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The Los Angeles Times article reveals a fundamentally authoritarian worldview: medical claims are "unproven," and dangerous for the public to discuss, until some official body endorses theman approach that threatens public health and science alike.
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In short, the actual scientific evidence used to dismiss HCQ is far from an absolute proof that it doesn't work. Many of the studies commonly cited to dismiss the drug are irrelevant, too weak to bear much weight, or actually suggest some benefits.
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Critical thinking about medicine or any topic requires weighing multiple sources against one another and distinguishing between degrees of certainty, not ruling out all sources of evidence but one and equating "unproven" with "false." The approach to health information increasingly taken by public officials, reporters, and social mediaunder which any statement is "unproven" and must be assumed harmful, barring some definitive pronouncement by public health authorities to the contraryis thus not only authoritarian but also damaging to public health and science as a whole.
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The fight to make it unavailable has been weird, though.
But that has not been the narrative. And the drug is widely available now. The most common narrative is that it hasn't been shown to work.Sapper Redux said:Quote:
The fight to make it unavailable has been weird, though.
Because it's an extremely valuable tool for people with longstanding autoimmune disorders, and their ability to stay healthy was seriously hampered by people rushing out to buy every last pill regardless of the efficacy.
That may sound clever, but why is it not data, and who says it's not?Quote:
The plural of anecdote is not data
Anyone with a statistics degreeJabin said:That may sound clever, but why is it not data, and who says it's not?Quote:
The plural of anecdote is not data
It is data, it just may not be reliable data. But even then, if there's enough anecdotal data, could it be reliable? For example, if 1,000,000 doctors gave HCQ to 1000 patients each, isn't that enough "data" to start reaching some conclusions?
And the supposed "gold standard" of medical data is RCTs, and a rank higher than those are the meta-studies. But every single RCT study I've seen so far has flaws, many with serious flaws, and meta-studies are only so good as the studies they choose to include. They don't seem to be that much more reliable than widespread anecdotal data.
It seems that many are simply repeating mantras without actually thinking about what the mantras mean and their implications.
Sapper Redux said:
This is a weak argument. Multiple drugs, including HCQ and Ivermectin, were seriously analyzed by multiple groups of scientists and medical professionals when they were informed of in vitro success. The problem for this "David and Goliath" bull**** narrative is that the scientific method showed they don't work. The plural of anecdote is not data, and you should always be suspicious of someone who profits off of results that make no sense in relation to the studied and published results made by multiple groups studying thousands of other patients.
Jabin said:
Well, I don't have a statistics degree so would you care to elucidate just a tiny bit further?
Also, isn't "big data" based on the idea that if you have enough anecdotal evidence, you can draw statistically significant conclusions from it? At one time, I assisted an internet marketing company and they made hundreds of millions of dollars from analyzing anecdotal data en masse.
Year of the Germaphobe said:Sapper Redux said:
This is a weak argument. Multiple drugs, including HCQ and Ivermectin, were seriously analyzed by multiple groups of scientists and medical professionals when they were informed of in vitro success. The problem for this "David and Goliath" bull**** narrative is that the scientific method showed they don't work. The plural of anecdote is not data, and you should always be suspicious of someone who profits off of results that make no sense in relation to the studied and published results made by multiple groups studying thousands of other patients.
Lol the OP posts a thread about authoritarian science, and the first post literally validates the thread title.
This is priceless.
Authoritarian: favoring or enforcing strict obedience to authority, especially that of the government, at the expense of personal freedom.
From mask mandates, to social distancing, to vaccine efficacy...the science has been corrupted by nonsense.
Sapper Redux said:Year of the Germaphobe said:Sapper Redux said:
This is a weak argument. Multiple drugs, including HCQ and Ivermectin, were seriously analyzed by multiple groups of scientists and medical professionals when they were informed of in vitro success. The problem for this "David and Goliath" bull**** narrative is that the scientific method showed they don't work. The plural of anecdote is not data, and you should always be suspicious of someone who profits off of results that make no sense in relation to the studied and published results made by multiple groups studying thousands of other patients.
Lol the OP posts a thread about authoritarian science, and the first post literally validates the thread title.
This is priceless.
Authoritarian: favoring or enforcing strict obedience to authority, especially that of the government, at the expense of personal freedom.
From mask mandates, to social distancing, to vaccine efficacy...the science has been corrupted by nonsense.
It's funny that in your argument about "authoritarian science," you provide no science and appeal to purely political beliefs. I'm shocked you've come to this conclusion. Shocked.
I am quite open to the argument that the anecdotal evidence from doctors is wrong. However, your conclusory and condescending posts provide little in the way of persuasion.Sapper Redux said:Jabin said:
Anecdotes are narratives divorced from circumstance and investigation. They're essentially non-falsifiable and their source has often created a conclusion and then filled in the story to support it. Useless as a statistical point.
