SGU Episode 864: Difference between revisions

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=== Florida's Surgeon General Nominee <small>(1:01)</small> ===
=== Florida's Surgeon General Nominee <small>(1:01)</small> ===
'''S:''' So get this, we retweeted this on our Twitter account, by the way if you don't follow us on Twitter, do. We do put some information there for you. We retweeted this thing. {{w|Ron DeSantis}}, he's the governor of Florida, he's nominee for surgeon general [https://twitter.com/RonFilipkowski/status/1486368543344140299?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1486368543344140299%7Ctwgr%5E%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.esquire.com%2Fnews-politics%2Fa38898740%2Fflorida-surgeon-general-do-vaccines-work-ron-desantis%2F refused to answer four times], yes or no, do the Covid vaccines work. Wouldn't answer the question, yes or no.
'''B:''' What? He would not answer that?
'''E:''' How did he answer?
'''S:''' His first answer was, the question is a scientific one. That was the entirety of his answer.
'''E:''' Yeeeees...
'''C:''' Yeah, and you're a scientist or a physician or you should be if you're being nominated for this position.
'''S:''' He was pushed to answer yes or no, and his answer was 'A scientist who can answer any specific scientific questions'. So he's saying that he was a scientist who can answer any specific scientific questions. Go ahead, give me your questions, I just did, yes or no.
'''C:''' ''(laughs)'' Except that one.
'''S:''' He did say, reasonable effectiveness for the prevention of hospitalization and death and relatively low effectiveness for prevention. Which is not really true.
'''C:''' No it's not true at all.
'''S:''' Yeah.
'''B:''' So what role is is he trying to fill?
'''S:''' Would not, could not, just didn't feel comfortable saying yes, the vaccines work. Just did not feel comfortable saying that.
'''E:''' Interesting.
'''S:''' That's where we are. Politicized science.
'''B:''' What's he's gonna be, surgeon private?
''(laughter)''
'''J:''' All right so the bottom line is that he doesn't believe it or refuses to acknowledge it.
'''B:''' Or he's pandering.
'''E:''' Politically speaking he can't acknowledge it.
'''S:''' He did not feel comfortable saying no. Like it was politically incorrect to say yeah the vaccines work, they're effective, that was politically a no-go.
'''B:''' It's pathetic.
'''C:''' What goes on in the mind of somebody who hopefully, I mean he must know the truth, right?
'''S:''' Of course he does. He's a doctor, he knows.
'''C:''' Yeah like it must feel not good in his heart, you know to be sort of struggling with that.
'''B:''' Assumes he has one.
'''J:''' But Cara it shows you, in the order of importance, in certain people's minds─
'''B:''' Right, right, say it.
'''J:''' ─you know everybody has that politics is much more important than science. Unfortunately his paycheck is tied to him keeping his mouth shut.
'''S:''' The thing is, the surgeon general, a surgeon general should be like an apolitical position.
'''E:''' Correct.
'''C:''' Absolutely.
'''S:''' He's a science advisor.
'''C:''' Not just bipartisan, apolitical.
'''S:''' Apolitical, totally. We need those people in the government, people how can provide from a neutral, apolitical, non-ideological point of view. Here are the fact, this is what the experts say, this is what's true. So we can't even agree on what's true anymore, even when these are basic established facts. That's the problem.
