Earlier today, I
took note of Joaquin Sapien's
interview with the physician who used to run the National Center for Injury Prevention Control at the Centers for Disease Control. That was until the National Rifle Association got Congress to chop 96 percent of his budget and alter the NCIPC's mission to keep its data collectors-and-crunchers away from anything that might promote firearms control. As if scientifically gathering information on the impact of guns in our society should actively, aggressively be avoided.
As is true of so many things, ignorance isn't bliss. Unless you're its purveyor.
Nicole Flatow at Think Progress points to another area in which scientific data (and method) are avoided, thus allowing propaganda to win the day:
In the face of obstacles to marijuana research from both the Drug Enforcement Administration and the National Institute on Drug Abuse, a theoretical physicist at the California Institute of Technology and one-time MacArthur Fellow is calling out the federal government on its obstruction of science.
During an address before a medical marijuana conference Friday [Feb. 22], John H. Schwartz explained how the DEA and NIDA act as a “tag team” to censor science, with NIDA holding a monopoly over legal access to cannabis for research, and the DEA refusing to reconsider the drug’s designation in the Controlled Substances Act as a dangerous substance with no medical value on the basis that sufficient research does not exist. He alleges that the government has blocked research even though it has long been aware of marijuana’s potential to serve many medical benefits including shrink aggressive cancer cells is because it might “send the wrong message to children”:
The most blatant example of this behavior came last year, when NIDA blocked an FDA-approved clinical trial testing marijuana as a remedy for post traumatic stress disorder, PTSD. It’s especially sad to note that the study participants were veterans, with PTSD deemed untreatable by other means. After 12 years of war, this is how we treat them. […]
As a physicist, I can assure you that this not how physics works. … We are all expected to act like grownups and accept it gracefully as experiments prove our favorite theories are false. In physics, unlike marijuana policy, we consider the right message to send to be the message that’s true. […]
Consider what American science might look like if all research were run like marijuana research is being run now. Suppose the Institute for Creation Science were put in charge of approving paleontology digs and the science of human evolution.
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Blast from the Past. At Daily Kos on this date in 2005—MT's Schweitzer Leads Charge Against Bush on Prescription Drugs:
Around these parts, Montana's new Democratic governor Brian Schweitzer has come in for a lot of (well-deserved) adulation. So it was with special interest that I read this story today about Schweitzer taking the lead in the fight to bring low-cost prescription drugs to his constituents, who of course live along the Canadian border:
The Bush administration cites public safety in trying to block admission of cheaper prescription drugs from Canada, but has agreed to expand imports of Canadian beef and cattle despite cases of mad cow disease, Montana's Democratic governor complained Saturday.
"President Bush was recently here in Montana and we had just one question for him," Gov. Brian Schweitzer said in his party's weekly radio address. "Why allow bad beef to enter the U.S. from Canada and not allow safe medicine?"
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Tweet of the Day:
WHY WON'T THE PRESIDENT WHO NOMINATED A REPUBLICAN SECRETARY OF DEFENSE WHO WAS ALMOST FILIBUSTERED COMPROMISE?
— @LOLGOP via TweetDeck
On today's
Kagro in the Morning show,
Greg Dworkin set up the day's discussion of the looming sequester. Apparently, though people were aware of the Fiscal Thingy, hardly anyone is aware of the sequester, and they don't think it will affect them. Why? Maybe it's inherent to the differences between liberals and conservatives. We dig into why that might be & what it means.
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