Sapper Redux said:
This is a weak argument. Multiple drugs, including HCQ and Ivermectin, were seriously analyzed by multiple groups of scientists and medical professionals when they were informed of in vitro success. The problem for this "David and Goliath" bull**** narrative is that the scientific method showed they don't work. The plural of anecdote is not data, and you should always be suspicious of someone who profits off of results that make no sense in relation to the studied and published results made by multiple groups studying thousands of other patients.
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Remdesivir came out to kill patients shortly after.
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That is not my view of big data. Big Data is just an acknowledgement that we are in a world of spiraling, exponential data generation due to advances in computing power and telecommunications.Quote:
Well, I don't have a statistics degree so would you care to elucidate just a tiny bit further?
Also, isn't "big data" based on the idea that if you have enough anecdotal evidence, you can draw statistically significant conclusions from it? At one time, I assisted an internet marketing company and they made hundreds of millions of dollars from analyzing anecdotal data en masse.
Didn't you say the below just prior? Seems king of political to me.Quote:
1) an appeal to political beliefs can be found nowhere in my statement.
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Authoritarian: favoring or enforcing strict obedience to authority, especially that of the government, at the expense of personal freedom.
But this is not the crux of the discussion. A better analogy is that you have no knowledge of automobile mechanics or engine parts. Your friend's car starts making a noise and he takes it to the mechanic who diagnoses the problem and advises a fix. You go to your friend and tell him to ignore the mechanic and use this other thing because you read about it on the internet.Quote:
2) If I hear a sound inside of a person's car that indicates a serious issue, do I have to diagnose it with the precision of a mechanic, in order to communicate the problem? Or can I simply just state "Hey Bud, You Have A Problem."
Windy City Ag said:Didn't you say the below just prior? Seems king of political to me.Quote:
1) an appeal to political beliefs can be found nowhere in my statement.Quote:
Authoritarian: favoring or enforcing strict obedience to authority, especially that of the government, at the expense of personal freedom.But this is not the crux of the discussion. A better analogy is that you have no knowledge of automobile mechanics or engine parts. Your friend's car starts making a noise and he takes it to the mechanic who diagnoses the problem and advises a fix. You go to your friend and tell him to ignore the mechanic and use this other thing because you read about it on the internet.Quote:
2) If I hear a sound inside of a person's car that indicates a serious issue, do I have to diagnose it with the precision of a mechanic, in order to communicate the problem? Or can I simply just state "Hey Bud, You Have A Problem."
Your friend goes and talks to the mechanic who patiently explains why that doesn't work and how multiple engine experts have looked into this and concluded it doesn't work. You tell your friend to ignore all that research and insight because of . . . . . . . . .
something.
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Say the mechanic has lied to you repeatedly in the past and is known to be incredibly greedy and self centered. Say they've repeatedly demonstrated that their primary interest is control of you and your vehicle and that they are willing to sacrifice your well being for that purpose. In that, incredible hypothetical, situation might you believe a friend who knows a little about cars over the expert mechanic?
Hope that helps spell it out.
Windy City Ag said:Quote:
Say the mechanic has lied to you repeatedly in the past and is known to be incredibly greedy and self centered. Say they've repeatedly demonstrated that their primary interest is control of you and your vehicle and that they are willing to sacrifice your well being for that purpose. In that, incredible hypothetical, situation might you believe a friend who knows a little about cars over the expert mechanic?
Hope that helps spell it out.
Not nice stuff to say about the average ER doctor.
Windy City Ag said:Quote:
Say the mechanic has lied to you repeatedly in the past and is known to be incredibly greedy and self centered. Say they've repeatedly demonstrated that their primary interest is control of you and your vehicle and that they are willing to sacrifice your well being for that purpose. In that, incredible hypothetical, situation might you believe a friend who knows a little about cars over the expert mechanic?
Hope that helps spell it out.
Not nice stuff to say about the average ER doctor.
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Not sure if serious? You think I am talking about the average ER doctor.
I'll correct myself.Windy City Ag said:Quote:
Remdesivir came out to kill patients shortly after.
It never plagued the hospitals using it...how funny.Windy City Ag said:Quote:
Not sure if serious? You think I am talking about the average ER doctor.
Just pointing out that certain individuals tend to indulge in fantastical visions of conspiracy regarding nefarious actors actively working against their personal interests.
The more boring reality is that we rely on is a system of educated medical professionals who work through a code of ethics and have in many cases learned the hard way to do no harm. They have tools to determine efficacy of treatment and if something does not appear to do any good and has remote chances of doing harm, they do not prescribe.
The Double Blind Study process is what plagues the pro-HCQ crowd . . .not the Bilderbergs or the Globalists or Lizard People.
Masks - LMAOQuote:
Remote chances on doing harm, they do not prescribe.
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It never plagued the hospitals using it...how funny.
The research staff, the COVID ICU nurses. Specifically UMMC Houston
The more boring reality is that educated medical professionals have been eschewing a code of ethics of "Do no harm" for risk management security. They find solace in "consensus" to punt that accountability. This is undeniable the last two years.
