Simon Singh Talks With Wired About His Libel Battle
smellsofbikes writes "Wired has a short but pithy interview with Simon Singh about his defense against a libel suit brought by the British Chiropractic Association, in which he spent more than $200,000 and emerged victorious."
It would seem that if he emerged victorious, the other side should have to cover the $200K -- plus something for his time.
Sorry... I hate seeing numbers thrown around as if it somehow makes this case more important than others. I'm glad to see that Simon Singh stood up for his comments and also that he is now extremely famous and has furthered his career by this episode.
Also, can someone enlighten me if British law allows him to sue for his defense cost?
astrology,
homeopathy,
feng-shui,
graphology,
psycho-analysis?
I happen to know a few people who are really.. well, they love Jesus more than most. They seem to attack science, not to learn anything, but to merely shoot down their "adversary".
I really wish those people could understand this quote (last 2 lines of the article): "People start off with a belief and a prejudice—we all do. And the job of science is to set that aside to get to the truth."
Yeah - a victory that cost him $200k of his own money - so that he doesn't have to issue a retraction or pay even more of his own money.
Or, maybe if he is lucky he might get reimbursed some or all of it - quite some time after having spent it. Of course, he won't get any interest on the money or anything like that. Most ordinary people would lose their homes in the process of trying to pay these kinds of fees, and I'm sure courts would not reimburse those costs either.
That will teach them!
Europe at least is far better than the US in this regard, but I'd go a step further. I'd envision a system where when a suit is brought a court would require an escrow of funds from the plaintiff if they had greater than a certain amount in assets. Regardless, the attorneys would be paid by the court (for both parties) - it would be illegal for attorneys to receive money from their clients. The fee rate would be set by the court, and the budget for both parties would be the same, and the budget would be based on the nature of the case and the amount at issue. Both parties would then battle it out in court or settle. Individual participants (whether defendents, plaintiffs, witnesses, or jurors) below a certain income level (moderately high) would also be paid by the court a per-diem based on their annual income. In the end the court would assess the loser of the case for the amount of court costs (which now includes all client legal costs and the cost of the time of all parties as well), plus interest sufficient to ensure the government comes out at least even. This would be a public debt that the government would have the power to collect on.
This would ensure that merely being sued would have no negative financial impact on somebody, and that people will think twice before filing frivolous lawsuits. People who are out time and money also don't have to try to badger the other party to pay - the government would pay them as they incur costs, and now the government can use all its usual methods to recoup its loss just as if the losing party didn't pay their taxes/etc.
The bottom line is that the court system needs to stop punishing people (effectively) merely for being sued.
"yet it happily promotes bogus treatments" does not necessarily imply dishonesty, it can also imply ineptitude or idiocy. So ruling that he was claiming they were intentionally promoting bogus treatments and knew and believed they were bogus infers something from the statement that does not necessarily exist.
People have the same problems interpreting the English language when it comes to the second amendment in the US Constitution. The "well regulated militia" clause is parenthetical but through willful idiocy or intentional sophistry some try to claim it's some kind of limiter or restriction.
The interview touches on the possible trend of popular distrust of scientific expertise, but never mentions lousy pop-science headlines, slimey university PR releases (I won't name names like MIT), skewed incentives of private sector researches (e.g., suppressing all negative results), and the list goes on. Medical research, given all the interest and money involved, is probably the most egregious offenders.
Researchers need to look in the mirrors, too.
Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
Actually, it is the UK legal system that doesn't work. Neither does the US legal system, or the AU legal system. But for this we can focus on the broken UK legal system.
Basically, what is broken is that the truth is effectively restricted to people with money and wealth. It's good that we have people like Simon Singh who have enough money to make it work, and make it work the right way. Unfortunately, the vast majority of those with money and wealth also tend to be those who perverse and corrupt the system with lies and untruths. So it is a very biased system, even if it might well be balanced and just when those facing off are well moneyed. In other words, it's not a system for ordinary people. So unless we can find a new system to replace it, or at least supplement it, there is no justice, and no truth, for ordinary people most of the time.
