"Evidence-based medicine" and the expulsion of Peter Gtzsche – Salon

For eight months in 1975, Peter Gtzsche recalls driving around Denmark misleading doctors about a new, more expensive type of penicillin. He was 25 years old, with masters degrees in biology and chemistry. As a pharmaceutical representative for the Sweden-based Astra Group, he was tasked with promoting Globacillin, which was said to be more effective than regular penicillin. At the time, Gtzsche says he did not know that the claims he was making on behalf of his employer were not backed by high-quality evidence.

Gtzsche stayed in the pharmaceutical industry for another eight years, writing brochures, strategizing ad campaigns, and, eventually, presiding over clinical trials. It was here that disillusionment set in. Gtzsche in his telling, still a principled naf would watch with dismay as his superiors twisted or suppressed any unflattering trial results. Increasingly distraught, Gtzsche began pursuing a medical degree, leaving the industry for good in 1983.

His medical thesis, titled Bias in Double-Blind Trials, examined the claims of 244 reports of clinical trials for non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, a group that includes ibuprofen and aspirin. Gtzsches writing strongly critiqued the marketing practices of his former employer, Astra-Syntex, pointing out that no good evidence existed for their claim that the higher the dose, the better the effect.

That thesis was read by an Oxford researcher and physician named Iain Chalmers. It confirmed his impression, Chalmers wrote to Gtzsche in 1990, that Gtzsche was doing extremely important research. Chalmers, founding director of Oxfords National Perinatal Epidemiology Unit, had spent much of the preceding decade hand-searching dozens of journals for studies relevant to care during pregnancy and childbirth. His idea was to collect these papers and compile them into reports so that doctors pressed for time would have authoritative, quickly-scannable syntheses of the best available data. In 1993, Chalmers sent an invitational letter to dozens of people, including Gtzsche, to help found a not-for-profit organization dedicated to gathering and summarizing the strongest available evidence across virtually every field of medicine, with the aim of allowing clinicians to make informed choices about treatment.

They called it the Cochrane Collaboration, after Archie Cochrane, a Scottish epidemiologist and one of the earliest and most prominent advocates for randomized controlled trials, the gold standard of clinical research. Cochrane today has 11,000 members with supporters in 130 countries, and many of the groups most high-profile findings that the placebo effect might be a myth; that mammography likely doesnt decrease breast cancer mortality, and turns healthy women into cancer patients via false or ambiguous findings emerged from Gtzsches research.

Gtzsche became the closest thing the world of statistical analysis had to a full-fledged celebrity. His findings were trumpeted, repeatedly, in The New York Times, with his mammography findings even making the front page in 2001. He became the subject of a documentary and was featured in at least one other. The Daily Show once had him play a kind of Big Pharma Deep Throat in a segment on the opioid crisis. Viewed by many as a relentless fighter who has accused entire disciplines of nigh-irredeemable corruption, Gtzsche's crusades earned him the respect of powerful peers and a loyal following of layperson-skeptics around the world.

So it came as a surprise, at least to outsiders, when Gtzsche was summarily expelled in fall of last year from the organization he helped found. He was voted off the board, then stripped of his position as director of the Nordic Cochrane Center, Cochranes Danish outpost. The stated reason for his termination was, according to a statement from Cochranes governing board, an ongoing, consistent pattern of disruptive and inappropriate behaviors, along with a breach of the organizations spokesperson policy, which requires collaborators to clearly identify whether theyre speaking on behalf of themselves or of Cochrane.

The seeming suddenness of his expulsion, and what critics view as its misguided pretext, has exposed rifts that go back decades: debates about the pharmaceutical industrys influence on medicine and about the research communitys tolerance of dissent. More fundamentally, Gtzsches expulsion has crystalized a longstanding debate about the proper role of data in the practice of medicine.

Whatever their differences, Cochrane and Gtzsche are both vocal supporters of evidence-based medicine, a movement that developed nearly 30 years ago to emphasize the use of well-designed research in medical decision-making. The problem is that neither side, nor really anyone, can agree on exactly what evidence-based medicine ought to mean. Some critics have characterized Gtzsche as a rigid intellectual who views assessing scientific data as a purely technical task that does not require the input of experts in a given field. Gtzsche calls such characterizations unfair, arguing that he simply advocates as everyone at Cochrane should for the use of rigorous methodology and the elimination of bias in assessing the efficacy of treatments. And while the organization has built its reputation on providing trusted evidence, Gtzsche now criticizes its methods, accusing Cochrane of bending to industry influence and overlooking important documentation of harms.

Cochranes reliance on published [randomized controlled trials], Gtzsche wrote in an email to Undark, makes Cochrane a servant to industry, which passively promotes what industry wants Cochrane to promote: messages that are very often untrue.

No one from Cochrane's leadership agreed to speak with Undark about the Gtzsche dust-up, or to respond to such charges, but in the organization's statement accompanying his ouster, they made their position clear: "Cochrane is a collaboration," the board declared, "an organization founded on shared values and an ability to work effectively, considerately, and collaboratively."

Gtzsche, they suggested, didn't seem to understand that.

* * *

In 1992, the Journal of the American Medical Association published a paper titled Evidence-Based Medicine: A New Approach to Teaching the Practice of Medicine. With more than 30 co-authors, it advocated a new paradigm for medical practice, deemphasizing intuitional and clinical experience in favor of the latest research data. We believed that the way we were practicing medicine was different from how it had been practiced before, the paper's lead author, Gordon Guyatt recalled, fundamentally different."

The paper had its origins at McMaster University in Ontario, Canada, where David Sackett, an American-Canadian epidemiologist, had been arguing that doctors should be able to make sense of the literature and apply it to their practice. Among other things, this meant studying randomized controlled trials to determine whether an intervention really works.

In a randomized controlled trial, the participants are divided into two or more groups. One group gets the intervention a drug, for example and the others get a placebo, a varied dose of the drug, or some other form of treatment. By the 1970s, these trials were a standard component of drug approval. Still, even in the early 1990s, the results had a more modest influence on clinical practice than they do today. According to Guyatt, doctors did not typically keep up with the literature, and drugs were dispensed according to the guidance of local opinion leaders or influence from pharmaceutical representatives. The idea behind evidence-based medicine, then, was for clinicians to consult the literature before making a decision.

Chalmers had been a visiting professor at McMaster in the late 1980s. As the McMaster crew refined and exported their theories, Chalmers began building his own movement, distinct from but parallel to evidence-based medicine, and with significant overlap in ideology and personnel. Its roots lay in the Gaza Strip, where Chalmers had worked as a United Nations doctor in 1969 and 1970. I believe I would have done a better job, and that fewer of my patients would have suffered, if Id had access to a good source of reliable evidence for research, Chalmers said.

