Posted on 12/01/2004 7:03:44 AM PST by ZGuy
WASHINGTON, D.C., (Dec. 1) -- JunkScience.com today announced its list of the Top Ten Most Embarrassing Moments in Health and Environmental Science for 2004. The list spotlights individuals and organizations that -- through exaggerated claims, bad judgment, and/or hidden agendas -- have most egregiously undermined public confidence in the scientific communitys capacity to conduct sound and unbiased research.
JunkScience.com has exposed and debunked flawed research and unfounded scientific claims since 1996. Many researchers and organizations sensationalize scientific claims to grab media attention, says JunkScience.com publisher Steven Milloy, and, all too often, the media simply repeat such claims verbatim. Milloy is the author of Junk Science Judo: Self-defense Against Health Scares and Scams (Cato Institute, 2001) a guide for laypersons interested in being able to recognize distorted research -- a.k.a. junk science.
JunkScience.coms Top Ten low-lights for 2004 are:
1. In August, Harvard University researcher Dr. Walter Willett delivered an urgent warning to parents declaring soft drinks harmful to children. Upon closer inspection, however, the report by Dr. Willetts research team suppressed some highly contradictory evidence-- including findings from their own research -- to reach this far-flung conclusion. Read more...
2. Leading up to election day, Stanford researcher and TV spokesman, Dr. Irving Weissman, preyed on the publics trust in his credentials as he hawked the $3 billion pro-embryonic stem cell research initiative, known as Proposition 71, to California voters -- without also disclosing the fact that, as a director and major options holder in a stem cell research company, he stands to benefit substantially from the windfall of taxpayer dollars. Read more...
3. Anti-obesity crusaders at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, who claimed in March that obesity kills 400,000 Americans each year, received a long-overdue black eye when researchers from the National Center for Health Statistics attacked the oft-quoted estimate as overblown by as much as 200 percent -- revealing just how the crusaders cooked the books. Read more...
4. The Arctic Climate Impact Assessment alerted the public that polar bears may be on the verge of extinction due to global warming -- even though their own data show that the current Arctic warming trend is within the expected fluctuations of the Arctics natural cooling/warming cycle. Despite their claims, other scientific surveys indicate that polar bear populations have actually been increasing during the current warming trend! Read more...
5. The Center for Science in the Public Interest bestowed its annual Integrity in Science award to Dr. Theo Colburn, a major proponent of the 1996 health scare blaming trace levels of industrial chemicals in the environment -- so-called endocrine disruptors -- for every health problem from cancer to infertility to attention deficit disorder. Where was CSPI when, in 1999, the National Academy of Sciences National Research Council announced that there was no persuasive evidence to support the endocrine disruptor scare? Read more...
6. Bypassing the more established tradition of featuring a prominent scientist or official as keynote speaker for its 2004 Annual Meeting, the American Public Health Association chose to set the tone with none other than anti-toxin babe Erin Brockovich -- and proudly featured a revealing, bustier-clad photo of Ms. Brockovich on their website promotion. Read more...
7. In February, the Journal of the American Medical Association scared the public with a widely-publicized claim that even a single days worth of antibiotic use is associated with increased risk of breast cancer. The studys researchers, however, based this claim on a fatally flawed analysis that did not adequately distinguish antibiotic users from non-users. Read more...
8. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers officials who had halted use of chlorine disinfectant in the Washington, DC drinking water system -- due to unfounded cancer fears hyped by the Environmental Protection Agency -- replaced this proven germ-fighter with a more corrosive substitute that leached lead from the pipes and caused wide-spread public alarm as lead levels climbed above federal standards. Read more...
9. In early 2004, a panel of the National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine urged that the recommended daily allowance of sodium be drastically reduced by almost 40% and that the average Americans actual sodium consumption be slashed by more than 60% -- even though 10 major studies conducted since 1995 have all concluded that lower sodium diets dont produce health benefits and may pose risks for some. Why the extreme recommendation? Political correctness run amok. Read more...
10. University of Arkansas researchers attacked the Atkins Diet in January with a report linking a high-carbohydrate diet with weight loss, saying it was possible to lose weight without cutting calories and without exercising. What they didnt reveal, however, was that the study subjects who lost weight actually ate 400-600 calories per day less than those who didnt lose weight. Read more at...
For more information on junk science, including daily updates, visit JunkScience.com, home of, All the junk thats fit to debunk.
Regarding global warming. If the global temperature heats up the polar ice will melt.
OK.
But, if the ice melts the sea level will rise. Why? If you have a cup with ice, and the ice melts, the fluid does not get any higher.
I live in the DC burbs and get DC news morning noon and night. I have NEVER heard this aspect of the story on ANY news report on the lead levels in the DC water system. I always thought news was to inform people.
Don't ever let actual facts get in the way of an agenda...
(And the Left says the Right is "anti-science")
It's supposed to be due to the lack of ice for them to ambush seals on...but I don't know....
The material transforms amino acids to carcinogens
as has been known since the '70s, but the chlorine
lobby is way too powerful.
Tha't true of the ice already in the sea, displacing the water. It is the melting ice on land mass that causes the water level to rise. However, since this is all crap it is not relevant.
It depends whether the ice is floating on the water, or whether it is resting on land masses. I don't know which form is predominant, but I'd guess there's some of each.
speaking of junk science ping
Armored Bear Barbers.
George Burns drank tap water for till the day he died, and it didn't bother him. :P
Ozone is a good (but more expensive and has its own problems) alternative. In coal-mining areas, there are often enough hydrocarbons in the water to allow chlorine to react to produce pentachlorophenynol; I think one can taste about 1 molecule.
Not a puff.
Sea ice melting would not raise sea levels; land ice would, but how much is the question. The Arctic is mostly sea ice; the Antarctic is largely land ice (though some of it is probably at or below sea level). Interesting work for a math major without an agenda!
Chlorine in drinking water reacts with organic matter in drinking water to produce trihalomethanes, which have been linked, epidemiologically, with bladder, colon, and rectal cancer in sensitive subgroups, e.g., smokers. Pathogens in drinking water, which chlorine eliminates, have been linked to widespread disease and death for centuries. Read Milloy's article to learn about the relatively recent death of 10,000 in Peru due to cholera when they ceased chlorinating drinking water because they listened to the US EPA's chemophobia.
Also reported is that polar bears are looking thinner and wasted. Not mentioned is that their protected status has allowed many more to exist than normal. They are starving because there is not enough food, not due to warming, but due to overpopulation. The Endangered Species Act at work.
Item 6 was interesting.
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