Sarah Goetz
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sarahgoetz.bsky.social
Sarah Goetz
@sarahgoetz.bsky.social
Cell biologist, embryo aficionado, ciliavangelist. Associate professor at Duke University School of Medicine. Tweets and opinions are my own. She/her.
Lab website: goetzlabduke.com
It should have. But Summers’ extremely obvious misogynist views were never disqualifying because Democratic politicians loved his neoliberal economics far more than they cared about the misogyny. That includes Obama and very much the Clintons.
November 16, 2025 at 2:36 AM
www.nytimes.com/2025/11/07/s...
To me, reading “The Double Helix” many years ago as a grad student felt like getting hit in the face. His cruelty towards a talented colleague whose work his major discovery depended on and who had, and I can’t emphasize this enough, *DIED*, was immediately stunning.
James D. Watson, Co-Discoverer of the Structure of DNA, Is Dead at 97
www.nytimes.com
November 8, 2025 at 4:54 AM
@zohrankmamdani.bsky.social's victory this week (YAY!) in the NYC mayor’s race has had me thinking a lot about my own story of “affordability” in that city. NYC was my home for nearly 8 years (2007-2015) while I was a postdoc Sloan Kettering Institute. 🧵🧪 1/
November 7, 2025 at 3:58 PM
Absolutely! I did lots of tours in the 8 years I lived in NYC. They tended to be cheap and fun (Zohran’s was free!)And yeah, many/mist of the other folks tended to be residents. Zohran’s love for NYC is really palpable, and I think it’s another big reason for his success.
I worked for a few years as a guide for history-related walking tours in lower Manhattan. My *best* and most enthusiastic joiners were the residents, not the tourists. They tipped the best too.
A thing Zohran & his campaign have powerfully tapped into -- and that his scavenger hunt captures so perfectly -- is that a vast majority of the people who live here genuinely *love* New York City. We wouldn't stay here otherwise!
August 24, 2025 at 9:43 PM
I’m incredibly proud of this work, which is the product of years of effort, mostly by @loukillab.bsky.social when he was a postdoc in my lab. It started out as a “fantasy project” when I was a new PI, and it’s very much a testament to Halim’s hard work that it became a reality!
Thrilled to share our new paper on the in vivo BioID of neuronal cilia 🧬🌀
This is the first look at the signaling power of neuronal primary cilia in the mature mouse brain.
Huge thanks to @sarahgoetz.bsky.social and amazing collaborators for making this possible! 🙏

www.jneurosci.org/content/45/3...
August 14, 2025 at 10:23 PM
This is very much how I feel right now. Extending the metaphor- we are also in the middle of the desert, so it’s is unclear where we would go or what will happen when it stalls. It’s bleak.
Being an academic right now feels like riding in a car that has the check engine and low fuel light on, and you know you there isn't a gas station for at least the next three years.

How long before it stalls in the middle of the rode?

How long before you get off?

How long before we all get off.
July 27, 2025 at 10:34 PM
This is a great piece and very helpful. One other problem I see among my colleagues is that we as scientists struggle to think and act collectively. Many people’s impulse and inclination is to focus even harder on the immediate needs of their own lab/career. But that will lose us precious time.
May 17, 2025 at 3:09 PM
What will happen is a few high profile people will move or return to Europe with much fanfare. But the rest us are just stuck. We will simply be forced out of our jobs and careers.
$500 million is… less than 1.25% of the NIH’s 2024 budget.

When I say there is no capacity to absorb the shock, I mean it.
We will put forward a 500 million package for 2025-2027 to make Europe a magnet for researchers.

As well as ambitious proposals for R&I in the next EU budget.

We will also offer the best and brightest the right incentives to come to Europe ↓
May 5, 2025 at 6:49 PM
This is a great piece! It’s really refreshing to see scholars in the humanities subject the use of LLMs in education to serious scrutiny. Scrutiny and skepticism of “AI” is often in embarrassingly short supply in my own field (the biological sciences).
March 22, 2025 at 10:12 PM
This stuff gets me every damn time. The level of credulity even otherwise smart ppl show about these chatbots is truly bonkers. Preschool age children are more skeptical than NYT reporters. At least they ask “why?” and “how do you know?” constantly. 🙄
March 18, 2025 at 1:05 AM
This. But also we are up against the fact that academic scientists in particular are often unprepared to think of ourselves as workers, build solidarity, and take collective action. This moment is going to require a really big pivot!
With the attacks on science and academia by the current administration, if those of us who have tenure don't speak up, it's really hard to continue justifying the tenure system based on academic freedom.
March 15, 2025 at 3:35 PM
Reposted by Sarah Goetz
If your sources are willing to share specific details of cancelled grants publicly, please encourage them to share using the Google Sheet below👇

The current lack of transparency on cancelled grants is really limiting organizing efforts and advocacy.

bsky.app/profile/scot...
We need to organize--let’s help each other.

