‘Ghost Hunters International’ open new doors in paranormal investigation & make me a believer

Growing up I was always fascinated, obsessed even, with the paranormal. I would watch all the primetime specials purporting to investigate UFOs, psychics, and of course ghosts.

Sure I didn’t believe in every psychic, UFO sighting, and ghost story I ever heard. In fact, I thought that probably over 99% of all [...]

The Skeptic Psychic Spies on the Media

Recently, scientists found possible precursors to life way out in the middle of space.  This is really cool, but I started wondering, “What will the Mainstream Media say?”  So I asked my old friend, the Skeptic Psychic, and after peering into his bowl of homeopathic tea leaves suspended in a 9% alcohol lager, this is [...]

Time Magazine Provides Honest Look at Jenny McCarthy

Even if you haven’t yet read Time’s new article, Who’s Afraid of Jenny McCarthy?, I bet most of you have answered the question already. The author, Karl Taro Greenfeld, is no stranger to the issue of autism and wrote a book about his autistic brother. While the article takes a hard-line on McCarthy’s belief that [...]

Why David Kirby? A treatise on the Huffington Post

David Kirby: Evidence of Lazy Editors

There are two reasons why I write for this blog.  The first is from that part of me that’s altruistic.  From the minute I knew the New York City Skeptics existed, I wanted to do what I could to help the organization out, and when all is said and [...]

Neonatal male cirumcision con’t

I received an interesting response to what I thought would be a light topic when, on Friday, I wrote a critique of the HuffPo’s reporting on two stories that were unrelated to each other. I was in error to broach the subject of neonatal male circumcision in such a glib manner when obviously it is [...]

Vaccines, Circumcision, and The HuffPo

(For further discussion please read the continuation here.)

No this is not a new game akin to 6-degrees-of-Kevin-Bacon.

Unlike Sarah Palin, I don’t read “all” periodicals, but I have a few favorites… the HuffPo is not one of them. Their editorials tend to come off as tirades by individuals who like to hear themselves talk… type… whatever. [...]

The Desiree Jennings Case, a Win for Skepticism

I don’t usually write a post that solely tells you to read another blog post, but in the strange case of Desiree Jennings, Steve Novella has become something of a primary reference. I recommend his post on this case penned at Neurologica.

Desiree, if you will recall, was the young woman who presented with a mysterious [...]

An Intellectual Dichotomy at the New York Times

The home of a paper of record and a website of crap.

The New York Times kindled a love of science in me at an early age.  My parents, at the time, were trying to get me to a place where I would actually read the paper.  I was more of a comic books and… [...]

Superbowl Commericals and You

Our Lord and Sponser

The Superbowl was on last night.  Someone was playing something with somebody else… but who really cares about some gentlemen with a gas filled piece of meat, there were new commercials on!  Most were innocuous.  “Buy fatty foods” and “Bud Light will make women want you” – always a strange thing [...]

2 Pseudoscience Peddlers Get Served… By Science!

Just in case you haven’t heard, a UK General Medical Council’s Fitness to Practise Panel found sufficient evidence to suggest “serious professional misconduct” on the part of Andrew Wakefield and his colleagues, who published the very first paper that insinuated a link between autism and the MMR vaccine. Further, The Lancet has retracted the original [...]

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