Junk Science
Life Flow One
The Solution For Heart Disease
A Book By
Karl Loren
Much of what I have to say about heart disease includes exposure of the lies said by others. In the past several years a term has become popular in the press: "junk science." That term is one of the subjects of the editorial in the Wall Street Journal, shown below. The "junk science" in the field of heart disease is far more serious than the junk science in the field of breast implants. This page includes many articles and links relating to "junk science."
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| Articles And Data About Junk Science | ||
| Click Here To Jump To The Article | Title Or Description | Comments |
| ...1... | Wall
Street Journal Article Junk Science Breast Implants December 10, 1998 |
The WSJ has long been critical of "junk science" |
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| ...3... | Junk Science Home
Page A Page Of Clickable References To "Junk Science" Compiled By Steve Milloy |
"Junk Science" has become so "popular" that there is a web page devoted entirely to this subject. Yahoo search engine gives this link great prominence. |
| ...4... | The Junk Science Home
Page Background On The "Private Individual" |
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| ...6... | Fad Diets Based on Corporate Junk Science and PR |
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December 10, 1998
When a tropical storm devastates an island or a troubled teenager goes on a killing spree, cries go up demanding something be done to make sure it never happens again. When a deranged tort system destroys an industry--driving people out of jobs, panicking customers--and does so based on junk science admitted to the courtroom by injudicious judges-- there really is the possibility of making sure it doesn't happen again.
It would come too late to save Dow Corning, once the country's biggest maker of silicone-gel breast implants, from bankruptcy. The company filed in 1995, snowed under by thousands of lawsuits ginned up by the likes of Houston lawyer John O'Quinn in such numbers as to make a defense on the merits impractical. The long-running fiasco got up its head of steam after FDA Commissioner David Kessler grandiosely ordered the implants off the market in 1992, claiming the company hadn't proven them absolutely, positively, irrefutably safe. He has since accepted Yale's invitation to run its medical school.
Let us understand that this effort was a deliberate strategy devised by tort sharks like Mr. O'Quinn, who in theory have a duty as "officers of the court," yet strive to make it impossible for the courts to do their proper work as finders of facts and dispensers of rational justice. All along Dow Corning and other implant makers have maintained they have no liability because there is no scientific evidence to support the scattershot claims that implants cause auto-immune disease and other "systemic" ailments. Study after study has vindicated the industry's belief in its own innocence.
Last week, after spending two years and $800,000, a team of independent researchers appointed by Federal District Judge Sam Pointer Jr. of Alabama came to the same conclusion: There is "no evidence" linking implants to patterns of elevated risk of these and other diseases. The plaintiffs lawyers say they look forward to deposing the researchers--three female and one male academic specialists--and we hope Judge Pointer's court is prepared to protect them. When the New England Journal of Medicine's editor published a Mayo Clinic researcher's negative conclusions on silicone implant diseases, the lawyers bombed both women with subpoenas and sought to troll through their work files and associations. Junk lawyering is as abusive as junk science.
Some, like lawyer and advocacy group organizer Sybil Goldrich, now urge that science be ignored in favor of the stories of individual women--superstition, in other words, since causation cannot be observed in individual cases; it can be divined only from statistical patterns. Once, when a chief died and the rains didn't come, primitive man assumed a link. The achievement of the big-money trial lawyers has been to make such primitivism play in the courts. When the Dow Corning case is finally settled, legal fees could top $1 billion.
How did we get here? The failure is a failure of judges, and maybe even a wider failure of republican (small "r") responsibility. An astonishing number of Congressmen and Senators seem content to give Bill Clinton a pass on lying in the courtroom. But the polls aren't telling Congressmen not to impeach the President; the polls are telling them that voters want them to decide. They're saying, don't kick the difficult, professional judgments back to us. As we've seen in the later round of breast implant trials, when judges permit only legitimate scientific evidence to be presented as "science," jurors will do their duty, whatever sympathy they may feel for the women involved.
