Interesting Information: The Real Quacks: Internet Trolls Attack Anyone Resisting Vaccine Party Line

Interesting Information:

The Real Quacks:

Internet Trolls Attack Anyone Resisting Vaccine Party Line

 

How many times have you gone to a web site with a title like “Science-Based Medicine” or “Quackwatch” for information?

I would urge some caution as to thinking you are going to find some kind of truth, or even expertise, there.

Take an extra step and try to find out something about who is behind these sites.

For instance, the mainstream press and media in general would have you believe that 99.9% of all doctors and scientists agree that vaccines are safe.  But when you start to list the many doctors and genuine scientists who work in immunology or virology and who do not agree and who are asking questions and calling for adequate research, you can surface one of the internet “trolls” from “science” blogs or web sites who work to disparage your comments and the work of creditable, credentialed, experienced doctors and scientists.  Another term for this process of debunking reasonable people, information, or questions is ASTROTURFING.

Who are these people who are not called trolls?  Let’s take a look.

Here’s a quote from the link below:

Predictably, every time you give the name of a contrarian doctor or scientist in response to the 99.9% figure, what you tend to get is, “Eh, well, he’s a quack, she’s not credible.” Also, you get referred to blogs such as Science-Based Medicine1 or Respectful Insolence,2 or the Skeptical Raptor’s Blog.3 The first two are often written by or associated with a guy named David Gorski, MD, who also goes by the alias “Orac.” Gorski is a surgical oncologist and an assistant professor of surgery at Wayne State University School of Medicine in Detroit, MI.4 The third is written by Michael Simpson, who goes by the “Skeptical Raptor.”5 This is how Simpson describes himself on his blog:

I have over 25 years experience in marketing, business development, and product development in the medical products industry, working in a variety of marketing, sales, clinical research, and product development roles with large and small medical products companies. I have also had key executive roles on both the manufacturing and distribution sides of the medical products industry.3

Should you wish to debunk someone, anyone, who dares to disagree with mainstream thinking on vaccines, all you need do is inform Orac or the Raptor, and either will gladly oblige by writing up a boorish piece, long on insult and short on science. Their methods are painfully predictable. In one piece earlier this year, Raptor criticized a prominent immunologist6 who had the nerve to write an open letter on vaccine science to state legislators in California about to vote on a bill eliminating personal belief vaccine exemptions. The piece started out by dismissing the individual’s credentials outright.

Follow the money?

Orac’s defensiveness, in particular, may have something to do with his research on a Sanofi-Aventis drug called Riluzole (Rilutek®),10 which may well eventually be used to treat autism. Riluzole has been approved for clinical trials (for autism) by the FDA, and one can imagine the money that might be at stake if the drug makes it to market.11 12 13

And for heaven’s sake note that Simpson IS A SALESMAN, not a scientist.  And let’s also remember that MDs are practitioners, not scientists like immunologists, virilogists, and so forth.  And surgical oncologists have NOTHING TO DO WITH GIVING VACCINES.

So, take a second and take a look at who is saying what and who is paying them to say what.  PULL BACK THE CURTAIN AND TAKE A LOOK AT THE WIZARD BEHIND IT.

Source: Internet Trolls Attack Anyone Resisting Vaccine Party Line

Turkey Tracks: “Allietore,” Bonnie Hunter’s 2015 Mystery Quilt

Turkey Tracks:  January 6, 2016

“Allietore”

So, since I returned from Charleston after a splendid Thanksgiving with my children, I have been working each week on Bonnie Hunter’s “clues” for her 2015 Mystery Quilt, “Allietore.”

Just before New Year’s Day, I caught up with all the “clues.”

Could a quilt come from this pile of “clues”?

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Some of the individual units were really interesting to make–and we used Bonnie’s two favorite rulers a lot in this quilt:  Easy Angle Ruler and Companion Angle Ruler.

See those little red clips holding together the blocks on the right?  I LOVE those clips and am finding all sorts of uses for them.

Here are pics of the individual units so far:

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Bonnie “revealed” “Allietore” New Year’s Day!

What a gift!

Here’s her computer picture, likely done on EQ7.

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Here’s her own quilt in fabric–note that she has scalloped the edges:

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And here are the two blocks:

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These are the COOLEST blocks.  Thank you Bonnie!!!  There are, really, just four main colors–red, gold, black, and grey–so these blocks are going to be gorgeous in loads of colorways.  It has been so fun to see all the differing colors people are using on Bonnie’s Facebook quilt studio.

I still have to cut the red and gold block centers AND some red fabric for the corner and inner border treatments, but…

Unfortunately, I can’t get to this quilt until I get the second of the two granddaughters’ quilts off the design wall.

All in good time…but I got some fabric today for the gold inner border and the black outer border.  They are currently in the washing machine.

That’s progress of a sort.

YOU can print out her patterns from her blog–go to quiltville.com and click on the blog button–for a bit more time.  Then she will sell this pattern.

Bonnie meticulously explains each and every step for making one of her mystery quilts.

Turkey Tracks: Mount View Chamber Singers 2015-2016

Turkey Tracks:  January 6, 2015

Mount View Chamber Singers 2015-2016

One of my most favorite events of this past holiday season was attending an event on December 20th at The United Christian Church in Lincolnville, Maine–with my friend Rose Lowell and her friend and neighbor Dee.

My goodness, after an extraordinary peaceful hour passed in the candlelit church among the Mount View Chamber Singers, I left with renewed faith and belief in the young people of our nation.

The church is old–built in 1821.  Inside were “old timey” church boxes–where one opened a gate to enter a pew.

As we got settled, dusk fell–which it does about 3:30 in the afternoon in December in Maine.

A hush fell over us all as the young people entered the church, each carrying two lit candles in jars, and spread themselves in a circle around the church–stopping at the music stands put up for each person down the side aisles and across the front and back of the church.

After each song, the singers rotated one stand to the right–so the audience kept hearing different voices among the total voices.

The young people–high school age I’m thinking–were dressed as if going to a party.  The boys wore black tuxedos, and the girls wore stylish black dresses, heels, and stockings.  They looked smashing in the flickering candlelight!

AND, the music was very challenging–all sung with no accompanying instruments.  This music was from the middle ages for the most part.  There were songs like “Hodie, Christus Natus Est,” a plain chant.

How many teenagers do you know who would spend the amount of time these young people have on this kind of an effort?

They gave about 30 performances all over Maine, beginning November 28th.

Here they are–these lovely young people from the Thorndike, Maine, area–which is very rural in nature:

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Thank you all for an oasis of quiet, peace, music, candlelight, and renewed faith in people and the future of the earth.

This event may have been the best gift of the season.