Imagine the situation that the scholars are busy in settling out a study of some vital cases, while the government reserves the funds and lets the scholars outside the hall of the ministration. Yes, the situation is the general case around the world. Lacking the necessary support from the government, the scientific studies are going to the trap of modern society. The relationship between the government and the scientific research would be a heated issue. From my point of view, it is the mad scientific studies such as the unclear and the technology of clone which made in last century that makes the government fearful to care more about the development of science. Oppenheimer was able to change more than the course of a war, he changed the entire course of human history. Is it wrong to hold on to that kind of hope? The government unreliably exploited the research of the atomic bombs not the scientists themselves. In that word, most of the HARMFULL results did not come from the will of scientists, but the conflicts of political interest between different organizations. Even by these specific cases, those governments who suspicious about the results of the scientific studies should not restrain the power of science, since there is large numbers of achievements fulfilled by the scientific studies: the light that you can see in the night, the amazing feeling which aroused in the air-plane, the way to go somewhere with four or more wheels, and so forth. Without the sagacious minds and the aggressive desire to invent something convenient for our lives, we should have been in uncivilized society. Moreover, people cannot ignore the success of the studies which made contributions to human races. The stimulus of the scientists is not only the expectation of themselves, but also the support of the public and the government. If the promising researches which made by the assiduous scientists would not draw the concentration of the public, they would likely to suspicious about their abilities or even give up the promising goal, then the achievements cannot be enjoyed by us contemporaries. Take the somewhat capricious genius Henry Cavendish for example, because of the indifference of his social circles and the government during his time, he could only devote himself on the shabby labs, and his useful and brilliant studies had been shown after his death. We sigh for the lost of a great mind as well as the lost of the opportunities for the society to use his devotions. The government has no reason to restrain the scientific research by the great mind, if the research does not meet the political need, the government should monitor it other than prohibit it.