Reason and evidence have gradually won out, not least because judges like Mr. Pointer have used their own authority to reach beyond the theatrics of the trial lawyers and bring genuine scientific expertise to bear. But a change of incentives is also needed to stop people like Mr. O'Quinn from gaming our legal system and cowing companies into unmerited surrender.
To this end, it would not be the worst thing if the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Michigan rejected the $4.5 billion reorganization plan filed by Dow Corning last week. Dow Corning won't be pleased, but the court's duty is to protect legitimate shareholders and creditors, and the settlement would make $10,000 to $250,000 available to anyone who claims auto-immune disease, which science has consistently failed to pin on breast implants. The company once demanded a separate trial on causation, but seeing a light at the end of the tunnel has moved to close the books by paying up.
Women are already offered $20,000 for a ruptured implant, and $5,000 for anyone who wants hers removed for any reason. These seem appropriate responses to a controversy that, for whatever reasons, has caused customers a great deal of distress. But to reward plaintiffs, and more especially their lawyers, for claims repudiated by science would send the wrong message to all the aspiring tort sharks out there. The breast implant boondoggle was a wholly man-made disaster. It needn't happen again.
URL for this Article:
http://interactive.wsj.com/archive/retrieve.cgi?id=SB913240741924665500.djm
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Overcoming Junk Science
By John Stossel
01/09/97
The Wall Street Journal
Page A12
(Copyright (c) 1997, Dow Jones & Co., Inc.)
For 20 years I was a consumer reporter. Every week someone came to me suggesting stories about risks that "had to be exposed." I eagerly reported the dangers, illustrated with heart-wrenching testimony from victims. The most compelling stories were those that warned of new, unusual risks -- like Agent Orange, killer bees or flesh-eating bacteria. But did such stories really give an accurate picture of life's risks? Tylenol poisonings were a huge story in 1982 -- weeks of headlines and breathless news reports. Yet the poisonings killed only seven people -- while cars kill more than 100 people every day. Most car accidents just aren't "news."
I'm embarrassed to admit it took me years of reporting scares to realize that I was doing a disservice. The turning point came when a producer rushed into my office pushing a story on cigarette lighters. "Bic lighters are exploding," he said. "They've killed four people!" But by then I had compiled a "death list," a morbid document based on fatality data from government agencies and medical groups. The list provides invaluable perspective. Once you know that more people are killed by mundane things like beds and plastic bags, that 50 Americans are killed every year by ordinary buckets (mostly children who fall into them and drown), then it's harder to get hysterical about, say, Bic lighters.
Risk analysts measure the costs of accidents by how much each is likely to shorten the average life. So with the help of physicist Bernard Cohen, I drew up a chart of some risks the media have hyped, along with some more mundane risks that you may not hear so much about. You'll notice the media favorites -- for example, toxic waste sites like Love Canal -- are at the least dangerous end of the chart. Hyping small risks may cause more harm than the risks themselves. People frightened about plane crashes are more likely to take the car -- vastly increasing their risk.
One big loser in this process of hyping scares is science. Unfortunately, in our love of scare stories, we in the media often find it effective to take a tiny and insignificant datum -- or one sensational announcement -- and run with it. This misinformation often gets picked up by legislatures and courts.
The good news is that some are catching on to " junk science ." Recently, a federal judge in Oregon threw out of court the plaintiffs' experts who had been peddling the unproven theory that breast implants cause a variety of maladies. But the media continue to peddle plenty of other bogus scares. Here are principles to keep in mind to avoid being misled by junk science :
-- Association is not causation. Science author Michael Fumento points out that if we see fat people drinking diet soda, we shouldn't conclude that diet soda causes obesity. When trying to understand less familiar phenomena, we are more likely to see patterns where there are none. Consider silicone breast implants. If you know someone who was healthy before receiving implants but developed a crippling disease after surgery, it's natural to associate these events, but as the Oregon judge recognized, that does not mean that A caused B. About 10,000 women with breast implants have developed connective tissue disease -- but that's no higher than the rate among the general population.