The Cochrane Collaboration was meant to rectify this problem by way of something called a systematic review: all the best randomized controlled trial data on a given treatment, sifted and synthesized into one readable report. "Basically, it was a bunch of troublemaking anarchists who wanted to do something which the establishment was not doing," Chalmers said. A skilled evangelizer ("In those days, to meet Iain Chalmers was to get hooked to his cause," said Jos Kleijnen, founding director of the Dutch Cochrane Center), Chalmers had no trouble assembling a global network of like-minded colleagues for his first symposium Gtzsche among them.

The Cochrane Collaboration was an extraordinarily powerful threat against authority, Sackett told the researcher and author Alan Cassels in his 2015 book on Cochrane. Individuals who had reputations based upon this is the way this disorder must be treated obviously were terribly threatened by what was going to happen with these young upstarts, and kids, and punks, and even laypeople challenging them about what they said must occur in terms of health care.

In an interview, Peter Gtzsche expresses his views on the criminality of pharmaceutical companies.

The backlash, then, was not surprising. And yet, by the end of the 1990s, the Cochrane Collaboration had attained more or less its present-day esteem, and evidence-based medicine was installed as the dominant paradigm of Western medical practice, a position from which it is has not budged in 20 years. The Collaboration's efforts were embraced by nurses and younger doctors, who for the first time had a means of challenging the decisions of their elders what proponents sneeringly called eminence-based medicine.

Cochrane, which began as an almost whimsical experiment among a group of like-minded colleagues an effort, according to Hilda Bastian, one of its founding members, to work out something like the total sum of human knowledge has morphed, in the course of a quarter-century, into one of the worlds most prestigious medical research bodies, with outposts in dozens of countries and yearly outlays exceeding $1 million apiece from the U.S., U.K., and Australian governments, plus large donations from groups like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which gave Cochrane $1.15 million in 2016.

Cochranes total income last year was roughly $13 million, most of it from royalties on its enormous library of systematic reviews, generated by Cochranes global network of research centers and licensed to universities and hospitals around the world. Historically, these research centers have been more or less autonomous, free to pursue their own projects under the Cochrane banner while Cochranes main office in London lobbied for and distributed funding.

In recent years, though, Cochranes leadership has adopted a more hands-on approach, attempting to centralize the efforts of its far-flung franchises. In November of 2018, 620 disillusioned Cochranites formed Cochrane Members for Change, to protest what one member, Robert Wolff, described in a blog post as a mismatch between these two approaches, a grassroots science-focused collaboration on the one hand, and a top-down more business-oriented organization on the other. Among this group, Gtzsches termination was interpreted as a troubling symbol of the new business-oriented direction.

Gtzsche said that Cochrane was founded on the best of human motives honesty, generosity, fairness, transparency, openness. He believes his expulsion will dog the organization for years to come. It was a fundamental error they made, he said.

* * *

In person, Gtzsche can be a warm, appealing, gently ironic presence. At 70, he is tall and thin, with a faint dusting of gray hair. Both his eyebrows arch skeptically in the same direction. He delights in bad jokes irretrievably bad jokes, Chalmers said. Not rude or anything like that; theyre just not funny. He can be famously good company, and it is not hard to see why so many of the people he has mentored and worked with remain loyal to him. I just remember [Peter] as one of the most sincere scientists that I have ever met, said Kleijnen, the Dutch Cochrane Center founding director.

But when it comes to his books and public persona, he also has a famously take-no-prisoners approach. I dig so deeply in my research, Gtzsche said, that I find the skeletons people have buried down there. And when I put them up on the ground people yell and scream, and call me all sorts of names, because they didn't think anybody would ever find the skeletons.

It started with Gtzsche's 2012 book on mammography, a recap of the research and controversies attendant to his decade-plus campaign against breast cancer screening. Gtzsche's view was, and still is, controversial. His public profile rose a year later with his next book, "Deadly Medicines and Organized Crime. It excoriated the pharmaceutical industry, likening its tactics (bribes, kickbacks, serial fraud) to those of the mob.

Gtzsche's next crusade had markedly less currency, and planted him, in the eyes of some, on the outer edges of the fringe. Released in 2015, the book was called Deadly Psychiatry and Organized Denial. Its argument, more or less, is that much about the way psychiatry is practiced is wrong; that the specialty is built on myths, lies and highly flawed research; that the majority of practicing psychiatrists are, actively or through ignorance, deceiving and harming their patients, given Gtzsche's finding that prescription pills are the third leading cause of death in the U.S. and Europe; and that these same psychiatrists might have noticed some of this were they not helplessly compromised by industry money.

The main reason for the drug disaster he writes, is that leading psychiatrists have allowed the drug industry to corrupt their academic discipline and themselves. Gtzsche then goes on to compare the leaders in the field to primate silverbacks in the jungle and claims that psychiatric research is predominantly pseudoscience.

The psychiatric community had some quibbles with this. Cochrane did, too. When Gtzsche published a summary of his findings in the Daily Mail, Cochranes leadership took the unusual step of publicly distancing themselves through a statement on Cochranes website. In addition to stating unequivocally that the organization did not share Gtzsches views, it publicly chastised the Danish professor: He has an obligation . . . to distinguish sufficiently in public between his own research and that of Cochrane the organization to which he belongs.

This infuriated Gtzsche, and the encounter seems to mark the point of no return in his relations with Cochrane management. In the years since, Gtzsche, who has no special training in psychiatry, has become a fixture on the antipsychiatry circuit, criticizing the discipline in editorials, in presentations, and at various symposia about withdrawing from psychiatric medications. (He has since claimed that almost all Cochrane reviews on psychiatric drugs should not be trusted.) Up until his expulsion, Gtzsche listed his title in these outreach activities as director of the Nordic Cochrane Center, leading multiple parties to complain to Cochrane itself.

One of these complainants, Fuller Torrey, a researcher at the Stanley Medical Research Institute, a nonprofit that funds work on schizophrenia and bipolar disorder, shared his correspondence with Cochranes chief executive. Torrey wrote to call attention to Gtzsches association with an organization called the Hearing Voices Network, which, Torrey claims, promotes the belief that auditory hallucinations are merely on end of a normal behavior spectrum. Echoing other complaints, he added in a follow-up letter: It is very difficult to imagine how anyone with these views could possibly be objective regarding a Cochrane study of antipsychotics, thus impugning your credibility which is your most important asset.

