watch Wirecutter’s full potato chip taste test with special guest and cookbook author Maxine Sharf on YouTube.
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