Mere Factual Accuracy

Now, having said that, I’ll admit up front that I haven’t read the book that’s raising so many hackles. However, in PZ Myers’ general review, he pulled a quote that I have to address:

Dawkins and some other scientists fail to grasp that in Hollywood, the story is paramount—that narrative, drama, and character development will trump mere factual accuracy every time, and by a very long shot.

I write science fiction. I read science fiction. I watch it on television and in the theater. I read and write and watch in other genres too. This statement is one of those gross oversimplifications that makes me cringe. Maybe it’s better in context, covered in caveats, but an awful lot of people aren’t seeing it in context right now.

Go find out why I’m cringing at Quiche Moraine.

Mere Factual Accuracy
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Ed Started It

…with his post asking his readers about themselves. DrugMonkey took up the call and tagged “science-y or academic-y blog[s]” with the meme.

That raises a question I find just as interesting as the secret identities of my lurking readers. Why does Almost Diamonds keep getting listed as a science blog? I know people have waffled on this. Some of folks who have been so kind as to put me on their sorted blogrolls have had a tough time classifying me. But it still happens.

So if you’d care to indulge a confused blogger, please tell me in the comments what kind(s) of content brings you to Almost Diamonds. And if I don’t already know who you are, I’d love to hear a bit about your background too.

Ed Started It

Interviewed

Bora was kind enough to include me in his interview series for SciencOnline’09, and he posted the results today. It’s a very strange experience being interviewed, especially when the questions include minefields like:

What are your thoughts on the never-ending debates between groups of people who are generally on the same side, but differ in one tiny detail, usually of strategy? For example, in the evolution/creation debate, silent vs. vocal atheists, or different strands of feminism (including the question of women in STEM), people who are on the same page 99% of the time, spend a lot of time aggressively arguing the remaining 1%?

He’s a rabble-rouser, is our Bora. Let me know how well you think I handled it.

Interviewed

Appalled

Talk about disgracing your profession.

According to the criminal complaint:

The pastor, identified in the complaint only as “M.S.O.,” first contacted Byington about three years ago by answering an ad for an exotic dancer. He began seeing her at her home in Fargo for dance shows. Eventually, the pastor started paying Byington for sex.

In March, the pastor said he wanted to stop paying her and hoped they could consider their relationship as an affair.

On May 14, she told the pastor that he had to give her $6,000 to keep her from telling his wife and the bishop about their relationship.

Really, I expect better from exotic dancers.

Appalled

Still Running

Um, yeah. Hi. So, I was going to post some con report today, talking about what went on at CONvergence and SkepchickCon. Then Skepchick carr2d2, otherwise known as Carrie, sent me a note about dinner. Then dinner lasted for four hours, ending just as an apologetic server came up to say we were sitting where the stage would be in about 15 minutes. So con reports will have to wait for tomorrow. I have sleep debt to repay.

In the meantime, Greg is posting analysis of the con in general and panel reports. Bug Girl is giving her own con report and posting pictures. And Rebecca is telling me I went to bed too early Saturday night.

Enjoy. I certainly did.

Still Running

Running Full Out

I’m off to CONvergence for the day and saving my Fourth of July Quiche Moraine post for tomorrow, so I’ll leave you with some odds and ends to amuse anyone who isn’t off amusing themselves today.

This I had to share only because I’d never seen the very silly video. The song holds up well, though.

Jane’s Getting Serious

It’s a relationship based entirely on trust.

Elsewhere on the web, Toaster Sunshine is running a painfully funny series on how not to flirt. It’s a must read.

Speaking of comics, Matt and Ian at Three Panel Soul have a little message for the residents of Provo, Utah regarding pornography. Tatsuya Ishida of Sinfest shows that even demons are not immune to the irresistible power of geek.

Enjoy.

Running Full Out

Who Has the Profit Motive?

Science-based medicine = Big Pharma? You hear it all the time from the peddlers of woo, but it’s rare that they disclose their own profit motives.

Take the fellow who used Greg’s recent post on the FDA and acetaminophen to complain about how the FDA conducts itself.

I think more people need to take a bigger picture approach to this latest FDA news. Who is the FDA ultimately protecting? How long do they wait, how many lives are affected before they take this kind of action on big pharma drugs? Too long. How long do they wait to come down hard on the natural health industry when a few people lose their sense of smell (for example)? Not that long. The makers of Zicam got dragged through the media a few weeks ago after 100 or so people lost their sense of smell temporarily over a ten year period, but it takes 20 years or so for the FDA to say anything about the drug that is the leading cause of liver failure in the U.S.

Set aside the fact that the post quotes an article talking about the years-long educational campaigns conducted by the government to help keep people from using acetaminophen dangerously. Set aside the fact that this is not the first FDA action on acetaminophen. Ben, the commenter, did, after all. Even after this was pointed out to him, he accused the FDA of “purposely staying silent” on the subject.

Ben wanted to “focus…on the priorities of the FDA.” Of course, contrarian that I am, that only makes me look at Ben’s priorities, particularly since I just looked at the FDA’s and he ignored what I said.

Ben was kind enough to provide a link to the blog for his company, Swanson Vitamins. So I took a look at the company, specifically in regard to things he didn’t think the FDA should be focusing on.


Zicam, of course, is the “homeopathic” cold/allergy/wealth remedy, at least one formulation of which actually contains an active ingredient (unlike most homeopathic remedies, which are just water). The FDA recently released a consumer warning that Zicam Cold nasal gels can temporarily or permanently impair users’ sense of smell. That may not sound so awful, but it’s an ugly condition.

Now, as Ben pointed out, his company’s site doesn’t carry the Cold products. Of course, those can’t currently be marketed without FDA approval, so that’s not evidence of care for their customers. They do, however, continue to carry other Zicam products, even after:

There have been 130 cases reported to the FDA of decreased sense of smell following the use of one of these Zicam products – sometimes after a single use, sometimes after repeated use. All of these cases were reported by patients or their doctors; none were reported by the company, Matrixx Initiatives. According to reports, the FDA has asked Matrixx to turn over 800 consumer complaints regarding to Zicam. There is a 2007 law that requires company to report such complaints to the FDA, although the FDA has not said whether Matrixx violated this law.

Swanson Vitamins could choose not to carry any of these Zicam products in order to protect their customers. They don’t. They are instead choosing to ignore a company history of unsafe formulations and failure to report problems with their own products in order to continue to promote a popular brand name of woo.

Ben points to the fact that the other Zicam products haven’t been dunned by the FDA. He links to an article on his own blog that says that the FTC and FDA have regulatory powers over “natural” medicines. What he doesn’t tell you:

While most homeopathic remedies are diluted to the point that they are indistinguishable from water, that is not a requirement. Lesser dilutions may contain small amounts of active ingredient. If a “homeopathic remedy” contains a biological active amount of a drug as an active ingredient, is it not a regular drug?

This is relevant to Zicam because these products are regulated as homeopathic drugs – which means they were allowed on the market without having to provide any evidence for safety or efficacy.The homeopathic exception allowed the manufacturer to simply bypass the usual requirements, even though Zicam is not really homeopathic but contains biologically active levels of zinc.

Why doesn’t he tell you that? Why doesn’t he tell you the the FTC has only the power to make sure he’s not making direct medical claims for his products? Well, you could ask Ben, or you could just read the title of this post again.

Update: Note that a profit motive can also encourage other unethical behavior. As Jason points out in the comments, the astroturfers from Swansons Vitamins have arrived.

Who Has the Profit Motive?