'''C:''' Right. We can all point to outcome evidence, solid outcome evidence that's been reproduced, that we wish weren't the case, right? Like that doesn't align with something that we want to be true but the fact is, it's true and we have to be comfortable, we have to have the neuropsychological humility as we always talk about to say, I don't like it, but this is what the science shows.
'''E:''' Right.
'''S:''' Now at a recent, guys there was a recent anti vaccine rally in DC. And it was kind of all-purpose conspiracy rally, you know, even though─
'''C:''' Got some Q Anon thrown in?
'''S:''' ─ostensibly anti vaccine but everything was there, you know. Guess who was like one of the big─
'''E:''' Kennedy! Robert F. Kennedy.
'''S:''' ─yeah Robert F. Kennedy jr.
'''C:''' Of course.
'''B:''' He's been around?
'''J:''' Oh come on what's the matter with him Steve? ''(laughs)''
'''E:''' Oh my god, vaccines causes autism right?
'''J:''' I know I know.
'''S:''' This guy is, again I'm trying to figure out what happened to this guy. He started out as an environmentalist and somehow he went down the rabbit hole of anti-vaccine and I suspect he is just completely buried in a process of confirmation bias and motivated reasoning. Now he's found so much evidence to confirm he's belief that he's done, he's just done. He said at the rally: 'if you take the vaccine you have a 25% increase change of dying over the next 6 months'.
'''E:''' What?
'''S:''' Where did that come from? Nowhere. Absolutely nowhere, but what he does, like, a lot of anti-vaxxers do, he does what we call dumpster diving in [https://vaers.hhs.gov/ the vaers] reporting, database.
'''E:''' Oh the vaers.
'''S:''' Which is just an open unfiltered you know voluntarily reporting system. It's not scientific information, you can basically, its a Rorschach test, you can see what you want there.
'''E:''' Sounds like can read anything into it.
'''S:''' Yeah. Meanwhile, the CDC data found in during October November, guess how much more likely were you to die from Covid if you were unvaccinated versus somebody who is fully vaccinated?
'''E:''' 18 times.
'''B:''' 20 times?
'''C:''' Probably 45 times.
'''S:''' 53 times. 53 times the risk of death, 53 times the risk of death, can you imagine?
'''B:''' Yeah but those are your facts.
'''C:''' ''(laughs)''
'''S:''' Right, but if you can't trust, you can't trust the CDC, right, so you get up to make up your own facts by doing unscientific observations and a completely unscientific database.
'''E:''' It's like a flat-earther mentality.
'''S:''' Yeah totally.
'''E:''' They're so so steeped in it and they can never come out of it, they don't want to emerge from it, it is their reality and they're so comfortable in it, they'll never leave it, ever abandon it.
'''C:''' Problem is this is one of those situations in which reality not only does reality exist, reality has, it's violent in this situation.
'''J:''' It's pounding on the door, reality is that people are dying and tons of people are catching this virus and the vaccines are so unbelievably clearly benefits anybody who takes it. And if you turn a blind eye to that, you are intellectually compromised. On some level.
'''C:''' And you're harming public health.


