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 ›
doctor-and-patient Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date February 27, 2025 CategoriesBioethicsMedicine Tagged , doctors, global warming, health care, Journal of the American Medical Association, journals, medicine, patients, Politics, The Lancet Claim: Only Doctors Can Prevent Global Warming Wesley J. Smith February 27, 2025 Bioethics, Medicine 3 Science, medical, and bioethics journals are setting themselves up as the new political resistance. Read More ›
Brave New World 2 Type post Author Wesley J. Smith Date July 23, 2019 CategoriesBioethicsEnvironment & Climate Tagged , __edited, Africa, Aldous Huxley, atomic energy, bioethicists, biotechnology, Brave New World, China, Congress, Food and Drug Administration, genetic engineering, genome editing, germ line, human experimentation, Journal of the American Medical Association, media, medicine, scientists, social media, Stanford University, William Hurlbut Slouching Toward a “Brave New World” Wesley J. Smith July 23, 2019 Bioethics, Environment & Climate 4 Genetic engineering could unleash a deadly pandemic or lead to a “new eugenics” with very sharp teeth. Read More ›