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- -------------------------------------------------------
- April 1991 "BASIS", newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics
- -------------------------------------------------------
- Bay Area Skeptics Information Sheet
- Vol. 10, No. 4
- Editor: Yves Barbero
-
-
-
- PREGNANCY: FACTS AND MYTHCONCEPTIONS
- by Molleen Matsumura
-
- Many years ago, I took a course in the Indonesian language.
- Inevitably, the instructor tossed in various cultural highlights.
- One day, Ms. Nur Wattimena mentioned that, where she came from, a
- couple expecting a child are also expected to avoid certain foods.
- As she listed bananas, cucumbers, and other long, narrow,
- cylindrical foods, we all burst into laughter at the obvious
- symbolism.
-
- Every important aspect of life, in every culture, is the focus of
- a huge store of myth, lore -- and even, sometimes, empirical
- knowledge. Not surprisingly, this is doubly true about pregnancy
- and childbirth, since no culture could continue without these
- activities. Our culture is no exception, of course. If you or
- anyone you know even CONSIDER having children, you can expect to be
- bombarded with an incredible mixture of information,
- misinformation, out-dated information, and out-and-out myths. I'll
- try to untangle a bit of the confusion, here.
-
- BEGINNING A PREGNANCY
-
- MYTH: Every couple that has ever had trouble conceiving has heard
- some variation of the following: "Joe and Mary tried ten years and
- nothing happened. Then, finally, they gave up and relaxed. Next
- thing you know, Mary is expecting twins."
-
- This story is a variation on the "me decade" credo that if an
- airplane crash-lands in your living room, you must have WANTED it
- to happen. Attitude does not affect fertility; it's just that
- nobody is going to tell a hopeful couple stories about people who
- gave up, relaxed, and remodeled their kitchen with the money that
- would have remodeled the obstetrician's kitchen.
-
- FACT: There are a few simple ways a couple can improve their
- chances. The man who LITERALLY not figuratively) keeps cool will
- have a higher sperm count. That means trading jockeys for boxers,
- and avoiding hot tubs, saunas, and steam baths. Timing is
- important. Planned Parenthood gives free classes that teach women
- how to tell when they are fertile -- equally applicable to
- conception or contraception.
-
- Not cheap, but far more accurate, are the ovulation-detection kits
- at your local pharmacy. When "the time is right", conception should
- be attempted on alternative days, not daily: This way, there is
- time for the mature sperm count to be replenished. (Some couples
- who conceive after giving up may be benefitting from an increased
- amount of mature sperm, due to less- frequent intercourse.)
-
- If conception doesn't occur after a year of trying, see a fertility
- specialist.
-
- MYTH: A woman who sees a fertility specialist will be treated like
- a guinea pig, and forced to undergo a lot of expensive, painful,
- unreliable procedures.
-
- FACT: Many people who foster the above myth have axes to grind. At
- one end of the spectrum are people who simply build exaggerations
- of the undeniable reality that some researchers are more interested
- in the research than the research subject, and some physicians
- aren't very good at giving clear explanations. At the extreme are
- people who REALLY DO believe that the medical profession is some
- sort of male conspiracy against women, and/or that science is some
- sort of male aberration that no feminist should have truck with.
-
- Deciding to get fertility counselling can be difficult. However,
- the initial steps in fertility counselling involve simple,
- painless, and relatively inexpensive tests such as blood tests. At
- any point, questions can be asked. How much will this cost? How
- likely is it to work: How many people have tried this procedure?
- There is always the option of stopping to think!
-
- MYTH: You can choose the sex of your child.
-
- FACT: The methods suggested for affecting the sex of the child
- alter the odds slightly, and that's all. The technique involves a
- combination of methods, including timing the conception at a
- particular point in the woman's ovulatory cycle (not easy!), and
- altering the vaginal pH. Be forewarned that making the vagina less
- acid increases the risk of minor but annoying local infection,
- which in itself interferes with fertility. (If you try this method,
- and infection occurs, don't listen to what people tell you about
- allergies and "yeast diets" -- more myths! Just have your doctor
- prescribe local medication -- it works in one to three days).
-
- Researchers are trying to find improved methods for selecting a
- child's sex -- and ethicists and demographers, among others, are
- worrying about the possible social consequences. A gynecologist can
- give you an update (and you can expect any REALLY effective
- technique to make the front page of your newspaper).
-
- PREGNANCY
-
- Some of these myths will sound painfully familiar to the seasoned
- skeptic. Well, what did you expect?