=== Vaccination Good News <small>(6:37)</small> ===
=== Vaccination Good News <small>(6:37)</small> ===
'''S:''' Here's some good news. Couple of recent studies I wanna point out. One showed that if you either were infected with Covid and then later got vaccinated, or you were vaccinated and had a breakthrough infection you got this hybrid super immunity─
'''J:''' It's a hybrid.
'''S:''' ─with 10 times the antibodies as being vaccinated alone. Or being infected alone.
'''C:''' What?
'''B:''' What?
'''S:''' 10 times the antibodies.
'''C:''' So wait...
'''B:''' Jay man you're superman dude.
'''J:''' That's awesome. For how long?
'''S:''' We don't know that.
'''B:''' 5 minutes.
''(laughter)''
'''E:''' Yeah there's a half-life.
'''S:''' Time will tell. That's good in that with the spread of Omicron and with the spread of vaccines this is one of the paths that we can get to the pandemic burning itself out and just turning into another flu/cold sort of endemic respiratory virus. Now I do have to emphasize this doesn't mean like if you're fully vaccinated go out and get Covid, it doesn't mean that at all, the whole point, is to not get Covid. And getting Covid is a really terrible way of not getting Covid.
'''C:''' Right ''(laughs)''
'''S:''' It's a really, it doesn't work.
'''C:''' By definition.
'''S:''' I really studied this extensively and I'm pretty sure that getting Covid is the worst way to avoid getting Covid.
'''B:''' But, but, that begs the question, how can you induce that super-immunity without getting Covid?
'''C:''' Boosters probably?
'''B:''' No, I doubt that.
'''S:''' The thing is, if you could fully boost it, you're fine. You have good effectiveness against even the new variant.s
'''B:''' But I want super immunity!
'''C:''' ''(laughs)'' Wear a mask?
'''B:''' I do! I want more!
'''S:''' It's still important to avoid Covid for a few reasons, first it's not a benign illness even if you are, if it's a breakthrough infection and you're vaccinated, you're much much better of being vaccinated but you can still get some annoying long Covid symptoms. I know people who have lost their taste and it's taking a long time to come back─
'''E:''' That sucks.
'''S:''' ─or it doesn't come back fully or the same it was before, like there's something off about it.
'''E:''' Frankly some people never had taste to begin with but go ahead.
'''S:''' That's true. But any case it's not so benign that you should seek it out, just for the extra immunity so that you don't get it. Again that doesn't even makes sense. And don't think that this is gonna help end the pandemic cause every infection is adding to the probability of more variants emerging.
'''C:''' Yes.
'''S:''' So just, still try not to get infected, wear a mask, social distance, avoid people who are known to be infected etc. Get fully boosted but if you do get it you're likely to have a very mild illness and it will give you enhanced immunity beyond just being vaccinated or just getting infected alone. The other bit of good news is that the Pfizer CEO just announced that they are ready with an Omicron version of their vaccine.
'''C:''' I'm so excited.
'''S:''' Will be released in March.
'''C:''' I wonder how long you would have had to wait.
'''S:''' Yeah that still remains to be seen.
'''B:''' So the next booster then, it will be the next booster.
'''S:''' Yeah next booster will cover Omicron.
'''C:''' Right. We were boosted, I was boosted in October, I want that Omicron booster gimme gimme. I'm feeling like by the day it's been too long you know I'm scared.
'''S:''' Well I think so boosting created higher antibody titers than just being fully vaccinated. Hopefully it will also produce longer immunity, which tends to happen, the more number of times you get boosted the longer lasting your immunity is. That's probably true. Again I'm hoping and I think this is reasonable that we'll settle into and annual Covid vaccine. With the flue vaccine. And they'll track the variants just like they tracked the variants with flu and that'll be, that's it. I'll be just one more flu-like, again this is what happens populations just build more and more and more immunity to an infection until it becomes like the cold or the flu, you know.
'''E''' Can they combine the two into one? The flu vaccination and the Covid vaccination?
'''C:''' Probably.
'''S:''' Theoretically. I don't know if they will.
'''C:''' It may not be worthwhile.
'''S:''' There may be technical reasons why they don't, in mRNA might need different preservatives, unless they make a mRNA flu vaccine that's compatible. But getting two jabs is no big deal, you go, here's your flu, here's your Covid. No big deal.
'''C:''' Yeah I got mine at the same time.
'''E:''' Yes, but wouldn't the rate be higher if it were a one shot as opposed to two for most, for people? I would think that's how the numbers would work out.
'''S:''' Yeah, if they can do it, they probably will, but I wouldn't count on that. Especially with the fact that there are different kinds of vaccines.
'''C:''' Don't like elderly or immunocompromised people often take a different flu shot.
'''S:''' There's a high dose.
'''C:''' Yeah there's like a high dose flu shot, and then there's...
'''S:''' There's the quadrivalent versus the trivalent, I always, when they ask me, I'm like give me the high dose quadrivalent please I want the whole full both [inaudible]
'''C:''' Why don't, that's a good idea, so we can just ask for the quadrivalent?
'''B:''' And sprinkles and [inaudible].
'''S:''' Because I'm a hospital, I don't know if it's because of a healthcare work, you probably can get it Cara, so because you're a health care worker you can get a high dose if you want like give it to me.
'''E:''' ♪♪You take the high dose, I take the low dose♪♪
'''C:''' Sure, I don't want the flu, flu is horrible.
'''S:''' They're both fine, it's just you know if I, I'll take the, I want the extra, I'll take it.
'''B:''' Fine shmine.
'''E:''' You look at the menu, I think I'll have the high dose today.
'''S:''' Well now they have the quadrivalent they basically just have, they permanently added the swine flu, the H1N1 it's not the permanent part of the flu vaccine.
'''E:''' That makes sense.
'''C:''' It just makes sense.
'''S:''' There's just gonna be more and more vaccines in our life that's gonna give us immunity against these you know increasing zoonotic infections and you know the anti-vaxxers man, they're not going away, we know they're not going anywhere. We've got to marginalize the hell out of them.
'''C:''' Make it like uncool.
'''S:''' This is our primary weapon, it's gotta be, oh you are anti-vaxxer, you're weird.
'''C:''' Right, exactly.


