Weird Liberal Science

Now this one I take personally having earned a degree in Organic Chemistry. Alex Beresow exposes a liberal journalist who disparages all chemicals with no comprehension of the science. In this case Nicholas Kristof demonstrates how his employer, the New York Times, misleads and spreads irrational fears in its mission to sell copies to its clientèle on the upper west side of NYC.  He seems to be channeling Rachel Carson (Silent Spring) who wrote about carcinogens everywhere as she was dying of the disease.

The article is NYT’s Nicholas Kristof Would Flunk An 8th Grade Science Test Excerpts below with my bolds.

It’s often helpful for journalists who do not have specialized knowledge of complex scientific topics to write about them anyway, because if they can understand them and figure out how to communicate them, they can perform a tremendous public service. However, if journalists don’t take the time to understand complex topics and get the very basics wrong, they do the public a massive disservice and end up looking like buffoons.

Which brings us to veteran New York Times columnist Nicholas Kristof, who studied law and fancies himself an expert in chemistry and toxicology. Chemists and toxicologists disagree.

His latest diatribe — which was easily and thoroughly debunked by my colleagues Dr. Chuck Dinerstein and Ana Dolaskie — begins with the single most shameless act of fearmongering I have ever seen from a major media outlet. He shows a bunch of common household products, all of which are perfectly safe, and asks, “What poisons are in your body?”

Look at all these lethal things: toothpaste, soap, shower curtains. It’s amazing we all aren’t dead yet. Mr. Kristof’s “research” — if you can even call it that — relied heavily on well-known anti-science activists, such as the Environmental Working Group.

When we criticized his scientific ignorance, Mr. Kristof doubled down, as the scientifically ignorant always do.

It’s interesting that his immediate defense is to lie about his writings. He isn’t only afraid of endocrine disruptors; he’s afraid he’ll get cancer from popcorn, and he’s worried that some enigmatic chemicals somewhere out there are causing diabetes, obesity, and autism. This level of paranoia is what we would expect from a chemtrail conspiracy theorist, not a public intellectual.

Mr. Kristof’s reference to DES is typical chemophobic scaremongering. He points out a chemical that really is bad (DES), which in his mind justifies his demonization of every other chemical of which he is afraid. That’s the chemistry equivalent of saying that all Muslims are suspicious because 9/11 happened.

Mr. Kristof has demonstrated time and again that he is entirely ignorant of the basic principles of chemistry and toxicology. And given that he has been widely criticized from all sorts of science writers, he’s also completely impervious to being educated by actual experts.

Consider what Deborah Blum, a chemistry writer, wrote about him:

“Whenever Nicholas Kristof writes a piece about the evil, awful world of chemicals out there, I feel a twitchy need to kick something. Or someone. Possibly right there in The New York Times newsroom.”

In perhaps the biggest indication that Mr. Kristof is fundamentally anti-science, he ignores evidence that he dislikes. That’s utterly taboo for scientists, but par-for-the-course for NYT op-ed columnists. Writing in Forbes, Trevor Butterworth says:

“[Kristof] applies no statistical or experimental criticism to these studies: they always “really” find what they claim to have found; and he seems unaware of the many non-industry funded studies or regulatory agency assessments that contradict them. There is no mention, for instance, of the 15-page point-by-point rebuttal written by the Food and Drug Administration to the Natural Resources Defense Council’s petition to ban BPA, a rebuttal which relies, primarily, on non-industry funded research.

Chemjobber, a blog that promotes jobs in chemistry, had this to say of Mr. Kristof:

“I am a little at wit’s end to understand how to help intelligent people like Mr. Kristof see past their clear fear of chemicals, the distrust they have of chemical companies and their seeming dismissal of regulatory agencies. It seems to me that he is all too credulous to the claims of organizations like the Silent Spring Institute that are incentivized to generate as much fear and doubt around chemicals as possible. “

The New York Times Has Only One Editorial Standard

The real problem is that the New York Times has only one editorial standard: To publish whatever sells more copies to their Upper West Side clientele. That means throwing biotechnology and chemistry under the bus while embracing organic food, acupuncture, and other forms of witchcraft.

 

9 comments

  1. Sara Hall's avatar
    Sara Hall · March 5, 2018

    My experience out here in the (mostly) non-academic world is that the average person’s level of knowledge of chemistry and the other sciences is pitiful. I had a heated exchange a while ago with an eco-warrior who declared that all scientists were evil, all chemicals were poison and that the grape sugar added to health-food store bought cereal was perfectly acceptable whereas the dextrose added to my supermarket bought cereal was a deadly carcinogen.
    I had another heated exchange recently with an otherwise highly intelligent old Oxonian (classics), a global warming and renewable enthusiast and normally a deep thinker, but not apparently when it comes to matters of science. He was on his high horse about the merits of all things renewable and so I asked him to tell me anything at all that he knew about carbon dioxide, how it “worked” and how it might be warming the atmosphere. No answer was forthcoming.
    You just can’t have a proper argument with wilfully ignorant people like this.

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  2. HiFast's avatar
    Hifast · March 5, 2018

    Reblogged this on HiFast News Feed.

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  3. Bob Greene's avatar
    Bob Greene · March 6, 2018

    I’ve heard that organic chemists are pretty scary people. Waxy white solids, names you can’t pronounce, have to draw pictures and waive their hands to talk. At least that’s what I heard in a school that had its Chem department divided into Organic and Physical/Analytical/Inorganic/Nuclear (PAIN) divisions. Congrats on being on he right side.

    Kristoff has a real advantage. He probably didn’t take a science course after Junior High. That makes being a chemical/biochemical/etc expert very easy. I’ve hear University level scientists parrot stuff like Kristoff. Makes me really wonder.

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    • Ron Clutz's avatar
      Ron Clutz · March 6, 2018

      Thanks Bob. Thanks to my education, I recognize the diagram in the last cartoon as a benzene ring. But I didn’t know it was the structure of dirt.

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      • Bob Greene's avatar
        Bob Greene · March 6, 2018

        I recognized cyclohexadirtene as one of the calcx forms of cyclohexaearthene. It was easy when I started, much smaller periodic table.

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      • Ron Clutz's avatar
        Ron Clutz · March 6, 2018

        Good one. +1

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  4. rogercaiazza's avatar
    rogercaiazza · March 6, 2018

    Next up for Mr. Kristof – di-hydrogen monoxide.

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  5. oiltranslator's avatar
    oiltranslator · March 6, 2018

    Much more shocking is the adoption by educated Canadians of “liberal” as the nationalsocialist swear word adopted by supporters of Prohibitionism in 1932. The rest of the civilized world understands that liberal describes Milton Friedman, Frederik Bastiat, Ayn Rand. After mystical thugs in Germany and America turned it into a geuzenaam, communists realized they could adopt it as a sort of Fabian camouflage to further their depredations. Turning the 1928 Socialist platform into the law of the land was more the work of Republican bigots than anything the other looters could have pulled off unassisted.

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  6. hunter's avatar
    hunter · March 9, 2018

    The climate obsession and madness exist because of the ignorance and corruption of the Ktistoff’s of the world.

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