LISTINGS |  EDITOR'S PICKS |  NEWS |  MUSIC |  MOVIES |  DINING |  LIFE |  ARTS |  REC ROOM |  CLASSIFIEDS | VIDEO
        


Monday, March 31, 2008


Big Tobacco’s health research: What are these university folks smoking, anyway?


Just when you think you’ve heard the last politically correct, holier-than-thou pronouncement coming out of our university campuses for a while, you open the morning’s newspaper and find more inanities. This morning’s two-minutes-outrage is a rant from campus professors, researchers and administrators criticizing Big Tobacco for giving – and universities for accepting – no-strings-attached grants for health-related research at Boston University, Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of technology, and the University of Massachusetts. 

“Taking money from the tobacco industry to conduct scientific research is like the DA taking money from the Mafia to conduct investigations of crime,” Gregory Connolly, a prof at Harvard School of Public Health, is quoted by the Boston Globe as saying. Connolly may be an expert in his field, but he clearly is ill-informed about how the government funds its anti-Mafia investigations. In fact, state and local prosecutors rely on mob and other criminal money, collected through the asset forfeiture programs enacted in many jurisdictions, to run those investigations and otherwise fund law enforcement offices. Private ill-gotten gains are thus redirected into the law enforcement coffer, then subsequently turned around and aimed back at the criminal syndicates.

Of course, Mafia kingpins aren’t being generous or philanthropic when they “fund” activities that are clearly against their own self-interests through this process. By contrast, the Globe article shows that Big Tobacco is actually voluntarily forking over big bucks for health-related research – especially into those diseases that the companies’ products help cause in the first place. There’s a certain justice to this, no? Besides, what would Professor Connolly prefer Philip Morris do with the money instead of donating it to universities – add to its tobacco advertising budget?

Dr. Michael Siegel of B.U.’s School of Public Health fears that the tobacco companies will be “using the good name” of the various academic institutions. Isn’t that what virtually all donors are trying to do – and does Dr. Siegel propose that our colleges and universities do morality checks before accepting money from donors, much less before naming classrooms or even whole buildings after them? One can barely imagine how lists of alumni and other donors would quickly shrink. And, besides, whose test of morality would apply – Dr. Siegel’s?

One of the rare voices of sanity to come through this morass of pious bleating is that of researcher Rami Tzafriri of MIT. He defends his use of tobacco money “that does not compromise my independence.” It’s no coincidence, perhaps, that such sanity and honesty emanate from MIT, an institution still devoted to rational thought rather than to the latest intellectual and pseudo-political fashions of the day. (That’s why speech is freer at MIT than at most other academic institutions plagued by speech codes, but that’s a column for another day.) Academics at MIT are secure enough in their own professional scruples to understand that the source of their funds will not (at least in the case of no-strings-attached grants) compromise the methodologies or outcomes of their research. What does it say about the integrity of other schools’ faculties when professors start wringing their hands self-consciously, worrying about interference with research?

This interscholastic debate parallels a similar contretemps which broke out in the 1990’s at the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU). By that time the organization was experiencing severe tensions between, on the one hand, true-believer civil libertarians, and, on the other, those who wanted to turn the venerable organization into a “progressive” political group that would carry forward a political program rather than focus on free speech and other such liberty issues. (Such politicization would devastate the organization’s credibility as an honest broker for liberty. In fact, this battle continues today.) Then Executive Director Ira Glasser defended the group’s acceptance of no-strings-attached grants from Philip Morris and R.J. Reynolds. Morton Mintz strongly criticized Glasser in a series of reports and articles, including a Nieman Report (PDF) and an article in The Progressive. One did not have to be cynical to realize why Big Tobacco would support the ACLU – the companies were dependent on the nation’s tradition of allowing people to harm themselves if they really want do, as well as on the free speech arguments in favor of “commercial speech” (read: tobacco advertising). But as long as the ACLU was in control of how the money was spent, Glasser rightly refused to knuckle under to the PC crowd.

Hey – if the universities decide to do investigations of the good moral character of their donors as well as the ways in which they made their fortunes, I’d like to volunteer to be on that committee. I can probably get material for a few truly awesome columns, if not a screenplay or two.

