5 Comments
тна Return to thread
Comment deleted
Jan 9, 2022
Comment deleted
Expand full comment

True, it's worse for government agencies than universities, which are more vulnerable to legal action when researchers cause harm to their research subjects. One bad case of research misconduct costs the university millions in legal costs and severely damages their reputation (check out the mess UCLA medical researchers have been in for years). Unis are highly motivated to avoid this as a result and so take the IRB seriously, as a bulwark against legal action if nothing else. While the government health agencies are now totally unhinged, the body count is rising and the scandals are brewing, particularly with regard to harms to children. These scandals WILL come and the politicos will be desperate to throw anyone and everyone under the bus to save their political bacon. I expect this will happen soon as the injection programs have failed so spectacularly that public disgust is going to destroy the democrats this year, and then the national press will follow.

Expand full comment

What mess ar UCLA medical misconduct? I missed this and not finding it?

Expand full comment

Well, there is the case of the handsy gynecologist, but perhaps that's too salacious for the sensitive internet sleuth. See if you can dig up something on the case of the missing body parts (a bit older and less salacious I will admit) But then again, maybe I am making it all up. This is the internet after all.

Expand full comment

goodness! There's a lot there.!

Expand full comment