-
- MYTH: You can use a pendulum suspended over the mother's abdomen to
- predict the sex of the baby. Right! Probably it's a CRYSTAL
- PENDULUM! I really can't remember whether clockwise movement means
- a girl or a boy, but the really important question is whether you
- have a compelling reason to be polite to the pendulum wielder, or
- have been waiting for an excuse to kick this person out of your
- life. You should try pointing out that, starting around the fifth
- month, a mother-to-be shouldn't spend much time lying on her back.
- (That's a fact -- the uterus presses on major vessels and impairs
- its own blood supply).
-
- Sometimes people come up with other myths, for example, "An active
- fetus is a boy, a quiet fetus is a girl." (No comment needed for
- that one!)
-
- FACT: There is no way to predict fetal sex except by genetic
- testing -- amniocentesis or chorionic villus sampling. These
- procedures shouldn't be, and aren't, done unless there is good
- reason to be looking for genetic problems, or, in the case of
- amniocentesis, to diagnose fetal illness. If and when they ARE
- done, the parents can decide whether they want to know the fetus's
- sex as well.
-
- MYTH: If a little bit of vitamin supplementation is good, huge
- amounts of vitamins have got to be better. (I told you some of this
- would sound familiar!)
-
- FACT: Eating a balanced diet with plenty of fresh produce really
- will provide the necessary vitamins. All a pregnant woman needs to
- do is eat the way she knows she ought to, adding a few hundred
- extra calories, and skipping junk food. A prescription, prenatal
- vitamin can help, won't hurt, and will not be excessive. Prenatal
- blood tests can diagnose anemia, and then iron tablets may be
- prescribed.
-
- Taking huge amounts of some vitamins and minerals can be very
- dangerous. Two examples: When a woman takes very large amounts of
- Vitamin C prenatally, the newborn can develop "rebound" scurvy. A
- heavy excess of Vitamin D is just as likely to cause bone deformity
- as deficiencies.
-
- MYTH: Unlike "synthetic" medications, herbs and herbal extracts are
- "natural", safe, and wonderful.
-
- FACT: Ho-hum. And which herbal extracts are we talking about?
- Cocaine? Heroin? Strychnine?
-
- There are three herbs in particular that a pregnant woman might
- hear about. Raspberry leaf tea is supposed to "tone the uterus". I
- have never figured out what that means. But I do know that no
- controlled trials have been done, and that raspberry leaf tea
- tastes awful.
-
- Valerian is supposed to help with insomnia. The people who laid
- that one on a good friend of mine speculated that it was a "natural
- version" of Valium. Maybe because they sound alike? Why would
- anyone pregnant take any version of Valium, anyway? I was concerned
- enough to track down a book by a practitioner of herbal medicine
- who claimed that valerian will help with insomnia -- but, this
- writer added, after a couple of weeks, the valerian itself will
- cause insomnia. That was enough to convince my friend not to
- bother.
-
- Possibly the most dangerous is blue cohosh tea, which is supposed
- to stimulate labor contractions, and might be recommended to women
- close to their due date who are tired of waiting for labor to begin
- spontaneously. I have not investigated whether this tea performs as
- billed. If it can, that's scary: The concentration and dosage
- cannot be controlled, and overly strong uterine contractions can be
- very painful. At worst, if extremely strong contractions were
- stimulated, the tea would be outright dangerous to both mother and
- fetus.
-
- AFTER THE BIRTH
-
- MYTH: If the parents are prevented from immediately holding and
- "bonding" with their baby, their long-term relationship will be
- impaired.
-
- FACT: The researchers who originally stressed the importance of
- early bonding later modified their position. They did not retract
- their original finding that, during the first few weeks after
- birth, parents who had done early bonding seemed to grow attached
- more easily. But they noted that, by the time infants are several
- months old, the degree of patient-infant closeness is the same in
- both early bonding groups and control groups.
-
- Undeniably, a mother is very upset when she cannot be close to her
- baby right after the birth (for example, because she had surgery or
- the baby had respiratory distress). But the same women who, years
- after giving birth, still remember how sad they felt about such
- separations, do not express any feeling that their relationships
- have suffered.
-
- MYTH: Breast-feeding is always difficult. It is always easy. It is
- absolutely vital to the baby's health. It isn't that important.
- Formulas are just fine, and more convenient.
-
- FACT: Breast-feeding IS beneficial to the health of mother and
- infant. Women who breast-feed reduce their risks of developing
- breast cancer -- according to recent research announced by the
- National Academy of Science -- of developing osteoporosis. The
- newborn's immune system is not fully developed, and, in the first
- few days of life, it is protected against some infections by
- antibodies in the mother's colostrum (pre-milk secretion). Nothing
- is as easily digested by the newborn infant as breast milk, and
- nothing is less likely to cause allergies (infants less than one
- year old are more susceptible to food allergies).