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
The guy makes a great point although at the same time if applied everywhere is totally wrong. I'm sure some of those chiropractors are "experts" in their "field". Why wouldn't we trust them over some journalist. After all, the journalist isn't an expert!
The point being everyone seems to be labeling themselves as an expert these days, even when they're not (social media experts, haha). There was an artist on a TV program I watched the other day labelling himself a "climate expert" demanding that everyone should stop flying, right now! Regardless of how people feel about global warming I start not giving I shit when it turns into the big circle jerk that it has become and everyone starts the "look at me!" game.
So Singh believes in Global Warming, and that anyone who is against it isn't credible because by his numbers 98% of Climate Scientists believe in it being Real and Dangerous. Here's my take on that:
I remember the 1970's plenty well enough to recall that the great fear then was, are you ready for this, Global Cooling! The Earth was going to freeze in 30 years and we were all going to die through mass starvation because crops wouldn't grow. And yes, the Climate Scientists of that time were all behind that farce as well. How quickly things change.
Before you take Global Warming as your next panic attack, answer the following 3 questions:
1: Is the Earth getting warmer?
2: Even if #1 is true, is it human caused?
3: Even if #1 and #2 are true, can humans actually do anything about it?
Unless you can answer all three of the above questions with an unqualified YES, don't panic and don't suddenly feel that the only solution is the spending of hundreds of billions of dollars in wealth transfer (to enrich those in the environmentally blessed Green Industries), and don't buy into the radicals who believe that the only solution is to take us back to the Stone Age.
Singh, you may be right about Chiropracticy and I agree with you there, but you aren't even close to selling me on Global Warming as being anything other than natural cycles that we've gone through at least 8 of in recorded geologic history well before humans could have had any effect on it at all. Until you can explain the equally obvious global warming on Mars at present as somehow caused by human activity don't ask me to destroy my lifestyle over something I can't actually affect anyway.
And one last point. Despite claims to the contrary, we do not have wonderfully accurate temperature records over the last 100 years. This is my field and I know how even the most modern temperature sensors in common use are often biased and surprisingly inaccurate. Yet Climate Scientists are relying on manually read thermometers, often improperly placed initially or in areas now recently developed, to bolster their cause. And they throw out entirely the 33% of the data that doesn't support their cause at all. Tell me that you have devastatingly accurate temperature data from even 50 years ago and I'll call you a Liar right to your face. Singh may need to learn a bit more on just how inaccurate most of our historical readings truly are -- but that's not his field.
"It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
The reason he got into so much trouble is simple: The libel laws in the UK are batshit insane.
HAND.
That seems redundant. But I'll probably get sued for saying it.
This makes me very uncomfortable. I believe that global warming is real and anthropogenic, but the reason I believe it isn't just that somebody with a Nobel prize said, "global warming is real and anthropogenic." Authoritative scientists told us that margarine was better for us than butter; in that miscegenation laws were necessary for public health; and that electromagnetic waves were not quantized (Bohr's school said this) and that they were vibrations of a luminiferous aether (most textbooks said this, decades after Einstein published relativity). All of those claims turned out to be false. Some of them were extremely harmful to large numbers of people.
I teach physics at a community college for a living. The hardest thing to get my students to do is to think for themselves. Some come in already doing it, some will do it with encouragement, and others are incapable of doing it. Some will do it and come up with conclusions that I consider incorrect. But despite all these difficulties, we're far better off as a society if 10% of the population can think for themselves than we are if 100% accept authoritative opinions on faith.
Find free books.
"You have to decide who you trust before you decide what to believe."
- Singh
This pearl becomes even more meaningful in the Internet Age.
I like the last answer given by Singh:
When people use things like "common sense" as a weapon to call you an idiot, I will have to keep the view described by Singh in mind. After all, it's perfectly correct to question common sense and even fly in its face if evidence to the contrary is available. It common sense needs to be tested to strike out the impurities and leave us with the truth. So every time "the official story" seems a bit wrong or even unnatural, it needs to be tested. Unfortunately, it will not stop people from thinking you're some form of nut for going against the generally accepted truth. The world isn't flat but I wonder how many people were attacked or even killed for asserting otherwise.