-- Clusters often mean nothing. Similar events, such as people developing the same disease in the same place, often happen by chance. You can test this by repeatedly flipping a coin. Are five heads in a row big news? No, just a streak. We accept it with coins, but panic when it comes to something like cancer. Several American communities have detected cancer clusters and attributed them to, say, a nearby factory or power lines. The power lines may look menacing, but that doesn't make them the cause of tiny fluctuations in the rate of disease. We're all exposed to the Earth's magnetic field, and it's hundreds of times greater than the energy most people get from power lines.
-- Natural isn't necessarily better. We fear DDT, but malarial mosquitoes are worse. We get queasy at the thought of silicone in the body, yet silicone is chemically very similar to our own carbon-based human physiology. Natural chemicals in food are often more toxic than synthetic pesticides.
-- Chemicals that harm animals don't necessarily harm humans. The same chemicals can affect different species in very different ways. Saccharine was once banned because it caused cancer in rats. We know now that saccharine causes cancer by interacting with rat urine in ways that do not apply to humans.
-- Science is highly politicized. Fifteen years ago, the media used one small study of babies born of cocaine-addicted mothers to convince America that these children were handicapped for life. In fact, there is no proof that "crack babies" are fated to do worse in later life than anyone else, but the crack-baby scare thrived because diverse constituencies found it advanced their ideologies. Liberals pushed the story to justify government programs; conservatives used it to demonize cocaine users. Beware of science that feeds political agendas.
-- Some babies are born deformed purely by chance. One in five pregnancies end in miscarriage; 2% to 3% of all babies have an inexplicable birth defect. It's no one's fault, yet about 80% of U.S. obstetricians have been sued anyway.
People don't deliberately choose to make mental errors or to remain ignorant. Too often, though, we seize the first plausible-sounding explanation that appears to cut through the confusion of life. Once we've formed a belief, we're inclined to dismiss contrary evidence. We like to tell ourselves that we're superior to the people who burned witches centuries ago. People were often killed for no better reason than a neighbor experiencing crop failure or impotence. But we're still prone to the same basic mental errors that killed the "witches": seeing patterns where there are none, finding causes where there is only coincidence, and turning scanty evidence into widespread panic.
---
You Bet Your Life
Days off your life from the following
Toxic waste sites (Love Canal) 0-4 Pesticide residues 0-4 Flying 4 House fires 18 Driving 182 25% overweight 303 Smoking 2,580 Poverty 3,600
Source: Bernard Cohen, U. of Pittsburgh
---
Mr. Stossel is a correspondent for ABC News. His special, " Junk Science : What You Know That May Not Be So," airs tonight (10:00-11:00 p.m., ET).
(See related letters: "Letters to the Editor: Drugs: Let's Make Sense, Not `War'" -- WSJ Jan. 21, 1997)
JUNK SCIENCE AT LARGE |
Hall of Shame |
Medical Journal Caves to Environmentalists (12/28/97) In an apparent bow to pressure from environmentalists, the New England Journal of Medicine publicly humiliates a book reviewer who dared to criticize Sandra Steingraber's book Living Downstream: An Ecologist Looks at Cancer and the Environment. Click here for a the book review in question. Click here for the related news article. Maybe the NEJM should change its name to the New England Journal of Politically Correct Medicine?
Double Standard: Diesel Exhaust and Secondhand Smoke (12/20/97) What would Mr. Rogers say about the new meta-analysis of the diesel exhaust epidemiology?
The AMA: American Marketing Association? (12/05/97) Will the American Medical Association give up medicine for market research?
Dioxin a "Known" Carcinogen? (11/19/97) The National Toxicology Program's external peer review panel has recommended that 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin be upgraded from "reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen" to "known to be a human carcinogen." I guess the panel must have missed this new study.
Pope-a-Dope? (11/13/97) Did EPA take its air pollution strategy from Muhammed Ali?
Kangaroo Court: The Working Group on Public Health and Fossil Fuel Combustion (11/8/97) Conveniently timed junk science claims 8 million will die unless a climate treaty is signed.
Secondhand Joking (10/27/97) U.K. researchers tell an old EPA joke!
The Anti-tobacco Campaign of the Nazis: A Little Known Aspect of Public Health in Germany 1933-1945 (10/23/97) From the British Medical Journal, find out why the term "public health Nazi" is not necessarily hyperbole!