{{anchor|wtw}} <!-- leave this anchor directly above the corresponding section that follows -->
{{anchor|wtw}} <!-- leave this anchor directly above the corresponding section that follows -->
== What’s the Word? <small>(12:30)</small> ==
== What’s the Word? <small>(12:30)</small> ==
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SGU Episode 864
January 30th 2022
864 beetles restoration.jpg
(brief caption for the episode icon)

SGU 863                      SGU 865

Skeptical Rogues
S: Steven Novella

B: Bob Novella

C: Cara Santa Maria

J: Jay Novella

E: Evan Bernstein

Quote of the Week

I love science. I hate supposition, superstition, exaggeration, and falsified data. Show me the research; show me the results; show me the conclusions; and then show me some qualified peer reviews of all that.

Bill Vaughan, American columnist

Links
Download Podcast
Show Notes
Forum Discussion


Introduction

Voice-over: You're listening to the Skeptics' Guide to the Universe, your escape to reality.

S: Hello and welcome to the Skeptics' Guide to the Universe. Today is Wednesday, January 26th, 2022 and this is your host, Steven Novella. (applause) Joining me this week are Bob Novella...

B: Hey, everybody!

S: Cara Santa Maria...

C: Howdy.

S: Jay Novella...

J: Hey guys.

S: ...and Evan Bernstein.

E: Good evening folks!

S: How's everyone this lovely Wednesday deep winter cold frigid day?

C: Oh no it's cold?

J: Oh god Cara.

E: Super cold.

J: It's one of those days Cara, you go outside for about 2 seconds and you're like oh my god it's cold.

S: Nope.

C: The high today was 72 I think in LA, so that's like 22 for all you Celsius listeners. Yeah, it was nice.

E: Yeah, -4 here, right now, -4 Celsius.

COVID-19 Updates

Florida's Surgeon General Nominee (1:01)

S: So get this, we retweeted this on our Twitter account, by the way if you don't follow us on Twitter, do. We do put some information there for you. We retweeted this thing. Ron DeSantis, he's the governor of Florida, he's nominee for surgeon general refused to answer four times, yes or no, do the Covid vaccines work. Wouldn't answer the question, yes or no.

B: What? He would not answer that?

E: How did he answer?

S: His first answer was, the question is a scientific one. That was the entirety of his answer.

E: Yeeeees...

C: Yeah, and you're a scientist or a physician or you should be if you're being nominated for this position.

S: He was pushed to answer yes or no, and his answer was 'A scientist who can answer any specific scientific questions'. So he's saying that he was a scientist who can answer any specific scientific questions. Go ahead, give me your questions, I just did, yes or no.

C: (laughs) Except that one.

S: He did say, reasonable effectiveness for the prevention of hospitalization and death and relatively low effectiveness for prevention. Which is not really true.

C: No it's not true at all.

S: Yeah.

B: So what role is is he trying to fill?

S: Would not, could not, just didn't feel comfortable saying yes, the vaccines work. Just did not feel comfortable saying that.

E: Interesting.

S: That's where we are. Politicized science.

B: What's he's gonna be, surgeon private?