-
- The professional association of pediatricians recommend breast-
- feeding during the first year, and they're right. But it isn't the
- end of the world if you don't. Most of today's 20-to-45-year-old
- Americans were formula fed, and they're no more or less healthy or
- intelligent than our parents were (well, maybe a little more!)
-
- THE BIGGEST MYTH OF ALL
-
- There is one right way to bring up a child. Your in-laws/parents/
- neighbors/boss-and-boss's-spouse know this one right way, but you
- are hopelessly inadequate. But that's another story.
-
- [Molleen Matsumura is an editorial associate of "Free Inquiry", co-
- author of "Mother to Be: A Guide for Pregnancy and Physical
- Disability", soon to be published by Demos Publications. She
- collaborated on "Sex in China" (forthcoming, Plenum), and edited
- "Japan's Economy in World Perspective" (Alin Fdn. Press).]
-
-
-
- Letters to the Editor
- FLUORIDE AGAIN!
- by Carl Alexander
-
- I was delighted to read in December "BASIS" two articles dealing
- with medical issues, the fluoride controversy and wild claims for
- yoga. As a recovered cancer patient, I have heard it all. Yoga,
- mental imagery, macrobiotic diet, etc., all with little or nothing
- to back up the claims to good health or to cure illness. On the
- other hand, what is really the cause of illness, and what are safe
- levels of chemicals such as fluoride?
-
- I am delighted that "BASIS" is dealing with all kinds of medical
- issues and quackery. As Mark Hodes stated in the same issue, "upon
- entering scientific literature, it becomes fair game for critical
- evaluation". I hope "BASIS" will follow the issue of fluoride which
- MAY be a case of scientific quackery. The worst kind is that that
- is knowingly accepted.
-
- As a cancer patient, I became aware of accepted medical quackery,
- such as giving chemotherapy to people with lung or rectal cancer,
- of which there is little or no medical evidence it will help in
- these areas. I am not talking about experimental treatments, but
- rather treatments in common use. If I pushed a rice diet on
- someone, claiming it will cure cancer, without proof, I would spend
- a long time behind bars, but it would seem public health officials
- are immune from the rigors of scientific evaluation when dealing
- with fluoride. In both cases, the criticism may be proven false,
- but this can never happen without skepticism. Please keep up the
- good work.
-
- [Perhaps one of our physician-readers would like to reply. -- Ed.]
-
-
-
- STEINER FLAP
- by Robert Clear and Barbara Judd
-
- Fred Convers' analysis of Robert Steiner's statistics puzzle is
- persuasive, but wrong. Steiner's challenge was to figure out the
- probability that two children are girls if we know that at least
- one child is a girl. Convers would have us analyze this problem by
- assuming that we can split the problem in two cases: 1) The known
- child is the first child, and 2) the known child is the second
- child. We can illustrate this by _italicizing_ the outcomes where
- the first child is known, and BOLDING the outcomes where the second
- child is known. The outcomes are as follows: _gb_, GG, and BG,
- where g = girl, and b = boy.
-
- Since the cases overlap (gg is present in both cases), simply
- adding double-counts the probability for gg. The problem is that
- Convers' procedure assumes more knowledge than is given in the
- problem. If you only know that there are two children, then the
- probability of gg is 1/4. If you know that at least one of the pair
- is a girl, then the probability goes to 1/3. Knowing whether it is
- the first, or second child that is known, increases the probability
- to 1/2.
-
- The distinctions are probably most easily seen via a numerical
- example. Assume that we have 40 pairs, so that there are ten pairs
- each of gb, gg, bg, and bb. The probability that any arbitrary
- chosen pair from this population contains gg is 10/40, or 1/4. Now
- assume that we are only interested in those pairs that have at
- least one girl. This eliminates the ten cases of bb, so that the
- resulting probability is 10/30, or 1/3.
-
- Assume that the known child was the first child. There are ten
- pairs of gb, so all of these pairs must be included, since there is
- only one girl in the pair. If, as Convers asserts, the probability
- that second child is also a girl is 1/2, we have to include all ten
- pairs of gg. However, by the same argument, we also have to include
- all ten cases of gg when it is the second child that is known,
- which means we have to double-count them! If we include 1/2, or
- five pairs each, of gg with each known child, then the probability
- of gg with each choice is 5/15, or 1/3. These probabilities sum
- correctly.
-
-
-
- GOODE NIGHT AGAINE, LITTLE PUZZLE
- by Bob Steiner
-
- CASE 1:
-
- A man has two children. The chance is one in four that they are
- both girls.
