Just when I was about to write an article on this, PZ beats me to the punch.... again.
I swear, how do they all have TIME for this sort of thing?
Privatization of peer-reviewed research
Is it my imagination, or are Republicans trying to privatize EVERYTHING?
Wherein I muse about my experiences relating to higher education, atheism, neuroscience, school, and generally whatever I think is a good idea at the time.
Showing posts with label Pharyngula. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Pharyngula. Show all posts
Monday, January 16, 2012
Wednesday, February 16, 2011
NIH Is Under Attack
Spread the word. Funding for things like new medicine, treatments, and technology for medical use is about to be slashed to the tune of billions.
So is higher education, which pisses me off just as much.
So is higher education, which pisses me off just as much.
Monday, February 14, 2011
Happy Valentine's Day!
I'm totally stealing these from Pharyngula since I'm behind on my homework and I only have a few hours to catch up before my husband gets home and we have our romantic evening. But they are also so cute and surprisingly tender that I thought they would make perfect V-Day fodder.
Tell your sweetie that you love them.
Tell your sweetie that you love them.
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Paleontology, Anyone?
I love Jerry Coyne's blog Why Evolution is True. I have noticed, after watching and reading things about Pharyngula, Orac, and Coyne, that scientists tend to be completely and utterly sentimental saps. I know I am. And I think it is very sweet.
Anyway, enjoy this exploration of the life of a giant shrimp from nearly 450 million years ago.
-RF
Anyway, enjoy this exploration of the life of a giant shrimp from nearly 450 million years ago.
-RF
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Vaccine Awareness Week
It's Vaccine Awareness Week over at Respectful Insolence. I am enjoying Orac's series very much, and I thought I'd share his posts from Saturday, Sunday, Monday, and today.
I got started on all of this (and actually it woke up an interest in real science that I think had been sleeping for years) when an old friend found me on Facebook and started talking about all of this 'vaccines cause autsim' nonsense. I instinctively knew that her position was BS, but frankly I didn't know very much about it. So I did what anyone would do under the circumstances: I Googled it.
Lo and behold. Enter Orac.
This caused a flood of new scientific data for me, and I spent a HUGE amount of time reading everything I could get my hands on. It's like working in veterinary clinics had starved my brain of nutrition for so long, and I was desperately hungry to feed my intellect. Once I had literally read the entire Respectful Insolence archive (5 years or so) I hungrily devoured the content at Pharyngula and all of the other blogs that I now happily and proudly link to on the left of this post.
It inspired and fed my skeptical sensibilities. The facets of scientific argument and scientific inquiry came out from where they'd been stored for years, and by dint of new knowledge and a new awareness got a spit shine and polish.
This experience actually helped me sort out and come to grips with my lack of religious belief. I had the time to consider (here a word that means mull, chew over voraciously, discuss at length with a very patient husband, and settle on a conclusion) how I felt about religion and being an atheist. And I must say that it makes me very happy indeed.
Funny story: I made a comment on an old friend's Facebook on how the Huffington Post (what Orac calls a villainous hive of scum and quackery; guaranteed to make me smile) bears at least some of the responsibility for the pertussis outbreak in Southern California for propagating misinformation and scare tactics on vaccines. Someone else who saw that post vigorously denied what I said, and went on (after multiple arguments) to quote Joe Mercola at me to say that vaccinations aren't really down, that outbreaks follow cycles, and that it is because of the urban poor. (We'll leave the racism and class stereotypes for another post, shall we?)
Let's be crystal clear here. Someone quoted Joe Mercola at me. To defend Huffpo.
It burns.
I got started on all of this (and actually it woke up an interest in real science that I think had been sleeping for years) when an old friend found me on Facebook and started talking about all of this 'vaccines cause autsim' nonsense. I instinctively knew that her position was BS, but frankly I didn't know very much about it. So I did what anyone would do under the circumstances: I Googled it.
Lo and behold. Enter Orac.
This caused a flood of new scientific data for me, and I spent a HUGE amount of time reading everything I could get my hands on. It's like working in veterinary clinics had starved my brain of nutrition for so long, and I was desperately hungry to feed my intellect. Once I had literally read the entire Respectful Insolence archive (5 years or so) I hungrily devoured the content at Pharyngula and all of the other blogs that I now happily and proudly link to on the left of this post.
It inspired and fed my skeptical sensibilities. The facets of scientific argument and scientific inquiry came out from where they'd been stored for years, and by dint of new knowledge and a new awareness got a spit shine and polish.
This experience actually helped me sort out and come to grips with my lack of religious belief. I had the time to consider (here a word that means mull, chew over voraciously, discuss at length with a very patient husband, and settle on a conclusion) how I felt about religion and being an atheist. And I must say that it makes me very happy indeed.
Funny story: I made a comment on an old friend's Facebook on how the Huffington Post (what Orac calls a villainous hive of scum and quackery; guaranteed to make me smile) bears at least some of the responsibility for the pertussis outbreak in Southern California for propagating misinformation and scare tactics on vaccines. Someone else who saw that post vigorously denied what I said, and went on (after multiple arguments) to quote Joe Mercola at me to say that vaccinations aren't really down, that outbreaks follow cycles, and that it is because of the urban poor. (We'll leave the racism and class stereotypes for another post, shall we?)
Let's be crystal clear here. Someone quoted Joe Mercola at me. To defend Huffpo.
It burns.
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