Welcome to The Conservative Cave©!Join in the discussion! Click HERE to register.
0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
Euromutt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Click to send private message to this author Click to view this author's profile Click to add this author to your buddy list Click to add this author to your Ignore list Wed Jan-26-11 10:36 AMResponse to Original message7. This is hardly news; it's a 15 year-old story warmed over Edited on Wed Jan-26-11 10:36 AM by EuromuttBy way of reference, see "Public Health Pot Shots" in the April 1997 issue of Reason http://reason.com/archives/1997/04/01/public-health-pot...You don't have to agree with everything the article says to still conclude that the research the NCICP opted to fund was heavily skewed toward a predetermined conclusion that Guns Are Bad.I choked on this in particular:QuoteConsider a 1993 New England Journal of Medicine study that, according to press reports, "showed that keeping a gun in the home nearly triples the likelihood that someone in the household will be slain there." This claim cannot be verified because Kellerman will not release the data. Relying on independent sources to fill gaps in the published data, SUNY-Buffalo's Lawrence Southwick has speculated that Kellermann's full data set would actually vindicate defensive gun ownership. Such issues cannot be resolved without Kellermann's cooperation, but the CDC has refused to require its researchers to part with their data as a condition for taxpayer funding.(emphases mine)As a taxpayer, I already have a problem with publicly funded research only being available in journals that charge $30 to read a single article (even though the journal doesn't pay the authors or reviewers a dime). Funding behavior like Kellermann's is simply unacceptable, both from a government spending standpoint, and at least as importantly, from a standpoint of scientific honesty. There is no valid scientific reason to refuse to share the data on which your findings are supposedly based; it's denying others the means to verify that you aren't just making shit up.And speaking of duplicitous sons of bitches, Mark Rosenberg's claim that "we’ve been stopped from answering the basic questions" is a load of hooey. As far as Rosenberg was concerned, "the basic questions" were answered 24 years ago. What he and others have been stopped from doing is using taxpayer funds to gin up the junk science to support his predetermined conclusion.
Consider a 1993 New England Journal of Medicine study that, according to press reports, "showed that keeping a gun in the home nearly triples the likelihood that someone in the household will be slain there." This claim cannot be verified because Kellerman will not release the data. Relying on independent sources to fill gaps in the published data, SUNY-Buffalo's Lawrence Southwick has speculated that Kellermann's full data set would actually vindicate defensive gun ownership. Such issues cannot be resolved without Kellermann's cooperation, but the CDC has refused to require its researchers to part with their data as a condition for taxpayer funding.
Hmmmmmmmm, if you're an intruder and come into my house, there's 100% chance you're gonna wish you hadn't as compared to if I invite you in!Hey, this science stuff is easy! Wonder if I can get a research grant?
Don't you find it interesting that he, very correctly, rejects the study because the researcher refuses to release his data. He also, very correctly, calls on the rest of the DUmp to do so as well.Yet, where is this attitude vis-a-vis climate change and the refusal of those researchers to publish their data?
(I do have to clean my monitor, though . . . )
Of what?
(emphases mine)As a taxpayer, I already have a problem with publicly funded research only being available in journals that charge $30 to read a single article (even though the journal doesn't pay the authors or reviewers a dime). Funding behavior like Kellermann's is simply unacceptable, both from a government spending standpoint, and at least as importantly, from a standpoint of scientific honesty. There is no valid scientific reason to refuse to share the data on which your findings are supposedly based; it's denying others the means to verify that you aren't just making shit up.And speaking of duplicitous sons of bitches, Mark Rosenberg's claim that "we’ve been stopped from answering the basic questions" is a load of hooey. As far as Rosenberg was concerned, "the basic questions" were answered 24 years ago. What he and others have been stopped from doing is using taxpayer funds to gin up the junk science to support his predetermined conclusion.http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=118x367355
Euromutt Donating Member (1000+ posts) Wed Jan-26-11 10:36 AMResponse to Original message7. This is hardly news; it's a 15 year-old story warmed overEdited on Wed Jan-26-11 10:36 AM by EuromuttYou don't have to agree with everything the article says to still conclude that the research the NCICP opted to fund was heavily skewed toward a predetermined conclusion that Guns Are Bad.I choked on this in particular:QuoteConsider a 1993 New England Journal of Medicine study that, according to press reports, "showed that keeping a gun in the home nearly triples the likelihood that someone in the household will be slain there."