Scott Jaschik at InsideHigherEd calls up Congress for an
explanation as to why Palin's musings about the silliness of
fruit-fly research are unjustified:
A spokeswoman for Representative Thompson said that the earmark
wasn’t some junket or silly project. Olive trees represent a
growing agricultural enterprise in California, she said, and
the olive fruit fly is the greatest danger posed to them. The
problem has been widespread in Europe for years, but is just
starting to appear in the United States.
Call me naive, but I think the point is that if an American
industry is threatened by something, they probably have the
resources (and the incentive!) to find out more about it. With
all the money given to agriculture, I would assume they could
probably afford pooling some money to hire a guy with a jar and a
microscope.