In other words, Torrey seemed to be asking: Is this what Cochrane represents?

Gtzsche and his defenders argue that Cochrane is not meant to represent anything that Cochrane, as initially conceived, is simply a loose network of independent researchers, who will inevitably hold a range of opinions. But the organization Gtzsche was forced out of in September of last year was different in crucial respects from the one hed joined a quarter-century earlier. For one thing, it was no longer called the Cochrane Collaboration. It dropped the latter word in 2015, as part of a broader rebranding effort, and is now known simply as Cochrane.

In 2012, the organization hired Mark Wilson to serve as its CEO. Wilson, who does not have a science background, had spent more than a decade working in operations and development for the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies. In the view of Cochrane's latter-day detractors, Wilson is the driving force behind the organization's abandonment of its early, idealistic principles. According to them, he has corrupted the legitimacy of Cochranes systematic reviews by kowtowing to pharmaceutical companies and taking a relaxed stance towards conflict-of-interest issues. Former colleagues also describe Wilson as someone who uses business-speak as a weapon, rapidly jargon-ing subordinates into submission. You can't get a word in edge-wise, said Kay Dickersin, another founding Cochrane member and, until it closed last year, the director of the U.S. Cochrane Center.

For his part, Wilson did not respond to multiple interview requests sent by email. Similarly, other members of Cochrane declined to be interviewed. Having spoken with my colleagues, Cochrane spokeswoman Jo Anthony wrote in an email, I understand, at this time, none of them wish to follow up on your polite request and are happy for me to send you this note on their behalf.

Wilson has been praised for plotting a stable financial future for Cochrane, and for effectively consolidating an unruly, globe-spanning collective of scientists. Even Hilda Bastian one of Cochranes founding members, who parted ways with the organization over the boards refusal to remove the paywall from the Cochrane Library noted that Wilson is politically astute. Cochrane is lucky Mark Wilson hasn't abandoned them, turned on them, she added.

Cochrane started out as a movement, said Nick Royle, Wilsons predecessor as CEO. Over time, it became more business-like, and some of those early adopters perhaps didnt fit so well into the later framework. Thats just the normal evolution of an organization. Thats just how these things are.

Gtzsche has little patience for the new status quo. During a visit this past March, he was highly energized, particularly when discussing what he sees as Wilson's venality, power-lust, and imaginative bankruptcy. When he isn't denigrating Wilson, Gtzsche seems to impute to him an omnipotence somewhat disproportionate to his role as chief executive. In Death of a Whistleblower and Cochranes Moral Collapse, Gtzsche's book-length account of his Cochrane ordeal, Wilsons regime is compared to those of Voldemort, Big Brother, and Stalin. He is so powerful that he controls the whole governing board," Gtzsche told me. "He controls everything.

Disagreements over the direction of the organization came to a head last September. Ahead of its 25th annual colloquium, held at Edinburghs International Conference Center, governing board members voted to expel Gtzsche from the organization he had helped turn into a global force. The reason for the expulsion, as related later that month to STAT and Retraction Watch: Gtzsche had, among other things, used Cochrane letterhead on non-Cochrane-related business, in such a way as to potentially violate the organization's spokesperson policy.

(An independent legal team hired to review the dispute had not concluded prior to the expulsion that Cochranes policy warranted sanction.)

On September 16, the BMJ published a blog post by a researcher who worked with Gtzsche titled Cochrane a sinking ship? That evening, in Science: "Evidence-based Medicine Group in Turmoil After Expulsion of Co-founder." And a news article in Nature the next day: "Mass Resignation Guts Board of Prestigious Cochrane Collaboration." Similar articles were popping up in Italy, Colombia, and Sweden.

Near the end of the conference's second day, attendees took their seats for the Annual General Meeting in the conference hall's 1,200-capacity Pentland Suite. About 30 minutes in, the governing board's co-chair, Martin Burton, took the stage. (The meeting was recorded and posted on YouTube.) Gtzsche recounts in Death of a Whistleblower that before the meeting, he and David Hammerstein a fellow board member whod resigned upon Gtzsches expulsion had gathered signatures for a vote of no confidence in the present board, and the establishment of a new one right there in the conference hall. At Gtzsches signal, two of his colleagues were to stand and set the process in motion.

Gtzsche lifted himself from his seat and signaled to his colleagues across the room. But the colleagues stayed seated. (Neither would comment for this article, but in his book on the expulsion, Gtzsche suggests that at least one, Karsten Juhl Jrgensen, was worried about Wilson taking retributive action.)

No coup materialized. About a week later, Gtzsche was formally booted from the board. About a month after that, he was summarily fired from his job as the director of the Nordic Cochrane Center.

* * *

The Cochrane/Gtzsche split has by now been made to bear the weight of a number of disparate narratives by the journals and the medical press. One popular narrative posits Gtzsche as a truth-seeking maverick the spirit of evidence-based medicine incarnate going up against the creeping commercialism and bias-tolerance of mainstream science. Peter is willing to take positions that are sometimes very unpopular and probably create a lot of anxiety and even enmity in some circles," said John Ioannidis, a Stanford professor and prominent supporter of evidence-based medicine. We need people who are willing to take unpopular positions and provide the data.

Another narrative describes Gtzsche as a practitioner of an older, perhaps outmoded model of evidence-based medicine in which reviewing study data is viewed as a narrow task as, essentially, math which has since been superseded by the more open, pluralistic version supposedly taken up by Cochrane since Wilsons hiring.

Both views were recently unpacked in a 2019 paper published in the Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice. The papers corresponding author, University of Oxford professor Trish Greenhalgh, has in recent years emerged as one of the most prominent internal critics of the direction the evidence-based medicine movement has taken since its inception. In the 2019 paper, she takes particular issue with how the movement prioritizes clinical trial data over and above a physicians intuition or knowledge.

(Greenhalgh said she could not comment for this article, citing the possibility of a legal challenge to her piece from Gtzsche. Gtzsche, in a private, 11-page rebuttal he sent to Greenhalgh, which he shared with Undark, claims that the article is libelous and riddled with biases, errors and inexcusable oversights.)

Evidence-based medicines detractors further point out that its very name makes it difficult to criticize. How do you argue against evidence-based medicine? asked Mark Tonelli, a professor of medicine at the University of Washington. One way would be to destabilize the very concept of evidence.

