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The drugs don't work: a modern medical scandal
Drugs are tested by their manufacturers, in poorly designed trials, on hopelessly small numbers of weird, unrepresentative patients, and analysed using techniques that exaggerate the benefits.…
AUTHOR:Ben Goldacre
SOURCE:www.guardian.co.uk
PUBLISHED: Sept. 21, 2012
LENGTH: 16 minutes (4207 words)
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Fukushima Disaster: It's Not Over Yet
In other countries, people might want to put more distance between themselves and the source of the radiation, but this is difficult on a crowded archipelago with a rigid job market. Thousands have fled nonetheless, but most people in the disaster area will have to stay and adjust. Doing so would be easier if there were clear guidance from scientists and politicians, but here, too, contemporary Japan seems particularly vulnerable. The country has just got its seventh prime minister in five years. Academia and the media have been tainted by the powerful influence of the nuclear industry. As a result, a notoriously conformist nation is suddenly unsure what to conform to. "Individuals are being forced to make decisions about what is safe to eat and where is safe to live, because the government is not telling them – Japanese people are not good at that," says Satoshi Takahashi, one of Japan's leading clinical psychologists. He predicts the mental fallout of the Fukushima meltdown will be worse than the physical impact.
AUTHOR:Jonathan Watts
SOURCE:Guardian
PUBLISHED: Sept. 9, 2011
LENGTH: 21 minutes (5437 words)
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After 9/11: our own low, dishonest decade
Early in The 9/11 Wars, a magisterial history of the last decade, Jason Burke describes a battle in an Iraqi town called Majar al-Kabir, held in June 2003, soon after the Anglo-American…
AUTHOR:Pankaj Mishra
SOURCE:www.guardian.co.uk
PUBLISHED: Sept. 2, 2011
LENGTH: 16 minutes (4154 words)
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