-
- CASE 2:
-
- Start with the four chances in Case 1. Then eliminate the chance
- that has no girls (i.e., both boys). That leaves us with three
- chances, each of which has at least one girl. There is a one in
- three chance that both are girls.
-
- Thank you, Mr. Convers, for your interest in this puzzle. Alas,
- your little table has a logical flaw. It purports to demonstrate
- that it is twice as likely that a person will have a girl as child
- one and a girl as child two as it is that he will have a girl as
- child one and a boy as child two.
-
- An there are no further objections, maihap 'tis time to saie: Goode
- night againe, little puzzle.
-
- [Editor comments:
- COME ON...
-
- If one child born to a couple is a girl (or a boy), the chances of
- the second child being of one or the other sex is still fifty
- percent. Past performance has nothing to do with future potential.
- It is merely a way to form the ruler to measure the probability of
- that potential and not the cause of it. -- Y.B.]
-
-
-
- DENTAL FILLINGS
- by Tom Woosnam
-
- Did you realize that the fillings in your teeth could result in
- arthritis, colitis, kidney damage, birth defects and multiple
- sclerosis? That at least was the suggestion made by Morley Safer in
- a "60 Minutes" segment aired on December 16, 1990, a suggestion
- that is not borne out by scientific evidence as reported by
- Accuracy in Media, Inc. (AIM), in its January 1991 newsletter.
-
- The basis for the CBS claim is the fact that amalgam fillings,
- which have been in use for more than a century, are 50 percent
- mercury (they also contain silver, copper or tin), and mercury is
- known to be more poisonous than lead or arsenic. Although Safer
- admitted that "no specific disease has yet been directly linked to
- mercury from fillings" the parallels drawn between diseases and the
- use of amalgam as reported by "60 Minutes" left little doubt as to
- the conclusion that CBS wished to draw.
-
- As an example of the kind of frantic recovery sufferers can expect
- to experience, Safer interviewed Nancy Yost of San Jose,
- California. Yost, a victim of MS, had her five amalgam fillings
- taken out because she'd worked in the dental industry, and had
- heard reports that some patients had shown improvements after their
- amalgam fillings had been removed. The morning after the removal of
- her fillings, she threw away the cane she had been relying on to
- walk, and subsequently her voice and ability to dance were restored
- -- small wonder then that after the program was aired dentists
- around the country were flooded with calls from patients willing to
- pay $200 to $2,000 to have their fillings replaced.
-
- One naturally wonders at this point what an expert on MS might say,
- and indeed "60 Minutes" did contact the National Multiple Sclerosis
- Society and was offered an interview with Dr. Stephen Reingold,
- vice president for research and medical programs. Because the
- camera crew never showed up, however, the viewing public was unable
- to hear what Dr. Reingold would have said, as he made clear in a
- protest made to "60 Minutes" executive producer Don Hewitt: "The
- reality is that there has never been a direct association made
- between amalgam and MS. Reports of remissions resulting from
- amalgam removal appear to be anecdotal, and cannot be separated
- from placebo effects or spontaneous changes in disease."
-
- One would have hoped that in the interest of balanced reporting
- Safer would at least have interviewed patients who showed no
- improvement in their health after having had their fillings
- removed, but such hopes were not realized in this program. One
- might have hoped also that he would mention that health
- professionals who deal with amalgams every day show no higher MS
- incidence than the rest of the population, but, alas, this evidence
- is not forthcoming.
-
- "60 Minutes" did not entirely ignore the defenders of amalgam
- fillings, however. They showed an interview with Dr. R. Heber
- Simmons, Jr., spokesman for the American Dental Association, but
- much of his time (76 lines vs. 156 lines for the "anti-amalgam"
- dentists) was spent defending the ADA policy of declaring it
- unethical for dentists to recommend the replacement of amalgam
- fillings except for cosmetic reasons."60 Minutes" turned this into
- evidence of an infringement of the rights of dentists who want to
- help patients avoid mercury poisoning.
-
- So, what are the facts as they are known but not reported on the
- CBS Sunday night show? According to Dr. Simmons, studies show that
- the daily release of mercury from amalgams is about one percent of
- what a worker would receive when exposed to mercury in an
- environment complying with OSHA standards. Dr. J. Rodway Mackert,
- professor of dental materials at the School of Dentistry of the
- Medical College of Georgia, writes in an article scheduled for
- publication in the "ADA Journal" that the average patient's
- fillings may give off 1 to 2 micrograms of mercury per day. In
- contrast, the mercury intake from one meal of seafood in one week
- would be seven times the amount given off by one's amalgam fillings
- each week!