Randomized controlled trials, which are typically conducted by scientists who dont practice medicine, and often funded by people who want to sell drugs, are not designed with the patient in mind. For one thing, as Tonelli pointed out, these trials tend to weed out patients with more than one illness, meaning these drugs are being tested on people who bear little resemblance to huge swaths of the patient population. (What elderly diabetic patient doesnt have comorbidities? asked Tonelli.) And as Greenhalgh pointed out in a 2014 paper titled "Evidence-Based Medicine: A Movement in Crisis?" which set off a fervent round of soul searching in the evidence-based medicine community the results of randomized controlled trials may be statistically but not clinically significant.

More importantly, according to these same critics, in elevating randomized controlled trials, the evidence-based medicine movement has consciously demoted all other forms of knowledge: observational studies, clinical experience, and the unique, un-averageable needs of the patient on the other side of the doctors desk. Greenhalgh suggests, in her Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice paper, that this has lately begun to change, citing an epistemic crisis in the movement. Gtzsche, she argues, is trying to resist the epistemic forces that are redefining his world.

The implication is that in sacrificing Gtzsche, Cochrane is taking a step towards a reformed, less aggressively doctrinal evidence-based medicine. The problem, from what Gtzsche has argued, is that he agrees with much of what Tonelli and Greenhalgh have to say. Rather than relying solely on randomized controlled trials, he says, observational studies and case reports can be very important for finding harms.

In any case, exactly how dismissing Gtzsche would lead to any real change in Cochrane is unclear, as is any specific way in which this epistemic crisis has led to tangible changes for the better. According to Tonelli, these concerns have not trickled down to clinical practice. For people like Greenhalgh in particular, theres a feeling that this can be solved, he said. For me, its more of a true epistemic limitation and the only way to get past it is to acknowledge the severe limitations of clinical research for practice and then re-broaden our approach to how we view medical knowledge. Despite being primarily targeted at patients, the conclusions of "Deadly Psychiatry" might provide one example of an evidence-based medicine troublingly abstracted from real peoples needs.

David Healy, a psychiatrist, prominent psychiatry critic, and sympathetic ally of Gtzsche's, pointed out that if youre not constrained by the need to actually treat people and dont see that medications can be helpful, then its easy to drift into thinking it would be best if we didnt have them. And I think Peter has toppled a little bit too much over that way."

* * *

This past March, Gtzsche launched an organization called the Institute for Scientific Freedom, which aims to preserve honesty and integrity in science. It was part of Gtzsche's campaign to avenge himself for the perceived wrongs visited upon him by Cochrane, and to further the work he once did at the Nordic Cochrane Center. (The article he wrote to announce the institute, published on the psychiatry-skeptic website Mad in America, contained 12 paragraphs on his expulsion from Cochrane and on Cochranes perceived moral rot, and roughly one sentence on what the institute would actually consist of.)

Gtzsche's home, 20 to 30 minutes by car from the center of Copenhagen, hummed with activity on the afternoon before the institute's opening symposium, which was to be held the following day. Among those milling about the kitchen were Peter Wilmshurst, the British cardiologist who in 1986 had blown the whistle on Sterling-Winthrop, a drug company which had tried to suppress his negative findings about the cardiac drug amrinone. (He was able to blow the whistle a second time, two decades later, when a medical device company that had recruited him for help tried passing off misleading data.)

Also in attendance was the U.S. psychiatrist Peter Breggin, who at 83 years old, is still capable of generating controversy as when, last year, he served as an expert witness for Michelle Carter, the woman who, as a teenager, pressured her boyfriend into killing himself. (Breggin has made his name in part as an expert witness for people who commit crimes while on prescription drugs, which Carter was at the time.)

Pamela Popper, another of the next day's lecturers and a prominent advocate for healthy eating as a substitute for medication and a business partner of Breggins was also visiting. A naturopath, Popper runs a popular YouTube channel, and it had driven some of sign-ups for the next days conference. She wasn't surprised, she said, by what happened to Gtzsche. "We've all been come after," she said. "It's a badge of honor really, to be pursued by them. It must mean you're doing something right."

With Gtzsche, of course, the pursuit is reciprocal. He is infamous for coming after people, even his own colleagues. Two months before Edinburgh, Gtzsche co-authored a critique of Cochrane's recent HPV vaccine review, which had concluded that there is high-certainty evidence that HPV vaccines protect against cervical precancer in adolescent girls and women. Gtzsche's paper accused Cochranes researchers of excluding nearly half the relevant trials and incompletely assessing certain adverse events and safety signals.

From all the available evidence, this paper was not the cause of Gtzsche's expulsion. His two co-authors, also members of Cochrane, were not removed from the organization. The news coverage, though, tended to link the two events, and Gtzsche was subsequently taken up as a hero by anti-vaccination groups, who assumed he shared their worldview. The Danish researcher appeared to outside observers not to be at pains to disabuse his new followers of this notion. If anything, he appeared to be courting it.

A few weeks before the symposium, Gtzsche's face had cropped up in the promotional materials for a workshop run by Physicians for Informed Consent, a prominent anti-vaccination group, to be held just a few days after the opening of his institute. Gtzsche was to deliver its keynote, alongside such anti-vaccine luminaries as Toni Bark and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. When the news was picked up on Twitter, Gtzsche quickly pulled out. When asked about it, he claimed he hadn't realized who the other speakers would be.

The Institute for Scientific Freedoms symposium was held at Bethesda, a historic church in central Copenhagen. The one-day event was to be made up mostly of short talks (sample titles: "Medical journals are an extension of the marketing arm of pharmaceutical companies"; "The many forms of scientific censorship in psychiatry") with two audience Q&As, one before the lunch break and one at the end. There were about 80 or 90 people in attendance, some who appeared to be in their 20s, but most who looked to be at or beyond middle-age. Gtzsche, appropriately, looked nearly priestlike, standing on the stage in all-black.

The fact that Gtzsche had inadvertently organized a kind of impromptu anti-vaccination convention became clear during the first Q&A, after the fourth or fifth successive question about vaccines. One questioner asked Peter Aaby who conducts vaccine research in Africa why, given the apparent abundance of studies showing that measles is actually good for you, we don't try and study what happens when you give certain African children large doses of Vitamin C instead of "injecting them full of toxins" (i.e., giving them the measles vaccine).

"Could I perhaps ask also for questions about ... not vaccines?" Gtzsche asked eventually.

The next questioner promptly took the mic and said they had a question about vaccines.

"Please, please, please talk about something else now!" said Gtzsche.

"I just want to say that the BCG part of tuberculosis, which is in the BCG vaccine, was never on the schedule in the U.S., and tuberculosis was the number two killer in "

"But please, excuse me, this is still "

The woman talked over him, so Gtzsche raised his voice to match: I ask you very kindly to not ask a question about vaccines at this point in time.

Iain Chalmers had flown in from London to attend the event. Hed had to duck out early, but said later by phone that he had been troubled by much of what hed managed to see.

The older psychiatrist, he said, referencing Peter Breggin, "basically, he seemed to feel that undying love was a good treatment for psychosis. And referencing Pam Poppers talk: She seemed to think you could stay healthy all your life if you eat the right foods. Not to mention the audience, and their worryingly sustained applause at certain lines from the stage, notably those seeming to be against vaccination.

It had become clear to Chalmers, at least, that in taking on the establishment, Gtzsche had attracted the wrong crowd. He didn't mention any of this at the conference. But before leaving for the airport, Chalmers relayed one bit of tough-love advice: namely, that Gtzsche should reconsider making himself the public face of his new organization. Nothing against him it's just, he isn't much of a showman. Sort of an anti-showman, really.

There had been plans to publish a transcript of the Q&A, but these were quickly scuttled "too embarrassing," Gtzsche admitted later. The whole thing seemed to alarm him. "We were quite disturbed by these people," he said.

* * *

Gtzsche had some trouble getting his recent book, "Survival in an Overmedicated World," published in English. He said he never needed an agent before, but had to hire one this time. After a round of rejections, Gtzsche says, the agent informed him that American publishers thought it somewhat irresponsible to publish a manual about how to bypass doctors and seek out the best medical information via the internet. You should not trust your doctor. You should look up the evidence yourself, he told me, explaining the books thesis.

This project might represent, depending on your perspective, either the vilest perversion or the perfect apotheosis of the evidence-based medicine ethos. If we reduce the practicing doctor to an algorithm, mechanically relaying the relevant treatment as prescribed by the latest data, then dispensing with that doctor with her biases, her blind spots, her susceptibility to the latest marketing or lobbying efforts seems a sensible next step.

The book has appeared in several languages, with the English version published at the end of April. Its opening paragraph is instructive:

"'You do not ask a barber if you need a haircut.' Most people have heard this expression or something similar. Yet we willingly allow our doctors to subject us to various diagnostic investigations and treatments which may be financially beneficial for themselves. Health care is riddled with financial conflicts of interest, and even when your doctor does not directly benefit, there are many other reasons you should be on the alert."

Having started his career critiquing the drug companies, Gtzsche's circle of scorn has since widened to take in mammographers, psychiatrists, scores of his own colleagues, and, now, seemingly every single doctor in the world. According to him, he has another book Vaccines: Truth, Lies, and Controversy, coming out in February.

As for whether he's through with Cochrane, Gtzsche said:"It's not over yet."

* * *

Daniel Kolitz is a writer living in Brooklyn.

This article was originally published on Undark. Read the original article.

Originally posted here:

"Evidence-based medicine" and the expulsion of Peter Gtzsche - Salon

Medicine Hat outscores Thunderbirds in up and down game – MyNorthwest.com

Henrik Rybinski scored his 10th of the year but it wouldn't be enough as the Medicine Hat Tigers won 8-5. (Ryan McCracken)

Through 40 minutes of play Saturday night, the Seattle Thunderbirds hung with the leagues top-scoring club.

Seattle trailed the Medicine Hat Tigers 5-4 at the start of the third period and was on the power play, with a chance to tie. On the opening faceoff, the Thunderbirds turned the puck over and it led to a short-handed goal by Medicine Hats James Hamblin, 12 seconds into the period.

It was a backbreaker goal that the Thunderbirds could not recover from as Medicine Hat would take the game 8-5.

We give up that, that one hurts, Seattle head coach Matt ODette said. We were pretty amped up and fired up going into the third, the same situation as last night, chance to win a game going into the third by taking over momentum and capitalizing on some of the good work wed put in. That put us back, it was one of those key moments that we werent dialed in.

Seattle (14-20-2-1) wasted a hat trick from Andrej Kukuca as well as two-point nights from four other players in the loss. Medicine Hat (25-11-1-1) had two players score twice, including Brett Kemp who also added a pair of assists.

After a strong first period where Seattle erased an early 2-0 deficit to tie the game at 3-3, Medicine Hat was able to turn the game into an up and down affair in the second. Its the type of game that benefited the home club.

The Tigers outshot the Thunderbirds 20-9 in the second, scored twice and left with a one-goal lead.

I thought we had our game going in the first, that was a really good first period, ODette said. The track meet started up in the second period. Thats their style, thats what they want. I thought we hung tough and gave ourselves a chance going into the third and it just got away from us there.

Seattle had its chances Saturday.

Medicine Hats style allowed the Thunderbirds to create a number of odd-man rushes for themselves. While they scored five goals, they missed on several more that could have made a difference.

Weve got guys developing into those offensive type players that finish those chances, ODette said. Its a work in progress. Weve got some dynamic offensive guys that dont miss very often.

Kukuca didnt miss, and Saturday was another strong game for the Thunderbirds top line.

Henrik Rybinski scored a goal and added an assist, playing in Medicine Hat for the first time since he asked for a trade from the Tigers last season. Playing on Rybinskis wing, rookie Conner Roulette added a goal and an assist while Jeri Keltie-Leon had two helpers.

The goals were positive for Seattle, and the Thunderbirds have scored 10 times over the first two games of their weekend swing, but the up-and-down play is not in their DNA.

Seattle got sucked into the track meet at the cost of getting the puck low and wearing down the Tigers.

Its hard because they are risky off their offense, and they do give up odd-man rushes going the other way, ODette said. I thought we could have defended better at times. Some of the set plays, they scored two goals directly off faceoffswe need to be dialed in and focused in on those plays.

The loss didnt cost the Thunderbirds in their quest for a playoff race as the Tri-City Americans lost in Portland on Saturday. The two teams remain tied for the final playoff spot in the Western Conference.

Seattle will finish off its busy weekend Sunday afternoon with a game against the Swift Current Broncos.

Game Notes

The Thunderbirds are playing without defenseman Simon Kubicek who was playing in the World Junior Championships in the Czech Republic. Kubiceks Team Czech has been eliminated but ODette said that Kubicek wouldnt rejoin the team in time for Sundays game.

Kukucas hat trick gives him 14 goals on the season and just like last year, hes getting hot in the second half. He had a five-game point streak snapped on New Years Eve but has been back to scoring in the two games to follow. Over his last eight games, hes scored seven times while piling up 15 points.

Rybinskis goal was his 10th on the year and the Florida Panthers prospect has points in five straight games, four of which were multi-point outputs.

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Medicine Hat outscores Thunderbirds in up and down game - MyNorthwest.com

WVU Medicine doctor offers tips on how to make resolutions stick throughout the year – WBOY.com

MORGANTOWN, W.Va. With the start of a new year, also comes new resolutions. However, some find that it can be very hard to stick to those goals, but one WVU doctor wants to help.

Dr. Dana King, a professor of family medicine at WVU Medicine has tips that he said that can help people stick to their health-related resolutions in 2020.

King said that many people dont think resolutions are a good idea but that hes actually a fan because they are a good way to set the course for the rest of the year. However, he encourages people to not shoot for the moon by aiming for something unattainable.

He said proper dieting and exercise, for example, are two things that should be done in conjunction if you want the best results. King said he knows this because he and his colleagues have done the research but that its not necessary to overwhelm yourself with both.

If you say Im going to go for a walk every day youre not exactly having to join a gym or get new clothes. So physical activity and diet and of course stopping smoking or vaping, all working together would be great but really pick one and go for it this year.

King said he encourages people to consult with their primary care providers because they can give advice on dieting, exercising and tips on smoking cessation.

Specifically, he said, patients should get in touch with WVU Medicine and its physicians because they have free classes on how to quit smoking or vaping, and on proper diet and exercise.

We offer classes here starting Jan. 6 right here at University Town Center at WVU Family Medicine, King said. Theres a free class for smokers at 6 oclock, theres also a free class about dieting and weight loss either at 10:30 in the morning or at 5. But there are loads of resources throughout the community and classes, obviously, are starting this year because they want to take advantage of your new years resolutions.

At the end of the day, King said, he just wants people to remember that resolutions are a good and positive thing, as long as they are reasonable.

Sometimes people think of new years resolutions as something negative or something you have to give up for the year but really you can make a positive one, King said. You can say Im going to eat one vegetable at supper everyday or Im going to be grateful and have a grateful moment every day. So you can turn it into a positive.

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WVU Medicine doctor offers tips on how to make resolutions stick throughout the year - WBOY.com

UW Medicine on how to deal with winter SAD and gloomy weather – MyNorthwest.com

A study released in November 2019 declared Seattle the gloomiest city in the nation. That being so, there are ways to battle low winter mood that descends upon many here in the Pacific Northwest every year.

Study names Seattle the nations gloomiest city, Seattleites shrug

The November assigned something called a gloom score to each city. Seattles was a whopping 90.90.

Its hard because a lot of time you wake up in the morning, its dark, you come home in the afternoon, and its still dark, said UW Medicines Dr. Megan Feng. A lot of people come in with concerns about feeling a little down.

Dr. Feng suggests a variety of different methods to battle whats known as Seasonal Affective Disorder, or aptly, SAD, for short. Among those methods is purchasing some sort of a light therapy device.

Including brands like HappyLight, these devices mimic the presence of sunshine during the winter months, and can even help with the process of waking up on dark mornings.

Rainy weather and dark skies overtake Puget Sound for foreseeable future

Normally what you want to do is turn it on early in the morning, usually within 10 minutes of waking up, Feng described. Then, youll kind of just put off to the side as youre doing your daily activities, eating your breakfast, reading the paper. Just having it in your vicinity, letting your eyes absorb that light stimuli can be helpful.

Other methods for treating SAD include exercising, eating healthy foods, and keeping up with social activities.

More and more were recognizing that these are really significant and impactful to peoples quality of life, said Meng.

Continued here:

UW Medicine on how to deal with winter SAD and gloomy weather - MyNorthwest.com

‘Evidence-Based Medicine’ and the Expulsion of Peter Gtzsche – Undark Magazine

While the tone of the article is that Gotzchke is now questionable because his questions have extended toward the field of medicine in general, one would ask why should this be surprising or indeed, unethical? He has spent his time trawling through the negative depths of the medical industry and perhaps has uncovered even more than he expected.

The man should be judged on the data he produces and not through any bias toward those who question vaccines or medications. Indeed, everyone should question everything which is done to their body. That is common sense.

Doctors are not gods and they often make mistakes as we see from the death rate, in third place, from conventional medicine, most of it from prescribed drugs. More so because the chemists control the medical industry and influence research outcomes as has become increasingly clear.

It is not just Gotzche who has raised questions about the reliability of research. Editors of both The Lancet and The New England Journal of Medicine have done so and the work of Dr John Ioannadis concluded, most published research is false.

Methinks the writer of this article betrays his own prejudices rather than revealing Peter Gotzches.

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'Evidence-Based Medicine' and the Expulsion of Peter Gtzsche - Undark Magazine

Pacific College of Oriental Medicine To Change Name To Pacific College of Health and Science – PRNewswire

SAN DIEGO, Jan. 2, 2020 /PRNewswire/ --Pacific College of Oriental Medicine (PCOM) announced that effective today it will be formally changing its name to the Pacific College of Health and Science.

The change reflects the interests of the school's students, faculty, and alumni that now extend well beyond Chinese medicine. The time has come for the college to adopt a name that embraces that diversity and which will meet the needs of future generations, as well as today's nursing, acupuncture, massage, and health science students. The change also signals Chinese medicine's entrance into the mainstream of healthcare and medical science. No longer just complementary or alternative, Chinese medicine will be taught side by side with nursing and the science of human performance. Pacific College COO Malcolm Youngren states, "The school's central vision of being a recognized leader in delivering traditional medicine and integrative health science education remains as consistent as it has in the past while looking forward to the future."

Pacific College's newest offerings include the Master of Science in Health and Human Performance and the Medical Cannabis Certificate based on the standards of the National Council of State Boards of Nursing. Additional undergraduate and graduate nursing degrees are currently under development, all of which include a Chinese medical component.

According to Pacific College President Jack Miller, "By teaching nurses and other healthcare providers the principles of Chinese medicine, a truly integrative, patient-centered medical team is created. There are so many promising developments across the entire spectrum of health and sciencethat can and should be embraced by institutions of Chinese medicine for the benefit of their students and alumni, and ultimately, their patients."

While the name change reflects the forward thinking nature of the institution's academic leadership, the values and mission remain the same: improving lives by educating and inspiring compassionate, skilled leaders of traditional medicine and integrative health sciences.

To learn more, please reach out to Nathalie Turotte: nturotte@pacificcollege.edu

SOURCE Pacific College of Health and Science

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Pacific College of Oriental Medicine To Change Name To Pacific College of Health and Science - PRNewswire

Bargain Shop closing their doors – CHAT News Today

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Bargain Shop closing their doors - CHAT News Today

Poachers in South Africa slaughter 16 lions and hack off faces and claws for medicine – Metro.co.uk

Just one lion cub survived the mass slaughter in South Africa (Picture: Jamie Pyatt)

Sixteen lions have been brutally murdered and their faces and claws hacked off to be sold as traditional medicine.