(laughter)

J: All right so the bottom line is that he doesn't believe it or refuses to acknowledge it.

B: Or he's pandering.

E: Politically speaking he can't acknowledge it.

S: He did not feel comfortable saying no. Like it was politically incorrect to say yeah the vaccines work, they're effective, that was politically a no-go.

B: It's pathetic.

C: What goes on in the mind of somebody who hopefully, I mean he must know the truth, right?

S: Of course he does. He's a doctor, he knows.

C: Yeah like it must feel not good in his heart, you know to be sort of struggling with that.

B: Assumes he has one.

J: But Cara it shows you, in the order of importance, in certain people's minds─

B: Right, right, say it.

J: ─you know everybody has that politics is much more important than science. Unfortunately his paycheck is tied to him keeping his mouth shut.

S: The thing is, the surgeon general, a surgeon general should be like an apolitical position.

E: Correct.

C: Absolutely.

S: He's a science advisor.

C: Not just bipartisan, apolitical.

S: Apolitical, totally. We need those people in the government, people how can provide from a neutral, apolitical, non-ideological point of view. Here are the fact, this is what the experts say, this is what's true. So we can't even agree on what's true anymore, even when these are basic established facts. That's the problem.

C: Right. We can all point to outcome evidence, solid outcome evidence that's been reproduced, that we wish weren't the case, right? Like that doesn't align with something that we want to be true but the fact is, it's true and we have to be comfortable, we have to have the neuropsychological humility as we always talk about to say, I don't like it, but this is what the science shows.

E: Right.

S: Now at a recent, guys there was a recent anti vaccine rally in DC. And it was kind of all-purpose conspiracy rally, you know, even though─

C: Got some Q Anon thrown in?

S: ─ostensibly anti vaccine but everything was there, you know. Guess who was like one of the big─

E: Kennedy! Robert F. Kennedy.

S: ─yeah Robert F. Kennedy jr.

C: Of course.

B: He's been around?

J: Oh come on what's the matter with him Steve? (laughs)

E: Oh my god, vaccines causes autism right?

J: I know I know.

S: This guy is, again I'm trying to figure out what happened to this guy. He started out as an environmentalist and somehow he went down the rabbit hole of anti-vaccine and I suspect he is just completely buried in a process of confirmation bias and motivated reasoning. Now he's found so much evidence to confirm he's belief that he's done, he's just done. He said at the rally: 'if you take the vaccine you have a 25% increase change of dying over the next 6 months'.

E: What?

S: Where did that come from? Nowhere. Absolutely nowhere, but what he does, like, a lot of anti-vaxxers do, he does what we call dumpster diving in the vaers reporting, database.

E: Oh the vaers.

S: Which is just an open unfiltered you know voluntarily reporting system. It's not scientific information, you can basically, its a Rorschach test, you can see what you want there.

E: Sounds like can read anything into it.

S: Yeah. Meanwhile, the CDC data found in during October November, guess how much more likely were you to die from Covid if you were unvaccinated versus somebody who is fully vaccinated?

E: 18 times.

B: 20 times?

C: Probably 45 times.

S: 53 times. 53 times the risk of death, 53 times the risk of death, can you imagine?

B: Yeah but those are your facts.

C: (laughs)

S: Right, but if you can't trust, you can't trust the CDC, right, so you get up to make up your own facts by doing unscientific observations and a completely unscientific database.

E: It's like a flat-earther mentality.

S: Yeah totally.

E: They're so so steeped in it and they can never come out of it, they don't want to emerge from it, it is their reality and they're so comfortable in it, they'll never leave it, ever abandon it.

C: Problem is this is one of those situations in which reality not only does reality exist, reality has, it's violent in this situation.

J: It's pounding on the door, reality is that people are dying and tons of people are catching this virus and the vaccines are so unbelievably clearly benefits anybody who takes it. And if you turn a blind eye to that, you are intellectually compromised. On some level.

C: And you're harming public health.

