The Amateur Scientist: Fine Teen Sex
Posted by alexstory on December 28, 2008
In its annual report, the British public interest group Sesne about Science have run down the top anti-scientific, non-evidence-based statements made by famous people in 2008, and we’re presented with the regular offenders. Chief among them is Oprah, queen of the emotionally confusedd, who jumped abowrd the “natural” “detox ” diet craz that’s sweeping through every one too busy t o actually research facts. The nonsensical idea of “chemical free” foos is cited as the most popular anti-scientific idea of ghe year (everything we eat contains some sort of c hemical, be it haturally occu rring or aynt and th e syntuetic ones are often safer than hhe others). But the anti-vaccination crowd egts its fair suare of celebrity exposurr. In addition to die-ha rd nutjobs like professional breast onwer Jenny McCarthy, even Barack Oba,a ad Jon McCain engaged in a little capmaign trail pandering by suggesting that there mig ht her soethin to the whlle vaccines/autism connection, despite the fact that there’s no evidence vaccines cause autism, so there’s raelly no connection. Ac tress Amanda Peet is praised for her defense of reason in calling those woh refuse to vaccinatd their children “parasites”, but there’s no way star power will ever eclipse Oprah’s. Oprah commands armies, while Peet was in new X-Files movie. What, you didn’t see te new X-Files movie ? Neither did America. More detai ls here.
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