-
- Even "Consumer Reports", which took the scare-mongers' side during
- the Alar scandal, has noted "... dentists who purport to treat
- health problems by ripping out fillings are putting their own
- economic interests ahead of their patients' welfare. Amalgams have
- been used for more than 150 years. Except for a few people with a
- genuine allergy to mercury, [Consumer Union] knows of no one who's
- been harmed by them." The "San Francisco Examiner" quoted one
- anti-amalgam dentist as saying he had "at least 30 new patients
- awaiting appointments" following the "60 Minutes" piece. "The
- television show was wonderful." he said, "I was thrilled."
-
- He may have been thrilled, but what of the MS sufferers whose hopes
- were cruelly raised, then dashed when they were told the facts? As
- AIM states perhaps they were "... lucky compared to those who
- contacted not their doctors, but dentists willing to replace their
- fillings. They will be not only sadder but poorer ... they should
- send the bill to CBS."
-
- [Tom Woosnam holds the Science Department Chair at the Crystal
- Springs Uplands School in Hillsborough.]
-
- THE EDITOR ADDS ...
-
- I contacted Wallace I. Sampson, M.D., one of the founders of Bay
- Area Skeptics and currently an advisor, after that particular show,
- and asked him if I should run right over to my dentist and have my
- fillings replaced. He said, "No!" No scientific findings would
- suggest that there is any merit to the claims of that show. I know
- Dr. Sampson well, and respect his scientific opinions, so I saved
- myself a pile of dough.
-
- Nevertheless, the show was remarkable for some of the questions it
- raised. Obviously, you can't make a public health policy out of
- anecdotal events such as the remarkable recovery (if it happened)
- of Nancy Yost. Still, anecdotal claims (especially if there are a
- number of them) should be considered for serious investigation. No
- one seems to have suggested that Yost's recovery might be
- investigated. I can't help wondering why.
-
- That something has been in use for 150 years does not mean it's
- safe nor does it mean it should be immune from investigation. It
- does mean, however, that there is considerable vested interest in
- its use.
-
- There are clear economic interests at stake here. The ADA, like
- many of its sister professional organizations, does three basic
- things.
-
- => It looks out for the economic interests of its members.
- => It issues (and enforces) ethical guidelines.
- => It keeps its members scientific, by enforcing academic training
- standards and making sure its members use only accepted procedures.
-
- There's little question that these functions occasionally become
- blurred and don't always serve the public interest. In the name of
- science, ethical guidelines might be enforced to serve economic
- interests. If amalgam were proved dangerous, many dentists would
- have to put up a lot of time and money for retraining and
- retooling. Many of ADA's voting members would be out of business.
-
- In addition, I've always been suspicious about the ADA since it
- endorses commercial products (but that's an aside).
- "60 Minutes" is generally an excellent show, but it does
- occasionally demonstrate bias. It's difficult to pick it out if
- you're not familiar with the subject matter (as I am not on most
- medical matters). I have seen it in areas where I have some
- background (labor, for instance). Still, I think that bias,
- conscious or unconscious, is more closely related to sensationalism
- than actual malice. What a shocker it is to discover that a
- professional organization has thrown one of its members out of work
- because he gave honest advice to a patient. But suppose it was a
- sincere physician treating a patient with peach pits for cancer --
- which of us wouldn't want him defrocked!
-
- As skeptics, we should naturally be suspicious when conclusions are
- made about a complex medical issue on a fifteen-minute news
- segment, however reputable the news organization is. But we should
- also be suspicious of spokesmen from professional organizations
- (with mixed motives) who make pronouncements from on high. -- Y.B.
-
-
-
- VOLUNTEERS FOR 1991 CSICOP CONFERENCE IN BERKELEY
- (So far)
-
- The following have kindly volunteered their services to help make
- the conference a success. In alphabetical order, they are ...
-
- => Yves Barbero
- => Lucinda Ben-David
- => Ralph Carmichael
- => Judy Daar
- => Keith Dabney
- => Don Henvick
- => Dan Dugan - Sound and Audio
- => Rick Moen - Chair, Conference Steering Committee and
- Volunteer Committee
- => Kathy Pinna - Usher Supervisor
- => Francis Rigney
- => Wilma Russell
- => Jerry Schwartz
- => Gil Shapiro - Vice-Chair, Steering Committee
- => Terry Simmon
- => Kate Talbot
- => Laurel Tuck
- => Quentin Tuck
- => Ray Westergard - VIP Limousine Services
- => Tom Woosnam
-
- There's still time to volunteer. The hours are flexible, the wages
- nonexistent, but the company is great. Call Kathy Pinna at 843-
- 8364.