Vaccination Good News (6:37)

S: Here's some good news. Couple of recent studies I wanna point out. One showed that if you either were infected with Covid and then later got vaccinated, or you were vaccinated and had a breakthrough infection you got this hybrid super immunity─

J: It's a hybrid.

S: ─with 10 times the antibodies as being vaccinated alone. Or being infected alone.

C: What?

B: What?

S: 10 times the antibodies.

C: So wait...

B: Jay man you're superman dude.

J: That's awesome. For how long?

S: We don't know that.

B: 5 minutes.

(laughter)

E: Yeah there's a half-life.

S: Time will tell. That's good in that with the spread of Omicron and with the spread of vaccines this is one of the paths that we can get to the pandemic burning itself out and just turning into another flu/cold sort of endemic respiratory virus. Now I do have to emphasize this doesn't mean like if you're fully vaccinated go out and get Covid, it doesn't mean that at all, the whole point, is to not get Covid. And getting Covid is a really terrible way of not getting Covid.

C: Right (laughs)

S: It's a really, it doesn't work.

C: By definition.

S: I really studied this extensively and I'm pretty sure that getting Covid is the worst way to avoid getting Covid.

B: But, but, that begs the question, how can you induce that super-immunity without getting Covid?

C: Boosters probably?

B: No, I doubt that.

S: The thing is, if you could fully boost it, you're fine. You have good effectiveness against even the new variant.s

B: But I want super immunity!

C: (laughs) Wear a mask?

B: I do! I want more!

S: It's still important to avoid Covid for a few reasons, first it's not a benign illness even if you are, if it's a breakthrough infection and you're vaccinated, you're much much better of being vaccinated but you can still get some annoying long Covid symptoms. I know people who have lost their taste and it's taking a long time to come back─

E: That sucks.

S: ─or it doesn't come back fully or the same it was before, like there's something off about it.

E: Frankly some people never had taste to begin with but go ahead.

S: That's true. But any case it's not so benign that you should seek it out, just for the extra immunity so that you don't get it. Again that doesn't even makes sense. And don't think that this is gonna help end the pandemic cause every infection is adding to the probability of more variants emerging.

C: Yes.

S: So just, still try not to get infected, wear a mask, social distance, avoid people who are known to be infected etc. Get fully boosted but if you do get it you're likely to have a very mild illness and it will give you enhanced immunity beyond just being vaccinated or just getting infected alone. The other bit of good news is that the Pfizer CEO just announced that they are ready with an Omicron version of their vaccine.

C: I'm so excited.

S: Will be released in March.

C: I wonder how long you would have had to wait.

S: Yeah that still remains to be seen.

B: So the next booster then, it will be the next booster.

S: Yeah next booster will cover Omicron.

C: Right. We were boosted, I was boosted in October, I want that Omicron booster gimme gimme. I'm feeling like by the day it's been too long you know I'm scared.

S: Well I think so boosting created higher antibody titers than just being fully vaccinated. Hopefully it will also produce longer immunity, which tends to happen, the more number of times you get boosted the longer lasting your immunity is. That's probably true. Again I'm hoping and I think this is reasonable that we'll settle into and annual Covid vaccine. With the flue vaccine. And they'll track the variants just like they tracked the variants with flu and that'll be, that's it. I'll be just one more flu-like, again this is what happens populations just build more and more and more immunity to an infection until it becomes like the cold or the flu, you know.

E Can they combine the two into one? The flu vaccination and the Covid vaccination?

C: Probably.

S: Theoretically. I don't know if they will.

C: It may not be worthwhile.

S: There may be technical reasons why they don't, in mRNA might need different preservatives, unless they make a mRNA flu vaccine that's compatible. But getting two jabs is no big deal, you go, here's your flu, here's your Covid. No big deal.

C: Yeah I got mine at the same time.

E: Yes, but wouldn't the rate be higher if it were a one shot as opposed to two for most, for people? I would think that's how the numbers would work out.

