It's not a fact that anyone is lying: thats your interpretation.
Your interpretation is motivated by a POV apparent in almost everything you have posted here. So: propaganda.
You disregard "they interpret differently from me" in favour of "they're lying!!!!". So: crude.
You don't have facts on your side. Instead you have belief that you have facts on your side, which is not asupported by fact checking. For instance, younger had evidence that affirmative action is economically harmful.
It's not a fact that anyone is lying: thats your interpretation.
Did you look at the links? They're not exactly trying to hide it.
You disregard "they interpret differently from me" in favour of "they're lying!!!!".
Where by "they interpret differently from me" you mean they don't care whether they're statements correspond to reality as long as they're politically convenient.
What can we learn about science from the divide during the Cold War?
I have one example in mind: America held that coal and oil were fossil fuels, the stored energy of the sun, while the Soviets held that they were the result of geologic forces applied to primordial methane.
At least one side is thoroughly wrong. This isn't a politically charged topic like sociology, or even biology, but a physical science where people are supposed to agree on the answers. This isn't a matter of research priorities, where one side doesn't care enough to figure things out, but a topic that both sides saw to be of great importance, and where they both claimed to apply their theories. On the other hand, Lysenkoism seems to have resulted from the practical importance of crop breeding.
First of all, this example supports the claim that there really was a divide, that science was disconnected into two poorly communicating camps. It suggests that when the two sides reached the same results on other topics, they did so independently. Even if we cannot learn from this example, it suggests that we may be able to learn from other consequences of dividing the scientific community.
My understanding is that although some Russian language research papers were available in America, they were completely ignored and the scientists failed to even acknowledge that there was a community with divergent opinions. I don't know about the other direction.
Some questions: