TheTrueLordHumungous
TheTrueLordHumungous t1_itvujp9 wrote
Reply to Pennsylvania House GOP to File Articles of Impeachment against Progressive Philadelphia DA Larry Krasner by Beliavsky
Just a gentile reminder on what kind of "progressive" Larry Krasner is.
> Upon taking office Krasner released Hassan Elliot, earlier jailed for felony illegal gun possession. Later, Hasan violated parole when police caught him trying to sell cocaine, but Krasner released again. That same day, Elliot killed a man. Months later, Elliot murdered Philadelphia police corporal ames O’Connor who trying to apprehend Elliot.
This is not a unique example.
TheTrueLordHumungous t1_itujnbm wrote
Reply to An accurate debate summary from Tuesday night, despite reports stating otherwise by Edgeyville
There is so much cope going around this morning after Chunk got his ass handed to him in last evenings debate.
TheTrueLordHumungous t1_ituik10 wrote
Reply to An accurate debate summary from Tuesday night, despite reports stating otherwise by Edgeyville
Poor chunk.
TheTrueLordHumungous t1_irgmrxz wrote
Reply to comment by VitriolicViolet in “Scientific progress is thwarted by the ownership of knowledge.” How Karl Popper’s philosophy of science can overcome clinical corruption. by IAI_Admin
I don’t understand the point of this pedantic argument.
TheTrueLordHumungous t1_irgg8ed wrote
Reply to comment by ApprehensiveTry5660 in “Scientific progress is thwarted by the ownership of knowledge.” How Karl Popper’s philosophy of science can overcome clinical corruption. by IAI_Admin
> there exists a mechanism for avoiding its rigors and it has been exploited rather openly and documented in court cases with opioids most famously
How were the clinical trials for opioid pain killers exploited? Are opioid pain killers not effective for reducing pain?
TheTrueLordHumungous t1_irgfvqz wrote
Reply to comment by iiioiia in “Scientific progress is thwarted by the ownership of knowledge.” How Karl Popper’s philosophy of science can overcome clinical corruption. by IAI_Admin
> would you consider the label to be objectively accurate (aka: True):
Yes I would consider the label objectively true assuming it fell within the bounds of some purity standard.
TheTrueLordHumungous t1_irfce1o wrote
Reply to comment by iiioiia in “Scientific progress is thwarted by the ownership of knowledge.” How Karl Popper’s philosophy of science can overcome clinical corruption. by IAI_Admin
> who > has yet to > answer.
Calm down champ, I have a life.
TheTrueLordHumungous t1_irfc951 wrote
Reply to comment by iiioiia in “Scientific progress is thwarted by the ownership of knowledge.” How Karl Popper’s philosophy of science can overcome clinical corruption. by IAI_Admin
> > a) if .01% of a system is genuinely rigged, is this statement as a binary True or False: "The system is rigged."
Its false, the tiny minority does not define the overwhelming majority.
> b) if two people answer differently, is one of them correct and the other incorrect, objectively and necessarily?
Yes, one of them is correct and one is incorrect.
TheTrueLordHumungous t1_iresvcg wrote
Reply to “Scientific progress is thwarted by the ownership of knowledge.” How Karl Popper’s philosophy of science can overcome clinical corruption. by IAI_Admin
This entire article is based on the premise that the clinical trial process is flawed and rigged based on a few anecdotes of dangerous drugs that made it through this process. First, only 14% of drug candidates successfully passes clinical trial testing and regulatory approval. If the clinical trial process was truly rigged, wouldn't we see a much higher approval rate for them? When six out of seven of you experiments end in failure and the median cost for each failure is $20 million you'd think the process is very rigorous. The authors also mention the replication crisis in medial research, which is a real issue across all fields, but how does this compare to psychology (the authors specialty). The entire clinical process is a way to filter out bad and non reproducible research with actual experimentation and it seems to work fairly well. As bad as the replication crisis is in medicine its far worse in psychology ... perhaps they should clean their own rooms before pointing fingers at others.
TheTrueLordHumungous t1_irc00q9 wrote
he was basically a NEET for the majority of his adult life living of mommy and daddy.
TheTrueLordHumungous t1_itvyimd wrote
Reply to comment by Tyfukdurmumm8 in Pennsylvania House GOP to File Articles of Impeachment against Progressive Philadelphia DA Larry Krasner by Beliavsky
>it might as well mean soft on crime
Thats usually what it is.