EPA to Asthmatic Kids: Hold Your Breath (9/19/97) Irony of ironies! In the same week EPA kicked off its campaign to exploit children's health, the agency proposes to take away an important option for treating asthma.
Amherst's Smoking Ban: Town Board of Health is Bored of Science (8/20/97) Find out why the Amherst, Massachusetts Board of Health believes in "junk science über alles!"
Ross Gelbspan: Pulitzer Prize Fraud (7/24/97) In a Junk Science Home Page exclusive, the author of a highly touted book on global warming turns out to be a legend in his own mind!
Bruce Babbitt: The Joe McCarthy of Climate Change? (7/23/97) Watch out for the witchhunt for those "un-American pseudo-scientists" -- courtesy of the Secretary of the Interior!
Air Pollution and SIDS (6/13/97) On the eve of the decision about EPA's proposed air quality standards, a desperate agency does a desperate thing.
Schering Plough's Low Blow (6/9/97) Schering Plough says its competitor's product (Ex-Lax) causes cancer. I say Schering Plough deserves a junk science enema!
Does Circumcision Cause Blindness (4/3/97)? If justice is blind, is it likely to have been circumcised?
Summertime Haze by The Air Pollution Experience (3/3/97) The American Lung Association (ALA) recently refused to debate the Junkman on national radio about the new EPA-funded, ALA-published, junk-science fueled study on air pollution and asthma. Here's why!
September Surprise: Industry Group Achieves Junk Science Hall of Shame (09/05/96) The EPA response and public comments are in about statistical significance and the cancer risk assessment guidelines.
Material presented on this home page constitutes opinion of the author.
Copyright © May 20, 2008 6:26 AM by Karl Loren on behalf of Vibrant Life, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Permission is granted for non-commercial downloading, copying, distribution or redistribution on two conditions: One, that some form of copyright notice is included in every copy distributed or copied, showing the copyright belonging to Vibrant Life, Burbank, CA, at www.oralchelation.com . The second condition is that the material is not to be used for any purpose contrary to the purposes and objectives of this site. This permission does not extend to materials on this site which are copyrighted by others.
Welcome to the (award-winning) Junk Science Home Page, the latest from public health expert Steve Milloy, now affectionately known as "The Junkman". Mr. Milloy is executive director of The Advancement of Sound Science Coalition in Washington, D.C. He is the author of several books including Science Without Sense, a tongue-in-cheek guide to fame and fortune for the overly ambitious public health researcher uninhibited by any concern for real science.
This home page focuses on "junk science" issues with special emphasis on developments in the public health research arena. The Junkman concentrates on serious issues -- in a light, humorous manner. He hopes you find this material fun to read and that you consider this home page to be a principal source for news and information about junk science and its impact on public health.
On this home page you can find the latest developments in junk science. And you can visit the Junk Science Hall of Shame and follow the Junk Science Pennant Race. Find out who's who and who's winning in the wacky world of junk science!
This site has been designed to be interactive so feel free to share your own thoughts, comments, reasoning, reflections or anything else related to junk science. We want to hear from you! We also offer links to some of the Junkman's favorite and not-so-favorite sites. Check 'em out!
Copyright © May 20, 2008 6:26 AM by Karl Loren on behalf of Vibrant Life, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Permission is granted for non-commercial downloading, copying, distribution or redistribution on two conditions: One, that some form of copyright notice is included in every copy distributed or copied, showing the copyright belonging to Vibrant Life, Burbank, CA, at www.oralchelation.com . The second condition is that the material is not to be used for any purpose contrary to the purposes and objectives of this site. This permission does not extend to materials on this site which are copyrighted by others.
Blank Spot
Fad Diets Based on Corporate Junk Science and PR
Many years ago, scientists funded by food companies insisted that there was nothing important in whole wheat bread that a person could not get from fortified white bread. Of course, that turned out to be totally inaccurate and dangerous advice.