Evil poachers broke into an enclosure in South Africa to kill the big cats, including lionesses who were within days of giving birth.

It is believed they were fed poisoned chicken meat and just one newborn cub survived the slaughter.

The lions were living with Gert Blom at Predators Rock Bush Lodge in Rustenburg, North West Province.

He went down to their enclosure on Friday morning and found his two male lions and six lionesses missing.

He followed drag trails to behind a perimeter wall, where he found them all butchered.

Gert said: They had hacked off 32 paws for the claws and eight of their snouts for their teeth after killing them with poisoned chicken which is a really agonising death for the lions.

It is cruelty that is beyond belief and an absolutely terrible sight to behold when you see magnificent predators lying there covered in flies minus their faces and their paws.

Two of the lionesses were heavily pregnant and a post mortem showed that they died with three unborn cubs inside each.

Another lioness had given birth the day before she was poisoned and two of her cubs perished after drinking her poisoned milk.

Just one survived, who has been named Yoda, and the two-day-old is currently being bottle-fed by Gert.

He added: With the eight dead cubs six unborn and the two that were almost certainly poisoned from their mothers milk that means the poachers effectively killed 16 lions.

The poachers scaled two 2.4metre-high walls and threw poisoned chicken over an electric fence and into the enclosure.

They then used bolt cutters on a number of gates and dragged the lions corpses behind a wall to butcher them.

Gert said he believed there were four poachers as he had found four sets of footprints.

The poisoned lions were all aged between three and four.

The male lions were called Aslan and Hollow and the females Noela, Sia, Sussie, Misty, Lilly, and Frye.

South African Police spokesman Brigadier Sabata Mokgwabone said they were investigating but there have been no arrests.

Traditional witch doctors or healers us the lion body parts to make potions known as muti for local customers who believe it gives them powers to ward off evil spirts or bring luck.

There is also a growing international trade in lion bones as traders in East Asia turn the bones into wine and medicine.

Many of the lions have been killed in the canned hunting trade, where big cats are bred to be shot by hunters.

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Poachers in South Africa slaughter 16 lions and hack off faces and claws for medicine - Metro.co.uk

Opinion | Laughter and gardening make the best medicine – Grand River Sachem

Happy New Year everyone! This year, you will be able to astound your friends and family with these little-known facts about gardens and plants.

For example, did you know that a sunflower is actually made up of 1,000 to 2,000 individual flowers on one stalk?

Or, that there are more micro-organisms in one teaspoon of soil than there are people on Earth? They keep your soil full of nutrients.

In addition, according to studies, plants really do respond to sound. So, keep talking, singing and playing music to keep your plants happy and growing.

Also, did you know that butterflies are more attracted to weeds than to your plants? This is because the breeding process for many of the flowering plants we buy in stores has eliminated a lot of their fragrance. Make sure you sow heirloom variety seeds and plants for more butterflies.

Heres another interesting tidbit: if you sprinkle baking soda into your tomato soil, it will sweeten your crop and make them less acidic.

Composting doesnt have to be a long and laborious process. For a quick way to cheat on composting, apply coffee grounds, eggshells, chopped banana peels and other organic matter directly into the soil when planting.

Now we all know some fun (and silly) facts about gardening. Share them with your friends for a chuckle. Laughter combined with gardening makes the best medicine.

Why not join other happy gardeners and would-be gardeners at the Dunnville Horticultural Societys next program night, Jan. 16?

We will be welcoming local garden expert and group favourite Lester Fretz.

We meet every third Thursday at the Optimist Club Hall, 101 Main St., from 7 to 9 p.m. Or visit us online at our Facebook page, or website http://www.dunnvillehortandgardenclub.org

For questions or comments, contact president Deb Zynomirski at 416-566-9337 or debzyn@gmail.com.

Marlene Link is a member of the Dunnville Horticultural Society.

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Opinion | Laughter and gardening make the best medicine - Grand River Sachem

Toya Bush-Harris Broke Her Ankle: See the Photo of the Injury – Bravo

Married to Medicine's Toya Bush-Harris is starting the new year on the right foot and, for the moment, it's her only one. While we're not actually sure which ankle she did injure based on the photo she shared, she confirmed that she's broken one of her ankles and will be spending the next few weeks healing.

She confirmed the news on Instagram and shared a photo of the injury. "My life for the next 5-6 weeks. I Guess God needed my undivided attention," she captioned the photo adding the hashtags: #brokeankleproblems, #missingtennis, and #havingtroublesittingstill.

At least Toya has found the perfect way to spend her downtime by resting in front of a fire.

Regardless of the injury, Toya is still looking forward to the new year. "Happppppy New Year!!!! Lets make 2020 so amazing that we cant help but Thank God for Every Single Day!!!" she shared on Instagram. She hashtagged the message: #praisedance, #thankful, #humbled, #grateful, and #abundance.

Get well soon, Toya!

The Daily Dish is your source for all things Bravo, from behind-the-scenes scoop to breaking news, exclusive interviews, photos, original videos, and, oh, so much more. Subscribe to The Daily Dish podcast, join our Facebook group, and follow us on Instagramfor the latest news hot off the presses. Sign up to become a Bravo Insider and be the first to get exclusive extras.

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Toya Bush-Harris Broke Her Ankle: See the Photo of the Injury - Bravo

Human body parts found rotting next to abandoned medicine after thieves broke into medical waste compound – The Sun

HAZARDOUS body parts were found rotting at a medical waste site by two burglars nearly a year after it closed down.

Intruders Barry Watson and Jamie Pollard broke into the compound in Newcastle over two days to swipe medication left lying around.

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But the pair had to undergo decontamination due to the biohazard they had been exposed to after the medical waste was left to rot, Chronicle Live reports.

Investigators also discovered decomposing body parts left abandoned after Healthcare Environmental Services Ltd lost their NHS contract and went bankrupt in December 2018.

The companystopped trading after becoming embroiled in a waste stockpiling scandal.

Shocking pictures show bin liners full of hazardous waste piled up in skips inside the closed-down compound.

Prescription drugs in buckets were also "easily accessible to people who breached the security", Newcastle Crown Court heard.

A backlog of hundreds of tonnes of clinical and human waste was finally cleared last month.

Watson and Pollard have now been sentenced to six months suspended for 18 months with a community order after admitting two counts of burglary.

The court was told the pair simply forced a shutter to get into the site on September 6 before returning the next day to stock up again.

