Key thing about scientific research: we don't know the answer yet. But do we think we know the answer? You bet! (we're human, after all) Therefore, key difficulty in science: overcoming our convictions. How? Rigorously discard hypotheses that make wrong predictions.
Not sure what you think is at stake, but whatever it is, working to elect an egocentric, incompetent, authoritarian, convicted felon is throwing the baby with the bathwater.
And then, eroding the trust of the public in democratic institutions, the electoral process, the press, institutions of higher learning, science, and scientists, by spewing conspiracy theories, all for political expediency, is downright evil.
You might mean well, but what you're doing is very destructive, highly dangerous, and would have the opposite effect of what you're hoping for.
@Starcourse@j2bryson Genocide is perhaps debatable, but war crimes are defined by the Geneva Convention: and they are exactly that, attacking a civilian population (whether or not enemies are also there). https://t.co/AjHgBMmMUm
First: I am a proud Jew and grandchild of Holocaust survivors. Second: Israel is killing thousands of innocent civilians in Gaza. The actions of the Netanyahu government, and our funding and support of those actions, are morally indefensible. (2/6)
Social insect researchers and students: the IUSSI-North American Section meeting is coming up! Arizona in the mountains in late summer - spectacular landscape, gorgeous weather. Registration includes all accommodation and food. https://t.co/Sxz6XnqvBX
UPDATE: Around 2:00 a.m. law enforcement officers in gas masks and riot gear stormed a pro-Palestinian encampment on the @uarizona campus. The move came hours after a 10:30 p.m. deadline for protesters to leave the area.
More:
https://t.co/h9as5cpKq5
@UArizonaPolice out ticketing bike commuters and tear gassing our students but apparently have no problem with other encampments. @uarizona are you so afraid of your students that you’d ruin your lawns and close your campus rather than support the first amendment?
@mbialek82 I think this is misleading. What do people read into 'in full'? There are many levels of thoroughness of reading. And many levels of citing: general background vs specific method, for example, that require different levels of reading.
Although I sort of knew this, it is still shocking: the US isn't on here but I think that the old median age in Germany explains many of the cultural and living differences between Germany and the US.
Map by @landgeist shows the median age across Europe. Remember that median age means half the population is older than that age. In Portugal's Alto Tamega half of the population is older than 56.2 years! Imagine managing such a region. Challenging! Source: https://t.co/tutfm392ZP
6/Lets look at each review in turn.
1. MASKS:
N=35 studies in community settings (3 RCTs) & 40 in healthcare settings (1 RCT).
😷 MAJORITY of studies found that masks (87%) and mask mandates (89%) REDUCED infection compared to those that found no effect (12%).
@josh_c_jackson Interesting, but why? I can see that in medicine you are exposed to random death often, and religion may be plausible/helpful there. But what it is about programming? It seems the default interpretation or selection bias needs to be strongly refuted here.
@StatedClearly Wall-e. 😁 But seriously, you know evolution is about reproduction, so what matters is which heritable traits induce that. Eg later menopause, stronger predisposition of women not to want to work, etc seems more likely.