Not long after that food companies that made MSG claimed that experiments showing that it would kill a small number of important brain cells in young animals did not matter because they knew someone who still had a bullet in the head from a gunshot would and yet walked and talked normally. Once again this turned out to be nonsense and the industry was forced to remove it from baby food.
In fact, a significant number of completely independent neuroscientists now believe that long-term ingestion of MSG is dangerous for adults too, especially women of child-bearing age.
Over the last 20 years, the junk food companies and organizations made up of junk food companies (e.g., IFIC, ILSI) have been funding and promoted countless poorly-designed studies intended to show that their product is "safe" and "healthy." It is not a conspiracy, but simply greed, lack of ethics, and sloppy (in some cases bordering on fraudulent) work.
In order to sell this "science" these companies give huge grants to organizations so that will say that their product is safe and paint anyone who claims otherwise as "uninformed." For example, it is easy to see that the American Dietetic Association is simply selling advertising space (so to speak) for junk and dangerous food companies.
Here is a list of who sponsors their "fact" sheets:
1. McDonalds Corporation ("Ask an Expert: Nutrition Advice to Go")
2. NutraSweet Company ("Aspartame and Pregnancy" & "Facts About Aspartame")
3. Hershey Foods Corporation ("Chocolate Desserts and Treats: Reducing the Fat Just in Time for the Holidays")
4. The Steel Packaging Council ("Convenient, Safe, and Nutritious Foods: It's in a Can")
5. Nabisco Biscuit Company ("Discover the Secrets of Pyramid Snacking")
6. Procter & Gamble Company ("Facts About Olestra")
7. Campbell Soup Company ("Facts About Sodium and Healthy Blood Pressure")
8. The Sugar Association ("Fitness and Healthful Eating for Children")
9. Kellogg Company ("Focus on Fiber")
10. Gerber Products Company ("Food labels for Infants Under Two Years")
11. National Cattlemen's Beef Association ("Lean 'n Easy Way to Enjoy Meat")
12. Weight Waters International, Inc. ("Nutrition Fuels Fitness: Let's Get Moving")
13. Healthy Choice ("The Good News About Food")
There are many well-meaning dieticians. Unfortunately, many of them are unaware that they are getting inaccurate and unscientific corporate public relations (PR) from the ADA in many cases. They are taught to repeat the PR mantra: "Everything is safe in moderation."
Of course cocaine and heroin are not "safe" in moderation. One has to look at the evidence for lifelong ingestion before one can make such a claim.
The evidence clearly shows that aspartame has not been shown to be safe in any amount. There is no conclusive evidence that olestra is safe for medium-term or long-term use, yet such unscientific claims "safety" are often made. Large and growing number of people are finding that all of these artificial foods are contributing to poor health when ingested regularly for years and are not healthy are safe for them.
The International Food Information Council (IFIC) is a PR organization for the junk food companies. They also get their inaccurate information from the companies trying to push their products. IFIC distributes this information to organizations made up of physicians and persons in the food industry as if it is independent and authoritative.
Sometimes, schools have been known to distribute IFIC documents as if they had some basis in science -- which they often do not (although I have to admit that their documents often sound very convincing).
Corporate PR about food and other things is often repeated in the media where convincing-sounding stories are sometimes little more than advertisements. In fact, a 1991 survey found that 38% of 2432 journalists surveyed got half of their stories from PR and 17% said that used PR for *every* story.
Some people may choose to follow corporate junk science down the path to poor health. But there is a fairly simple alternative which can help you avoid becoming a guinea pig of the chemical junk food companies -- gradually moving towards a natural foods diet like countless others are doing right now. This nutrition plan is based partially on the traditional healthy diet seen in many cultures around the world. With a little experience purchasing food and preparing it, there is relatively little sacrifice in taste.
You will be sacrificing most of the untested or poorly-tested preservatives, additives, artificial coloring and flavors, fake fats and dangerously toxic fake sweeteners. Fortunately, there are healthy and tasty replacements for all of these artificial ingredients. In the "Food and Nutrition" document on my web page, I give an outline of a natural foods plan that can be very helpful in moving in a positive direction.
