I will concede that if it's at all to be blamed on the science-minded people, it'd be on a lack of patience. I'm guilty of it myself sometimes, but to us, it's a matter of "why the heck can't you just understand that it's not a religious thing".
To me, I can't understand why the religious insist on seeing science as a religious thing when it's really just a method for understanding the universe they live in.
Please feel free to speak up if anyone has a different perspective.
I am probably going to get verbally eviscerated for responding, but I can understand the perspective you would term 'anti-science.' Keep in mind, I am not arguing how I see things necessarily, but the way one might.
1. It's legal to teach that Intelligent Design is wrong, but not that it is right, or really anything about it in terms of information. (that gets really politicized, but I have not really heard their side of the argument in the media only Faith vs Science, God vs Darwin, etc. while faith is portrayed as another fancy term for stupidity which as a Christian I find annoying.)
2. There are all these people like Dawkins making a profession out of calling Religious people idiots, deluded, stupid, and all forms of derogatory names, while holding offices like "Public understanding of Science" which speaks volumes as to how much his celebrity is more important to those in positions than
actual Public understanding of science.
3. Certain evangelical atheists seem to be in love with their scientism at a very unhealthy level, I had a 14 year old atheist on myspace try to lecture me about 'what science is' after pointing out to him that if he was able to criticize someone's perspective they should be able to defend it. But honestly, with atheists being aggressively anti-theistic and trying to use science as their proverbial hammer against religion...
4. A lot of the times when people call the positions or activities of official scientific institutions into question, the reaction seems to be, "don't question us, this is what 'science says'" as if a method of discovering information about our world also makes our decisions for us too. Anti-Global warming advocacy for example seems to be one of those things that has become the underdog conservative rebel position because the response to a small amount of scientists questioning it was to circle the wagons and make every institution offer a statement supporting global warming, or basically argue from authority. Then let hackers expose some dishonest dealings rather than being honest because you have enough confidence in the data and your own conclusions... that's a good way to seem publicly discredited.
5. This really goes along with 4, but the pharmaceutical industry proverbially spitting upon Health and Wellness has a lot of health and wellness advocates up in arms trying to be rebels fighting "Big Pharma", while health and wellness also has a tendency to focus on a 'whole person' including one's 'spiritual fulfillment' and all that.
I could probably go on and on, but its like people live in two different worlds, one side has government support, the other has capitalist advantage. Everybody thinks they're 'fighting the power.' I kind of feel caught in the middle.