NIH is cancelling grants, but it's not clear exactly what they're cancelling and why. Without this information, we can't respond.

I've started a Google Sheet to track grant cancellations.

Please add any canceled grants you know of and spread the word!
March 11, 2025 at 2:40 PM
Reposted by Sarah Goetz
Not a lawyer, but flagging for the lawyers: HHS just said they're rescinding the Richardson Waiver (the policy under which changes to HHS grants were subject to notice-and-comment rulemaking, by my read).

Sure seems like this is about NIH.

public-inspection.federalregister.gov/2025-03300.pdf
February 28, 2025 at 1:55 PM
🧪It seems like we are now in the gaslighting phase of this crisis. For the past few days, there have been "official reports" that FR posts are going to resume, and every day they keep not resuming. And its crickets from our institutions.
Today, the study section I am a member of is one of 26 out of 26 canceled. No new post on the federal registry and councils are postponed indefinitely.
Universities focused on overhead cuts considering these a challenge to their survival. But *no grant at all* seems like the issue to battle first..
The NIH continues to be fully halted. 11/11 study sections canceled today, which includes the study section my grant was meant to be reviewed at. This is never ending and so damaging.
www.csr.nih.gov/RevPanelsAnd...
February 27, 2025 at 8:15 PM
🧪Hi Scientists. Someone I know posted this on facebook, but I haven't seen it here yet. thewashingtonpost.formstack.com/forms/scient...
Are you a scientist who has lost funding or grants in recent weeks? - Formstack
thewashingtonpost.formstack.com
February 26, 2025 at 7:16 PM
The Onion is barely even satire anymore.
February 24, 2025 at 11:19 PM
Reposted by Sarah Goetz
If anyone has been in touch with press covering the NIH situation broadly (firings, funding freeze etc), please encourage them to cover the sinister way in which HHS is preventing grant review and funding from happening, by blocking posting to the Federal Register.
HHS blocked posting indefinitely. Not enough press is being given to this back door approach to blocking NIH grants. If and when it is lifted will still be 35 days before study sections can be held
Still no SS meetings being posted to the Federal Register. www.federalregister.gov/documents/se...
February 17, 2025 at 5:24 PM
Finally, some coverage of this issue. I did not know what the Federal Register was until last week when I got an email that the study section I was set to serve on is postponed to an unspecified date. Most of my colleagues have no idea that study sections are going to start being cancelled this week
February 19, 2025 at 1:48 AM
This is exactly right- There has not been this kind of wholesale cancellation of study sections and other meetings during other transitions. And the fact that people in leadership roles say this when it isn't true is the opposite of reassuring.
I don’t know who is out there telling people that a pause in study sections is typical for a leadership transition, but please stop. That is factually incorrect. Pauses in some activities do happen, but a pause to this degree is unprecedented. Thankfully it should be short-lived 🙏🏾
January 24, 2025 at 10:51 PM
Reposted by Sarah Goetz
Academia??? Please!!!
November 29, 2024 at 2:04 PM
Well, at least getting a non-fundable grant score *feels* less bad than not discussed...
November 22, 2024 at 4:03 PM
At the end of what’s been a hard week, I made an unexpected discovery rummaging through a box of books at home:
🧪🧵
November 22, 2024 at 1:35 AM
Politics is a total mess, but I loved this today:
theonion.com/heres-why-i-...
(They really did buy Infowars)
Here’s Why I Decided To Buy ‘InfoWars’
Today we celebrate a new addition to the Global Tetrahedron LLC family of brands. And let me say, I really do see it as a family. Much like family members, our brands are abstract nodes of wealth, int...
theonion.com
November 15, 2024 at 1:12 AM
Reposted by Sarah Goetz
I started one but only for #cilia! go.bsky.app/ELfYqxw - cilia and centrosomes band together I guess!
November 12, 2024 at 10:03 AM
Trying this out since it seems like folks are fleeing science twitter. I'm not a huge user of social media, but hoping this will be a better place for engagement about science and other topics! 🧪
November 14, 2024 at 9:35 PM