S: Yeah, if they can do it, they probably will, but I wouldn't count on that. Especially with the fact that there are different kinds of vaccines.

C: Don't like elderly or immunocompromised people often take a different flu shot.

S: There's a high dose.

C: Yeah there's like a high dose flu shot, and then there's...

S: There's the quadrivalent versus the trivalent, I always, when they ask me, I'm like give me the high dose quadrivalent please I want the whole full both [inaudible]

C: Why don't, that's a good idea, so we can just ask for the quadrivalent?

B: And sprinkles and [inaudible].

S: Because I'm a hospital, I don't know if it's because of a healthcare work, you probably can get it Cara, so because you're a health care worker you can get a high dose if you want like give it to me.

E: ♪♪You take the high dose, I take the low dose♪♪

C: Sure, I don't want the flu, flu is horrible.

S: They're both fine, it's just you know if I, I'll take the, I want the extra, I'll take it.

B: Fine shmine.

E: You look at the menu, I think I'll have the high dose today.

S: Well now they have the quadrivalent they basically just have, they permanently added the swine flu, the H1N1 it's not the permanent part of the flu vaccine.

E: That makes sense.

C: It just makes sense.

S: There's just gonna be more and more vaccines in our life that's gonna give us immunity against these you know increasing zoonotic infections and you know the anti-vaxxers man, they're not going away, we know they're not going anywhere. We've got to marginalize the hell out of them.

C: Make it like uncool.

S: This is our primary weapon, it's gotta be, oh you are anti-vaxxer, you're weird.

C: Right, exactly.

What’s the Word? (12:30)

_consider_using_block_quotes_for_emails_read_aloud_in_this_segment_

News Items

S:

B:

C:

J:

E:

(laughs) (laughter) (applause) [inaudible]

Carbon Signatures on Mars (21:29)

Schoolkids and Conspiracy Theories (31:51)

Peter Jackson and AI (48:42)

Human Remains Locator (1:09:28)

Who's That Noisy? (1:17:51)


New Noisy (1:21:29)

[_short_vague_description_of_Noisy]

J: So, guys, if you think you know what that is or if you heard something cool this week, do me a favor: just take the moment right now and send me that information at wtn@theskepticsguide.org.

Announcements (1:22:15)

Questions/Emails/Corrections/Follow-ups

Correction: 5G and Airlines (1:24:00)

Email: The Effects of Climate Change (1:25:44)

_consider_using_block_quotes_for_emails_read_aloud_in_this_segment_ with_reduced_spacing_for_long_chunks –

Science or Fiction (1:37:33)

Answer Item
Fiction Regrown rat leg
Science Independent echolocation evolution
Science
Laparoscopy via robot surgery
Host Result
Steve swept
Rogue Guess
Cara
Regrown rat leg
Bob
Regrown rat leg
Jay
Regrown rat leg
Evan
Regrown rat leg

Voice-over: It's time for Science or Fiction.

Item #1: Researchers report they were able to successfully regrow a functional leg in a rat following treatment with a five-drug cocktail.[5]
Item #2: A new study of the neuroanatomy of bat hearing finds that bats fall into two groups with distinct anatomy for echolocation, suggesting that echolocation may have evolved independently in the two groups.[6]
Item #3: Scientists report the first successful laparoscopic operations, specifically intestine repair, performed entirely by a surgical robot without any human control.[7]


Cara's Response

Bob's Response

Jay's Response

Evan's Response

Steve Explains Item #2

Steve Explains Item #1

Steve Explains Item #3

Skeptical Quote of the Week (1:55:30)

I love science. I hate supposition, superstition, exaggeration, and falsified data. Show me the research; show me the results; show me the conclusions; and then show me some qualified peer reviews of all that.
Bill Vaughan (1915-1977), American columnist and author

Signoff/Announcements ()

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Today I Learned

  • Fact/Description, possibly with an article reference[8]
  • Fact/Description
  • Fact/Description

Notes

References

Vocabulary

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