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Masks - LMAO
Lockdowns - Cancer alone from missed regular screenings is skyrocketing. Go get checked.
Safe, effective. Well, excuse me. Your adverse events are showing. Next.
We have a large evidence pool now of doctors in leadership positions doing harm for the sake of profits. We have evidence of hospital administration doing harm for the sake of profits. We have evidence of those carrying water for the hospitals.
So... Do no Harm does not invoke much confidence the last two years.
Serious question.Windy City Ag said:Quote:
It never plagued the hospitals using it...how funny.
The research staff, the COVID ICU nurses. Specifically UMMC Houston
The more boring reality is that educated medical professionals have been eschewing a code of ethics of "Do no harm" for risk management security. They find solace in "consensus" to punt that accountability. This is undeniable the last two years.
You should not conflate a small number of doctors within a hospital system within the actual hospital system. You should also not confuse anecdote with more qualified studies.Quote:
Masks - LMAO
Lockdowns - Cancer alone from missed regular screenings is skyrocketing. Go get checked.
Safe, effective. Well, excuse me. Your adverse events are showing. Next.
We have a large evidence pool now of doctors in leadership positions doing harm for the sake of profits. We have evidence of hospital administration doing harm for the sake of profits. We have evidence of those carrying water for the hospitals.
So... Do no Harm does not invoke much confidence the last two years.
This would be relevant if it was doctors implementing this measures. In most cases it was Governor Greg Abbott, School Board Heads, or local administrators like County Judge Clay Jenkins.
And I am not sure where you go with the profits angle. The measures you cite were financially ruinous for everyone including doctors and hospitals.
Greg Abbott's COVID advisory board is littered with doctors and hospital administrators.Windy City Ag said:Quote:
It never plagued the hospitals using it...how funny.
The research staff, the COVID ICU nurses. Specifically UMMC Houston
The more boring reality is that educated medical professionals have been eschewing a code of ethics of "Do no harm" for risk management security. They find solace in "consensus" to punt that accountability. This is undeniable the last two years.
You should not conflate a small number of doctors within a hospital system within the actual hospital system. You should also not confuse anecdote with more qualified studies.Quote:
Masks - LMAO
Lockdowns - Cancer alone from missed regular screenings is skyrocketing. Go get checked.
Safe, effective. Well, excuse me. Your adverse events are showing. Next.
We have a large evidence pool now of doctors in leadership positions doing harm for the sake of profits. We have evidence of hospital administration doing harm for the sake of profits. We have evidence of those carrying water for the hospitals.
So... Do no Harm does not invoke much confidence the last two years.
This would be relevant if it was doctors implementing this measures. In most cases it was Governor Greg Abbott, School Board Heads, or local administrators like County Judge Clay Jenkins.
And I am not sure where you go with the profits angle. The measures you cite were financially ruinous for everyone including doctors and hospitals.
Windy City Ag said:Didn't you say the below just prior? Seems king of political to me.Quote:
1) an appeal to political beliefs can be found nowhere in my statement.Quote:
Authoritarian: favoring or enforcing strict obedience to authority, especially that of the government, at the expense of personal freedom.But this is not the crux of the discussion. A better analogy is that you have no knowledge of automobile mechanics or engine parts. Your friend's car starts making a noise and he takes it to the mechanic who diagnoses the problem and advises a fix. You go to your friend and tell him to ignore the mechanic and use this other thing because you read about it on the internet.Quote:
2) If I hear a sound inside of a person's car that indicates a serious issue, do I have to diagnose it with the precision of a mechanic, in order to communicate the problem? Or can I simply just state "Hey Bud, You Have A Problem."
Your friend goes and talks to the mechanic who patiently explains why that doesn't work and how multiple engine experts have looked into this and concluded it doesn't work. You tell your friend to ignore all that research and insight because of . . . . . . . . .
something.
Windy City Ag said:Quote:
Not sure if serious? You think I am talking about the average ER doctor.
Just pointing out that certain individuals tend to indulge in fantastical visions of conspiracy regarding nefarious actors actively working against their personal interests.
The more boring reality is that we rely on is a system of educated medical professionals who work through a code of ethics and have in many cases learned the hard way to do no harm. They have tools to determine efficacy of treatment and if something does not appear to do any good and has remote chances of doing harm, they do not prescribe.
The Double Blind Study process is what plagues the pro-HCQ crowd . . .not the Bilderbergs or the Globalists or Lizard People.
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It is data, it just may not be reliable data. But even then, if there's enough anecdotal data, could it be reliable? For example, if 1,000,000 doctors gave HCQ to 1000 patients each, isn't that enough "data" to start reaching some conclusions?
They did plenty of studies investigating its efficacy as a preventative and/or an aid to treatment if taking prior to onset of symptoms. That did not change the conclusion.Quote:
The pro HCQ crowd claimed that it needed to be taken early to be effective.