-
-
-
- SPIN DOCTORS AND DERVISHES
- by Yves Barbero
-
- It was a British general who pointed out, just before the ground
- war got under way, that Saddam Hussein was willing to use "the
- currency of human life" to advance his policies and therefore
- "there would be a ground war".
-
- The statement was remarkable for its candor. Finally, a military
- officer told the absolute truth. Washington, however, wasn't sure
- how the American people would take the news, and, for a couple of
- days, its public relations troops (spin doctors) were explaining
- that a ground war was not necessarily in the works (a lie). Events
- proved the might of modern war technology, and the forces of
- righteousness took almost no casualties, while the Iraqi forces
- (with a less-advanced technology) may have suffered, according to
- one estimate, as many as 150,000 killed.
-
- Under the guise of protecting troops, the press was stage-managed.
- Even the establishment press complained loudly and publicly. One
- commentator couldn't help wondering what possible security purpose
- was served by not allowing the photographing of bodies being
- brought home. I can answer that question. The administration wasn't
- sure the ground war wouldn't be bloody and was afraid that the
- sight of so many coffins would make it suffer at the polls.
- Censorship, in this country, has been more often used to manage
- public opinion than to protect state secrets. I doubt seriously
- that journalists would object to not publishing shipping schedules
- in time of war. The administration was nervous for public relation
- reasons.
-
- Whatever side one takes on the issue of the Gulf War, there was
- plenty to be nervous about. The resurgence of jingoistic patriotism
- is certainly one issue. Led by President George Bush, we have now
- overcome the "Vietnam Syndrome". If that means we've lost the
- reluctance to enter into armed conflict, it is a sad loss. The Gulf
- War may have been justified (and I personally believe it was,
- although I think the timing had more to do with the American
- electoral schedule than any other reason), but I'd prefer it if our
- leaders spent more time examining issues than possible public
- reaction. Would Bush have NOT started the war if he thought it
- would be unpopular? Could, for instance, have sanctions worked if
- given more time?
-
- Why do we think that an almost flawless technical execution of the
- war is synonymous with virtue? We won because we had better
- technology, more money, great generalship, better diplomatic
- skills, and numbers. In addition, Iraq could not re-supply or build
- its own weapons, and had almost no internal self-sufficiency. Oil
- needs to be exported, and that was cut off. A one-resource economy
- is doomed to eventual extinction. "Goodness had nothing to do with
- it!", as May West might have pointed out.
-
- Our greatest ally was Saddam Hussein, himself. He showed great
- ineptness in his public-relations campaign. Even the most twisted
- intellectual apologist in the Western World would have difficulty
- justifying the policies of a man who gassed thousands of his own
- people. However diplomatically skilled nations in that part of the
- world are reputed to be, nothing can make up for the public-
- relations stupidity of the Scuds and the terrorizing of the Kuwaiti
- population. And, most important, HE ACTUALLY INVADED KUWAIT. That
- made all the rulers in the area extremely nervous and malleable to
- our designs.
-
- Just as we infer virtue from technical skill, we seem to assume a
- hundred-percent moral certitude when the balance sheet is barely in
- the black for us. It IS a fact that Kuwait stole oil from Iraq. As
- are most of our Arab allies, Kuwait is a reactionary dictatorship.
- They all exploit their people. In the case of Kuwait, only a
- privileged few citizens do well. Imported workers, who make up the
- majority of the population, have absolutely no rights. The
- prospect, in the region, of democracy sprouting roots is almost
- nil.
-
- It's also a fact that the U.S. sees an opportunity to re-establish
- itself as a world power, with all its attendant commercial
- advantages, and was looking for an opportunity to show its prowess.
- Philip Agee, the former CIA agent (barred from re-entering this
- country), thinks the war was engineered by the Bush Administration
- just for that purpose. It was not diplomatic stupidity on our part,
- he claims, but cynical design when a State Department official told
- the Iraqis we had no interest in protecting Kuwait. (1) I'm not
- sure I'd go that far, but Grenada and Panama were too local and too
- small to send out the proper message. The Iraq War is just the
- right size and, to boot, in the right location.
-
- There may be justifiable wars, and I suspect, reluctantly, that
- this was one. But war should be a last resort and not the first.
- The "Vietnam Syndrome" served us well and I hope it isn't dead.
- Patriotism is fine and dandy as long as it implies good feelings
- for the land and its people, and not an lockstep following of any
- administration's line. Flags should identify public buildings and
- ships at sea, and not be the subject of idolatry.
-
- My greatest fear is that we'll start selling our military forces to
- the highest bidder, and our young people's lives will become our
- chief export. The best way to avoid war is to promote popular
- government. Economic ideologies, totalitarian states, and religious
- fervor have been responsible for all this century's wars, but I
- can't think of a single instance when one democracy has declared
- war on another. Ever! Not any time in history!
