cash Type post Date April 25, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsMedicinePlanetology Tagged , American Council for Science and Health, Anil Potti, Cameron English, chemistry, conservatives, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, distrust, Duke University, EPA, fraud, funding, government, Harvard University, Inspector Clouseau, Journal of the American Medical Association, Mount Sinai Hospital, National Institute on Aging, Parkinson’s disease, pesticides, Proxima Centauri, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Samuel Gandy, Science (journal), taxpayers, Wall Street Journal, Woo-Suk Hwang, ZME Science Should Science Be Publicly Funded at All? Science and Culture April 25, 2025 Bioethics, Medicine, Planetology 5 Waste, futility, and fraud are too frequent outcomes of taxpayer funding. Private funding could well be more intelligently directed. Read More ›
cdc-dW6TcVgY7Dg-unsplash Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date September 19, 2024 CategoriesBioethicsScience Reporting Tagged , American Academy of Pediatrics, American Council for Science and Health, bleach, Cameron English, Colin Wright, Darwinian scientists, Democratic Party, Donald Trump, gender-affirming care, ideology, Kamala Harris, Politics, President, public health, science, Scientific American, trust, United States, voting, Wesley Smith By Endorsing Political Candidates, Science Mag “Inflames Disdain for Science,” Says Science Writer Denyse O’Leary September 19, 2024 Bioethics, Science Reporting 4 He added, however, “The upside is that it could incentivize needed reforms in our ideologically slanted academic and public health institutions.” Read More ›
March for Science Type post Author Denyse O’Leary Date November 16, 2022 CategoriesBioethicsEvolution Tagged , Cameron English, climate change, COVID-19, Drosophila, Jerry Coyne, Nature (journal), New York Times, Politics, propaganda, Science, UC Davis, Why Evolution Is True Here’s What Happens When Science Goes Woke Denyse O’Leary November 16, 2022 Bioethics, Evolution 3 When fashion mags go woke, no one cares. Some girls want to wear rags on their heads, well… But science mags? Read More ›