drunk-homeless-man-covered-his-face-with-his-hands-and-sits-296936731-stockpack-adobestock Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date November 12, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , Debra J. Saunders, drug abuse, drug abusers, Executive Order, feces, harm causation, harm reduction, HIV, human dignity, Joshua Barocas, Las Vegas Review-Journal, Market Street, medicine, mental illness, needle exchange, overdose, personal autonomy, playgrounds, public policies, safe injection sites, San Francisco, sidewalks, syringe-services programs, The New England Journal of Medicine, Trump Administration, Union Square “Harm Reduction” Harms the Homeless Wesley J. Smith November 12, 2025 Bioethics, Medicine 5 San Francisco was allowing harm reducers to give away “starter kits” to people so they could begin injecting drugs! Read More ›
parallel-bars Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date October 5, 2024 CategoriesAnatomyBiologyHuman Origins and AnthropologyIntelligent Design Tagged , "poor design", arthritis, automobile, biceps, bursa, Cheddar News, chimpanzees, clavicle, collarbone, Columbia University, deltoid muscle, diet, DNA, evolution, exercise, feces, flat tire, flexibility, forearm, hip joint, human body, human shoulder, humerus, intelligent design, muscle, Natalia Ryzak, posture, rotator cuff, scapula, shoulder, shoulder blade, shoulder problems, stability, storytelling, throwing, tornado, trapezius muscle, zoos Is the Human Shoulder Badly Designed? Jonathan Wells October 5, 2024 Anatomy, Biology, Human Origins and Anthropology, Intelligent Design 10 Watch an acrobat performing on the parallel bars. Or a baseball player pitching a fastball. Or an athlete swimming the butterfly. Read More ›
parallel-bars Type post Author Jonathan Wells Date May 13, 2022 CategoriesAnatomyBiologyEvolutionHuman Origins and AnthropologyIntelligent Design Tagged , "poor design", arthritis, automobile, bursa, Cheddar News, chimpanzees, clavicle, collarbone, Columbia University, deltoid muscle, diet, DNA, evolution, exercise, feces, flat tire, flexibility, forearm, hip joint, human body, human shoulder, humerus, intelligent design, Natalia Ryzak, posture, rotator cuff, scapula, shoulder, shoulder blade, shoulder problems, stability, storytelling, throwing, tornado, trapezius muscle, zoos Is the Human Shoulder Badly Designed? Jonathan Wells May 13, 2022 Anatomy, Biology, Evolution, Human Origins and Anthropology, Intelligent Design 10 Watch an acrobat performing on the parallel bars. Or a baseball player pitching a fastball. Or an athlete swimming the butterfly. Read More ›
truck driver 2 Type post Author Michael Egnor Date March 19, 2020 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , __k-review, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, China, coronavirus, DDT, deplorables, eugenics, evolution, feces, globalism, gun control, Holocaust, homelessness, Los Angeles, malaria, medicines, Michael Egnor, overpopulation, pandemic, pharmaceutical industry, plague, quarantine, San Francisco, Seattle, Steven Novella, supermarket, tuberculosis, typhoid fever, Yale University Science Expert Slaps the “Anti-Intellectuals,” Again Michael Egnor March 19, 2020 Bioethics, Medicine 7 I stopped by Joe the truck driver’s house to talk. Joe read Yale neurologist Steven Novella’s essay, and he didn’t think much of it. Read More ›
cat 2 Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date December 9, 2019 CategoriesBioethics Tagged , __edited, animal rights, animal welfare, animals, cats, Dogs, environmental movement, feces, meat, New Scientist, pets Give Up Pets to Save the Planet! Wesley J. Smith December 9, 2019 Bioethics 3 Cats are, we are told sternly, an unsustainable “environmental vice that we must confront”! Read More ›
Type post Author Casey Luskin Date November 30, 2011 CategoriesIntelligent DesignLinguisticsPhysical Sciences Tagged , __k-review, chimpanzees, evolution, feces, intelligent design, multiverse, science, Scientific American, thought Scientific American Challenges the Multiverse Casey Luskin November 30, 2011 Intelligent Design, Linguistics, Physical Sciences 5 "Even if the multiverse exists, it leaves the deep mysteries of nature unexplained." Read More ›
Type post Date November 30, 2011 CategoriesEvolutionLinguistics Tagged , __k-review, chimpanzees, evolution, feces, First Things, intelligent design, Research, Stephen Barr, thought Waste Not, Want Not: Chimps Show the Way to Higher Development Science and Culture November 30, 2011 Evolution, Linguistics 1 Followers of news from the world of evolution research are abuzz over a new study, and it's only partly because of the opportunity for putting some mild potty talk in your headlines. Read More ›