-
- As to the "New World Order," I'm not ready, just yet, to put on an
- arm band.
-
- ------------
- (1) Agee, Philip -- "Producing the Proper Crisis," "Z Magazine",
- Oct '90. (An electronic form of this article may be downloaded from
- the Skeptic's BBS as "GULF-WAR" -- 415-648-8944.)
-
-
-
- WMMR, THE ENFORCER OF AUTHORITY
- by Brian Siano
- Secretary/Editor, Delaware Valley Skeptics
-
- [Censorship is a continuing problem, used most often to enforce a
- political agenda under the guise of protecting public morality.
- Increasingly, as Brian Siano observes, it is used to cynically
- promote commercial interests without regard to common decency or
- respect for individual political views. ...And this happened in the
- cradle of democracy, Philadelphia. -- Yves Barbero]
-
- Singer Sinead O'Connor has a policy of not allowing any national
- anthems to be played before her shows. Since, nine times out of
- ten, rock concerts aren't preceded by the "Star Spangled Banner,"
- nobody really took much notice of this, and no feathers were
- ruffled.
-
- However, when Ms. O'Connor threatened to refuse to perform at a
- recent concert in New Jersey, radio stations in the area found a
- dandy way to boost sagging ratings: organize Anti-Sinead activities
- fit for the whole family. WMMR's John DiBella, once the highest
- rated DJ in the Philadelphia area, decided that it'd be healthy and
- humane to hand out American flags at Ms. O'Connor's show at the
- Mann Music Center, and let the crowd give her what-for.
-
- If the people at WMMR have ever actually paid attention to what
- happens at a rock concert, the results were predictable: A good
- chunk of the audience waved their souvenir flags and chanted what
- they thought was the National Anthem during O'Connor's show. Quite
- a few of those flags wound up being thrown at the stage. The
- audience who went to hear O'Connor sing was cheated, in having to
- put up with this.
-
- Let's put things in perspective, so we can understand what WMMR has
- become. In 1966, John Lennon, in an offhand comment about the
- Beatles' popularity, remarked that they were bigger than Jesus.
- True or not, this sparked a massive wave of record-burnings and
- public protests. Lennon was forced to apologize, saying that he
- didn't have anything against Jesus, but that a lot of His followers
- were "a bit thick. They're the ones who ruin it for me." True
- enough.
-
- If we were to ask the people at WMMR "If you were running a radio
- station then, would you have organized some protest over John
- Lennon?" Sure they'd say "No," but it's easy for them to say that;
- the Lennon flap happened twenty years ago, and Lennon is something
- of a secular saint. This week, when Sinead O'Connor ticked a few
- "patriots" off, WMMR was staunchly on the side of the thimblebrains
- who burn records. I wonder how they would've dealt with the Lennon
- of 1973 who was far more critical of the U.S. than Sinead O'Connor
- has been.
-
- What else can we expect? WMMR is in the business of selling things
- to specific market segments, and what matters to WMMR are such
- products as Coors Beer, Miller Beer, Molson Beer, Budweiser, the
- Army, and such open-minded spokesmen as Guns `n' Roses. WMMR has a
- vested interest in encouraging mindless stupidity and unquestioning
- patriotism. And, so far, its concern with community issues has been
- limited to dopey platitudes about "Saving the Planet." Oh, there
- was John DiBella's opposition to record-labelling; but it's not as
- if WMMR hadn't kept quiet on the matter for years, before
- organizing something right after rival Howard Stern passed him in
- the ratings. (Coors Beer is both a sponsor on WMMR and a supporter
- of the pro-censorship Parents' Music Resource Center. Some
- commitment.)
-
- But the Sinead O'Connor incident wasn't just pandering to
- knuckleheads to regain lost Arbitron ratings. It was an ugly
- exercise in demagoguery. I'd expect that sort of thing from Howard
- Stern, maybe, or Jerry Falwell, but DiBella should know better. He
- could have used his position and his air time to educate his
- audience, and become an active voice in the community. Instead, he
- and WMMR organized a mob of flag-waving morons to harass and
- intimidate Sinead O'Connor, and ruin her concert. Too bad Sinead's
- fans are a bit wiser and more open-minded; I wouldn't mind seeing
- an WMMR-sponsored concert event disrupted in a similar fashion.
-
- By the way, has anyone noticed that the people raising the biggest
- noise about flag-burning or the National Anthem kept their mouths
- shut when Oliver North and Ronald Reagan were gutting the
- Constitution? Maybe I'm being to harsh on DiBella, an entertainer
- who just picked an opportune time to take a safe political stand;
- maybe he was just angry that she has more hair than he does.
