The Danger of Science Denial - READING 01
The Danger of Science Denial - READING 01
The Danger of Science Denial - READING 01
Michael Specter:
The Danger of Science Denial
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But these stories bothered me, and I couldn't figure out why,
and eventually I did. And that's because those fanatics that
were driving me crazy weren't actually fanatics at all. They
were thoughtful people, educated people, decent people.
They were exactly like the people in this room. And it just
disturbed me so much. But then I thought, you know, let's be
honest. We're at a point in this world where we don't have
the same relationship to progress that we used to. We talk
about it ambivalently. We talk about it in ironic terms with
little quotes around it: "progress." Okay, there are reasons
for that, and I think we know what those reasons are. We've
lost faith in institutions, in authority, and sometimes in
science itself, and there's no reason we shouldn't have. You
can just say a few names and people will understand.
Chernobyl, Bhopal, the Challenger, Vioxx, weapons of mass
destruction, hanging chads. You know, you can choose your
list. There are questions and problems with the people we
used to believe were always right, so be skeptical. Ask
questions, demand proof, demand evidence. Don't take
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anything for granted. But here's the thing: When you get
proof, you need to accept the proof, and we're not that good
at doing that. And the reason that I can say that is because
we're now in an epidemic of fear like one I've never seen and
hope never to see again.
This guy was a hero, Jonas Salk. He took one of the worst
scourges of mankind away from us. No fear, no agony. Polio
-- puff, gone. That guy in the middle, not so much. His name
is Paul Offit. He just developed a rotavirus vaccine with a
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I don't need to say this, but vaccines are essential. You take
them away, disease comes back, horrible diseases. And that's
happening. We have measles in this country now. And it's
getting worse, and pretty soon kids are going to die of it
again because it's just a numbers game. And they're not just
going to die of measles. What about polio? Let's have that.
Why not? A college classmate of mine wrote me a couple
weeks ago and said she thought I was a little strident. No
one's ever said that before. She wasn't going to vaccinate her
kid against polio, no way. Fine. Why? Because we don't have
polio. And you know what? We didn't have polio in this
country yesterday. Today, I don't know, maybe a guy got on
a plane in Lagos this morning, and he's flying to LAX, right
now he's over Ohio. And he's going to land in a couple of
hours, he's going to rent a car, and he's going to come to
Long Beach, and he's going to attend one of these fabulous
TED dinners tonight. And he doesn't know that he's infected
with a paralytic disease, and we don't either because that's
the way the world works. That's the planet we live on. Don't
pretend it isn't.
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But, you know, it's really a serious thing because this stuff is
crap, and we spend billions of dollars on it. And I have all
sorts of little props here. None of it ... ginkgo, fraud;
echinacea, fraud; acai -- I don't even know what that is but
we're spending billions of dollars on it -- it's fraud. And you
know what? When I say this stuff, people scream at me, and
they say, "What do you care? Let people do what they want
to do. It makes them feel good." And you know what? You're
wrong. Because I don't care if it's the secretary of HHS who's
saying, "Hmm, I'm not going to take the evidence of my
experts on mammograms," or some cancer quack who wants
to treat his patient with coffee enemas. When you start down
the road where belief and magic replace evidence and
science, you end up in a place you don't want to be. You end
up in Thabo Mbeki South Africa. He killed 400,000 of his
people by insisting that beetroot, garlic and lemon oil were
much more effective than the antiretroviral drugs we know
can slow the course of AIDS. Hundreds of thousands of
needless deaths in a country that has been plagued worse
than any other by this disease. Please, don't tell me there are
no consequences to these things. There are. There always
are.
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but we can put something like vitamin A into rice, and that
stuff can help millions of people, millions of people, prolong
their lives. You don't want to do that? I have to say, I don't
understand it.
And all I can say about this is: Why are we fighting it? I
mean, let's ask ourselves: Why are we fighting it? Because
we don't want to move genes around? This is about moving
genes around. It's not about chemicals. It's not about our
ridiculous passion for hormones, our insistence on having
bigger food, better food, singular food. This isn't about Rice
Krispies, this is about keeping people alive, and it's about
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Thank you.
Thank you.
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