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Simon Singh To Appeal In UK Court Today

TACD writes "Simon Singh, author, television presenter and known critic of pseudoscience, is in court today appealing the decision made against him last May over his use of the term 'bogus' to describe the methods used by the British Chiropractic Association. Today's decision could have far-reaching implications for the movement to reform Britain's horrifically outdated libel laws (that even America is making moves to protect its citizens against), and to begin taking steps to elevate Britain above the likes of China when it comes to open debate and freedom of speech."

10 of 213 comments (clear)

  1. More Importantly by JamesP · · Score: 4, Informative

    Simon Singh is the author of VERY COOL books:

    Fermat's Last Theorem
    and
    The Code Book

    (those are the ones I read, at least)

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  2. Chiroprators by Locke2005 · · Score: 4, Informative

    There are a few conditions a Chiropractic practitioner is good for, e.g. pinched nerves. However, their contention that manipulating the spine can fix virtually any condition is, er, properly described as "bogus".

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  3. Re:What a joke.. by grub · · Score: 4, Informative


    My family used chiropractors for years; the industry is so good as passing itself off as mainstream medicine, that I actually had to see the Simon Singh case to realize that chiropractice is woo-woo alternative medicine.

    Just look for peer-reviewed studies that show it does anything. If I recall, James Randi's $1,000,000 prize is open to Chiropractors who can show they can do anything other than help some minor back pain.

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  4. Judge not impressed by rugatero · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Simon Singh, author, television presenter and known critic of pseudoscience, is in court today...

    Well, given that it is now approaching 9PM in the UK, it is more correct to say Simon Singh was in court today. And so far things look promising – Lord Judge is less than impressed by BCA's case. See http://www.indexoncensorship.org/2010/02/simon-singh-chiropractic-bca-libel-appeal

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  5. Re:What a joke.. by Monkeedude1212 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I suppose that depends on what your Chiropractor is claiming to fix.

    For example, my girlfriend visits a chiropractor because one of her spinal discs pinches a nerve in her upper back and that causes backpain and headaches.

    She says it helps - and I take her word for it that someone cracking the back is helping the issues aligned with her spine.

  6. Re:Chiropratic is bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    In cadaver studies the whole pinched nerve thing was shown to be bogus. The amount a spine would have to be manipulated would cripple the subject.

    They now resort to "subluxations" which, again, have been shown to be bogus. In experiments with n subjects, some with and some without diagnosed "subluxations" were examined by n chiropractors.

    EVERY subject was diagnosed with a "subluxation" and rarely in the same spot.

    Bullshit all around.

  7. Re:What a joke.. by History's+Coming+To · · Score: 4, Informative

    Fair enough. I'm in the UK too. However, I would like to say the following: homoeopathy is fraud. I work in the science section of a large bookshop in Edinburgh, I should be easy enough to find and will identify myself if asked.

    Bring on the lawyers. I could intentionally produce a fraudulent, counterfeit, fake homoeopathic remedy (ie a small phial of water), but it would be indistinguishable from a "real" one. I would welcome a court's attention to the matter.

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  8. Re:A question for the limeys: by VJ42 · · Score: 4, Informative

    1. The libel stuff is fairly new - probably only the last 5 years or so. We always used to consider the USA the place for that, but it seems to have moved here recently.

    A lot of it come from one single judge as well: Mr Justice Eady.

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  9. Re:What a joke.. by Luthair · · Score: 3, Informative

    I remembered this article in which a few studies had found that poking people with needles could relieve pain, but there was no difference between traditional locations and random locations.

  10. Legal Context by Alistair+Hutton · · Score: 5, Informative
    Just to give you some idea of what is going on. Singh was found guilty of libel by a Judge know as Justic Eady, he is the Eastern Texas District Court of Libel Judges. Ridiculous libel decision after ridiculous libel decision has been made by him, well beyond the bounds of Britain's already incredibly strict laws.

    Britain's senior judges have been begging parliament for reform in the libel and defamation laws due to their stupidity. The three judge appeal panel has Britian's two most senior judes on it, they have specifically requested this case for two reason's
    1) To smack down Eady and deliver a sternly worded "No" to him while clipping his nose with a rolled up newspaper.
    2) A spot of judicial activism because the politicians are dragging their feet something rotten

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