                                                                    Harvey Silverglate


3/31/2008 3:42:45 PM by Harvey Silverglate | Comments [1] |  




Friday, July 06, 2007


Made in China: The Silent Critique


            Only two words are necessary to say all that needs to be said about the rapidly expanding scandal over the dangerous food, toiletries, and manufactured goods arriving on our shores and shelves from The Peoples Republic of China: Silent Spring. That, of course, is the title of Rachel Carson’s 1962 classic book that launched the environmental movement by exposing the deleterious consequences of the over-use of the pesticide dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane (DDT).

             It was not the government that blew the whistle on the extent to which we were poisoning our own backyards. Had we left it to the government to discover, and then to remedy, the dangers of environmental poisons and pollution, we would all still be slowly simmering to death in a far larger variety and number of toxic stews than we currently face. The whistle was blown by a scientist-author who belonged to the enormous and vibrant civil society that the nation’s constitutional framework has allowed to prosper.

            Much of the environmental movement’s success in fighting pollution must be credited to the First Amendment, which encouraged and allowed Carson to spread her message. And while Ralph Nader ruffled a few feathers on both sides of the political divide in recent Presidential elections, the publication of his epochal Unsafe At Any Speed triggered the start of the enormously successful effort to mandate and produce safer cars. While many of our nation’s problems emanate from the private sector, so do most of the solutions. If we left it to the government to focus initial attention on these problems, we’d see cover-ups that would make the recently-released CIA “family jewels” secrets look like minor blips on the nation’s radar.

             Given all this, it should have come as no surprise that we began to learn in a series of page-one news stories that pet food, then toothpaste , and most recently, children’s toys, manufactured in China for export to the United States contained potentially deadly chemicals. Another shocker was the discovery that automobile tires exported to the United States posed the danger of tread-separations likely to lead to deadly automobile accidents

             And then came the clincher: that while “99% of the food exported to the United States [from China] was up to safety standards over the past two years,” a staggering 20% of the fruit and vegetable juice surveyed were substandard, and other canned and preserved fruit and dried fish were contaminated with bacteria.  Of course, it would be foolhardy to take much comfort from the 99% figure, or even to believe the 20% figure as a maximum, since the survey was conducted by the PRC’s General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine, reported by a Chinese governmental official to the state-run Xinhua News Agency. Given China’s record on press freedom and regulatory control over its industries, somehow I’d feel more comfortable taking the word of, say, the Natural Resources Defense Council or Consumers Union as reported to The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal.


7/6/2007 9:32:01 AM by Harvey Silverglate | Comments [0] |  




Thursday, May 31, 2007


Traveling Man


        With key facts still in dispute, I hesitate to judge the conduct of public health officials in the case of the man with drug resistant TB who flew back and forth to Europe in early May.  But there seems to be no dispute that the man had been informed of his diagnosis and advised not to travel before he boarded the plane, so I don’t hesitate to blame him for knowingly exposing other people to infection.
   
        Virtuecrats may attribute his behavior to what is often (and sometimes rightly) critiqued as a cultural ethic of self-centeredness, but getting on a plane knowing you have drug resistant TB requires a malevolent thoughtlessness in which passengers who bellow banalities into their cell phones may never indulge. 
   
        The irony is that, from a civil liberties perspective, there are far fewer objections to cell phone bans on planes than to strict quarantine laws.  It’s true that cell phone abusers could assert a First Amendment right to use their phones, but their interest in free speech is weightless compared to the liberty interests apt to be violated by quarantine laws.

        Quarantines involve very difficult conflicts between liberty and public health, which I do not propose to discuss, much less resolve here.  I just wonder whether any laws can save us from the selfish stupidities of others, especially when the laws themselves are likely to be administered by people who are no better, if no worse, than the miscreants they seek to control.

5/31/2007 3:49:44 PM by Wendy Kaminer | Comments [1] |  



INFO

RSS 2.0
Atom 1.0
Send mail to the author(s)


RECENT
Big Tobacco’s health research: What are these university folks smoking, anyway?
Made in China: The Silent Critique
Traveling Man
ADVERTISEMENT

CATEGORIES

ARCHIVES



LINKS







TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
   
Copyright © 2006 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group