I'm glad Singh brings up the issue of GMOs in his interview. It's my opinion as well that the vast bulk of the evidence sited by GMO opponents is pseudoscience at best.
It is high time start recognizing what is going on with the anti-GMO campaign.
Minor correction for you - be careful not to mix up "England" and "Britain", they are different things. There are "English" courts and English law but there are no such things as "British courts" or "British law". In Scotland, which is part of Britain, Scottish courts and Scots law prevails, a different legal structure exists. So we're talking about the situation in England here, not Britain.
cheers!
Quote from Wikipedia:
The publicity produced by the libel action has led to a "furious backlash",[2] with formal complaints of false advertising being made against more than 500 individual chiropractors within one 24 hour period,[3][30] with the number later climbing to one quarter of all British chiropractors.[2] It also prompted the McTimoney Chiropractic Association to write in a leaked message to its members advising them to remove leaflets that make claims about whiplash and colic from their practice, to be wary of new patients and telephone inquiries, and telling their members: "If you have a website, take it down NOW." and "Finally, we strongly suggest you do NOT discuss this with others, especially patients."[2][3] One chiropractor is quoted as saying that "Suing Simon was worse than any Streisand effect and chiropractors know it and can do nothing about it."[2]
Linky.
"The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
As a matter of fact, demonstrating that CO2 is a greenhouse gas is very simple and can be done at home. I've seen a video from some BBC educational program demonstrating this, with a couple of clear plastic bottles, some vinegar and baking soda to generate CO2, and two digital thermometers.
I repeated the experiment and, yes, it worked. Therefore, I can assert from my own experience that Anthropogenic Global Warming is, at least, a plausible hypothesis. It's up to the denialists to come with a better experiment proving the contrary if they want me to believe them.
I heard he killed Shatner's wife... He hasn't denied it
Chiropractic and its ilk (e.g. homeopathy) are total nonsense and a complete wast of time and money. At best they are harmless throwbacks to a pre-scientfic age, but they also have the potential for serious harm if they divert any serious problems from competent medical practitioners.
However, in spite its worthlessness, chiropractic does enjoy a widespread following. Many people are too ignorant of the true nature of chiropractic to take their maladies elsewhere.
What the public needs is education and enlightenment. Only in this way will chiropractic, as well as similar useless activities, be rendered null and void.
However, public education seems impossible if all attempts to present the truth is immediately characterized as libel by the threatened parties. Social progress is the victim of these outmoded libel laws.
Your "reasoning" is reminding me of one of the "young earth" religious dogmas, the one in which god created the earth full of fossils that seem to be very old just to show how fallible science is. If you start doubting everything equally without sorting out the reliability of the information, then you are using blind dogma, not reason.
I did an experiment that corroborated the arguments for anthropogenic global warming. I have never seen any denialist present some experiment that could be used to demonstrate that either there is no global warming or that other effects are causing it.
In view of the facts that I have determined to be true by my own experiment, I assume the scientists who say global warming exists and is caused by human activities are more trustworthy than those who deny these claims.
The article and some replies imply that widespread agreement means that we should make an appeal to authority our definition of scientific truth. The reality is, the facts speak for themselves, regardless of what anyone says about those facts. Unfortunately, most people are ill-equipped to evaluate the facts. At some point, everyone is ill-equipped, because the breadth of human knowledge is too great. Even so, it is a dangerous thing to place one's thinking in the hands of other people, no matter who they are.
Taking stuff apart since 1969 (TM)
FWIW. I knew who Singh was before this case came up.
College-Pages.com - Online Colleges, Degrees, and Programs
It's a bit too hard for much signal to come out with all the professional noisemakers involved. Ignore all of those and it looks just as simple as it did twenty years ago.
Do the incredibly obvious and ignore anyone who has their main strength in advertising, political journalism, tent show miracles, metals futures or oil drilling. Just listen to the people that have something to do with climate in their day job.
You mean England *and Wales* not just England.