-
-
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------
- | |
- | PSYCHIC ADVISOR, continued |
- | |
- | By sending your check immediately, you are guaranteed |
- | six official computer-generated scrolls printed under |
- | the supervision of our crystal-controlled automatic |
- | |
- ----------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
- LASER PRINTER?
-
- Does anyone have a working laser printer he'd like to donate to
- "BASIS"?
-
- We've always been fortunate in having first-rate computing
- equipment available to us for final drafts from our dedicated
- subscribers, but it'd be really nice to have even a basic machine
- available at the editor's office to view working drafts without
- travelling across town.
-
- Contact Yves Barbero at 415-285-4358.
-
-
-
- THE SKEPTIC'S ELECTRONIC BULLETIN BOARD
- => 2400 Baud, 415-648-8944
- => 24 hours, 7 days a week
- => Rick Moen, Sysop
-
-
-
- Make plans now to join us at the
- 1991 CSICOP CONFERENCE
- Hosted by the Bay Area Skeptics, and co-sponsored by CSICOP
- and the University of California at Berkeley Physics Department
- CLAREMONT RESORT HOTEL
- Berkeley/Oakland Hills, California
- Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, May 3-5, 1991
-
- Keynote Address: "In Search of Our Origins", by Donald C.
- Johanson, President, Institute of Human Origins, Berkeley
-
- (See this issue's insert or the Winter 1991 issue of the "Skeptical
- Inquirer" for details and registration information. Write, care of
- this publication, or call Yves Barbero at 415-285-4358.)
-
-
-
- BAS BOARD OF DIRECTORS
-
- Chair: Larry Loebig
- Vice Chair: Yves Barbero
- Secretary: Rick Moen
- Treasurer: Kent Harker
- Shawn Carlson
- Andrew Fraknoi
- Mark Hodes
- Lawrence Jerome
- Eugenie Scott
- Norman Sperling
- Kate Talbot
-
-
-
- "BASIS" STAFF:
-
- Yves Barbero, editor; Sharon Crawford, assoc. editor;
- Wilma Russell, distribution; Rick Moen, circulation
-
-
-
- BAS ADVISORS
-
- William J. Bennetta, Scientific Consultant
- Dean Edell, M.D., ABC Medical Reporter
- Donald Goldsmith, Ph.D., Astronomer and Attorney
- Earl Hautala, Research Chemist
- Alexander Jason, Investigative Consultant
- Thomas H. Jukes, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
- John E. McCosker, Ph.D., Director, Steinhart Aquarium
- Diane Moser, Science writer
- Richard J. Ofshe, Ph.D.,U. C. Berkeley
- Bernard Oliver, Ph.D., NASA Ames Research Center
- Kevin Padian, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
- James Randi, Magician, Author, Lecturer
- Francis Rigney, M.D., Pacific Presbyterian Med. Center
- Wallace I. Sampson, M.D., Stanford University
- Eugenie C. Scott, Ph.D., Anthropologist
- Robert Sheaffer, Technical Writer, UFO expert
- Robert A. Steiner, CPA, Magician, Lecturer, Writer
- Ray Spangenburg, Science writer
- Jill C. Tarter, Ph.D., U. C. Berkeley
-
-
-
- CALENDAR
- April Meeting
- NATURE OF EVIL -- CULT VICIOUSNESS
- by John Hubner
-
- Tuesday, April 16, 1991, 7:30pm, Gallery Theatre, Skyline College,
- 3300 College Drive, San Bruno.
-
- Watch for coming events in the BAS Calendar, or call 415-LA-TRUTH
- for up-to-the-minute details on events. If you have ideas about
- topics or speakers, leave a message on the hotline.
-
- WARNING: We STRONGLY URGE that you call the hotline shortly before
- attending any Calendar activity, to see if there have been any
- changes.
-
-
- -----
-
- Opinions expressed in "BASIS" are those of the authors and do not
- necessarily reflect those of BAS, its board, or its advisors.
-
- The above are selected articles from the April, 1991 issue of
- "BASIS", the monthly publication of Bay Area Skeptics. You can
- obtain a free sample copy by sending your name and address to BAY
- AREA SKEPTICS, 4030 Moraga, San Francisco, CA 94122-3928, or by
- leaving a message on "The Skeptic's Board" BBS (415-648-8944) or
- on the 415-LA-TRUTH (voice) hotline.
-
- Copyright (C) 1991 BAY AREA SKEPTICS. Reprints must credit "BASIS,
- newsletter of the Bay Area Skeptics, 4030 Moraga, San Francisco,
- CA 94122-3928."
-
- -END-
-