The web page address is:
Best Wishes, - Mark
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Copyright © May 20, 2008 6:26 AM by Karl Loren on behalf of Vibrant Life, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Permission is granted for non-commercial downloading, copying, distribution or redistribution on two conditions: One, that some form of copyright notice is included in every copy distributed or copied, showing the copyright belonging to Vibrant Life, Burbank, CA, at www.oralchelation.com . The second condition is that the material is not to be used for any purpose contrary to the purposes and objectives of this site. This permission does not extend to materials on this site which are copyrighted by others.
Click here to add the Wednesday Letter as a Channel on your desktop. If your browser is so-equipped, you will be guided through a series of simple questions (about subscription information). Depending on your choices you can show the Vibrant Life Wednesday Letter as one of your "active channels" which will automatically download the new Wednesday Letter every month. In this way you can have the Wednesday Letter delivered to your desktop during the night (or your schedule) for immediate viewing in your browser. You can turn on or off this channel, at will, and delete the channel from your desktop at any time. With this feature operating you can click on the Wednesday Letter channel at any time to read the most recent copy of this electronic letter.
You can reach Vibrant Life in many ways, including by mail to Vibrant Life, 2808 N. Naomi St., Burbank, CA 91504. Within the US and Canada, use the toll free number: (800) 523-4521, the local number: (818) 558-1799, the FAX: (818) 558-7299, eMail to kimberly@oralchelation.com or any one of the hundreds of message forms throughout the 50 web sites. Vibrant Life normally ships the same day we get an order. There are message forms on each of the 100,000+ pages on this and other sites where you can communicate with Vibrant Life. Check out our companion site, at: http://www.oralchelation.net where Karl's 2000 page book is published. Karl Loren is the author and webmaster for this BOOK, as well as for another web site about ORAL CHELATION. His personal philosophical articles are at PHILOSOPHY.
Copyright © May 20, 2008 6:26 AM by Karl Loren on behalf of Vibrant Life, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Permission is granted for non-commercial downloading, copying, distribution or redistribution on two conditions: One, that some form of copyright notice is included in every copy distributed or copied, showing the copyright belonging to Vibrant Life, Burbank, CA, at www.oralchelation.com . The second condition is that the material is not to be used for any purpose contrary to the purposes and objectives of this site. This permission does not extend to materials on this site which are copyrighted by others.
Click here to add the Wednesday Letter as a Channel on your desktop. If your browser is so-equipped, you will be guided through a series of simple questions (about subscription information). Depending on your choices you can show the Vibrant Life Wednesday Letter as one of your "active channels" which will automatically download the new Wednesday Letter every month. In this way you can have the Wednesday Letter delivered to your desktop during the night (or your schedule) for immediate viewing in your browser. You can turn on or off this channel, at will, and delete the channel from your desktop at any time. With this feature operating you can click on the Wednesday Letter channel at any time to read the most recent copy of this electronic letter.
You can reach Vibrant Life in many ways, including by mail to Vibrant Life, 2808 N. Naomi St., Burbank, CA 91504. Within the US and Canada, use the toll free number: (800) 523-4521, the local number: (818) 558-1799, the FAX: (818) 558-7299, eMail to kimberly@oralchelation.com or any one of the hundreds of message forms throughout the 50 web sites. Vibrant Life normally ships the same day we get an order. There are message forms on each of the 100,000+ pages on this and other sites where you can communicate with Vibrant Life. Check out our companion site, at: http://www.oralchelation.net where Karl's 2000 page book is published. Karl Loren is the author and webmaster for this BOOK, as well as for another web site about ORAL CHELATION. His personal philosophical articles are at PHILOSOPHY.
Copyright © May 20, 2008 6:26 AM by Karl Loren on behalf of Vibrant Life, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. Permission is granted for non-commercial downloading, copying, distribution or redistribution on two conditions: One, that some form of copyright notice is included in every copy distributed or copied, showing the copyright belonging to Vibrant Life, Burbank, CA, at www.oralchelation.com . The second condition is that the material is not to be used for any purpose contrary to the purposes and objectives of this site. This permission does not extend to materials on this site which are copyrighted by others.