A security officer saw Pollard and Watson attempt to flee with a plastic bag full of drugs and gave chase.

Barry Robson, prosecuting, said: "He ran after them and shouted at them to stop but they didn't.

"Watson turned at one point and swung a punch towards him which missed and Pollard shouted 'Just do him'.

"The security guard let them escape because he feared for his safety."

After the second break-in, the pair were caught and firefighters had to be called due to the biohazard and both burglars had to be decontaminated before going to hospital.

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Vic Laffey, for Pollard, said: "It doesn't take much research to see there were dozens of large bin liners in the yard.

"Quite how this situation developed is beyond belief, quite frankly.

"On entering the premises, it seems that outdated prescription drugs were freely available and lying around and they went back the second day because of that."

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Human body parts found rotting next to abandoned medicine after thieves broke into medical waste compound - The Sun

The Politicization of the Sacrament of Penance – National Catholic Register

Giovanni di Paolo di Grazia, The Creation of the World and Expulsion from Paradise, 1445

The proposed ecological examinations of conscience only serve to politicize Penance before we even enter the confessional.

With the push for same-sex marriage, the past few years have witnessed the politicization of matrimony. As divorced-and-remarried persons demand Communion irrespective of the status of their matrimonial vows, we have also seen the politicization of the Eucharist.

Perhaps, then, it was only a matter of time before the Sacrament of Penance was politicized. And in the frenzied push for environmental examinations of conscience, that is exactly what is happening right now.

To preface this discussion, we need to recognize mans proper rights and duties with regard to his natural environment.

To be sure, individuals have a moral duty to care for the eartha duty evidenced in Genesis 2:15: The LORD God took the man and put him in the garden of Eden to till it and keep it. This is a two-fold duty: to develop (till) it and protect (keep) it. This should be a joyous duty, rooted in mans reciprocal love of God. As Pope Saint John Paul II saw it, caring for the created world is an expression of gratitude toward God.

Along with the duty, man has a corresponding right to develop Creation in order to support and advance himself, his family, and society. This right, however, does not permit man to indiscriminately engineer nature or pollute the environment.

By extension, societies have rights and duties to protect the environment. At the 1990 World Day of Peace, Pope Saint John Paul II stated, The State should also actively endeavour within its own territory to prevent destruction of the atmosphere and biosphereensuring that its citizens are not exposed to dangerous pollutants or toxic wastes. Similarly, the Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church states, A correct understanding of the environment prevents the utilitarian reduction of nature to a mere object to be manipulated and exploited.

Even the greenest environmentalist would likely agree with the above statement of the Compendium, but it is in its very next sentence that company begins to part: At the same time, it must not absolutize nature and place it above the dignity of the human person himself. In this latter case, one can go so far as to divinize nature or the earth...

The Compendium gets to the heart of the problem here by illustrating the two-fold environmentalist temptation: first, to worship creation rather than Creator; second, to view the natural world as more important than man himself.

These interrelated temptations are hardly new. The strange and apostate god of pantheism (everything is god) dates back to the ancient Greeks, and the Dutch philosopher Baruch Spinoza found a more modern audience for pantheism in the 1600s. Though the name Spinoza is rarely on the lips of modern men, his influence is on their minds. His essential argument was that everything is part of one substance; from this perspective, there is no substantive difference between a baby chipmunk and a baby human. That would be dangerous enough, but some of todays environmentalists take Spinoza one step further.

Some argue that a baby chipmunk is substantively better than a baby human. Why? Becausein the minds of some hyper-environmentalistswhile the baby chipmunk poses no threat to the environment, the baby human does. Therefore, he must be stopped, even before he is formed in the womb. That is why population control

is an essential ingredient in environmentalism and terms like responsible parenthood are commonthe clear implication being that the most responsible parenthood is no parenthood at all.

This conceptthat man and nature have equal ontological value, or that man is subservient to natureis diametrically opposed to Catholic teaching. The Church recognizes that man is created in the image and likeness of God and is called to share in the unending happiness of the Divine Trinity. Man transcends the material worlda claim that no other creature on earth can make.

Mans worth exceeds the material world, and not only in its component parts but in its totality. By virtue of her divine likeness, one tiny girl in the womb is greater than the rest of the physical universe combined. Add up the Pacific Ocean, the North Star, and Saturnadd up all the oceans and stars and planetsand they will never equal the worth of one baby girl. They will dry up and burn out, but she is immortal.

She is loved by God. And so are you.

In our sins, we fail to recognize or fully accept all this. We fail to love God with our whole heart, mind, soul and strength. We fail to love our neighbor. We fail to love ourselves.

If you want to write an examination of conscience, seek to find ways we have failed to love the immortals in our lives. Seek to find the ways we have sinned against those whom we are called to love: God, neighbor, self. At best, the talk about sins against the environment and eco-sins obscures this focus and re-directs it at mere matter. An examination of conscience hyper-focused on ecological sins constitutes a dangerous diversion that seems to flirt with the divinization of nature.

If a man intentionally harms the environment, that may very well constitute a sin. But, ultimately, it is not a sin against the environment. Rather, it is a sin against God, Who entrusts us with dominion over Creation and directs us to care for our neighbor. That is not a semantic difference.

The worst tragedy of our age is not that man abuses the environment for his own pleasure; rather, it is that man abuses man for his own pleasure. That statement is evidenced by the prevalence and promotion of abortion, pornography and adultery. Of course, it is not politically correct to refer to these things as sins anymore. Instead, we encourage mea culpas on the misuse of plastics and maxima culpas on the failure to recycle.

It is no secret that both local and foreign governments are trying to encroach upon the Sacrament of Penancein effect, to try to force priests into revealing what occurs in the confessional. But the proposed ecological examinations of conscience only serve to politicize Penance before we even enter the confessional.

To those who insist on these eco-examinations, I would point out that Scripture, Tradition and the Magisterium have already provided us with ample direction in terms of our environmental responsibilities. And the concept of quasi-ecclesiastical/quasi-governmental agencies drawing up examinations of conscience offends every Catholic sensibility. Rather than an examination of conscience written by those whose goalsstrangely enoughoften seem to align with the political Left, I would suggest an examination of conscience that was written long ago and has served us well: The Ten Commandments.

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The Politicization of the Sacrament of Penance - National Catholic Register

Chernobyl, selfies and radioactive raves: The art project illuminating our dark obsession with disaster – The Independent

Lasers danced across a teetering steel structure and poi dancers swirled fluorescent batons. At the foot of this spectacle was a ringmaster artist and DJ Valeriy Korshunov, clad in a gold cape sending a trance soundtrack whirling into the tainted air.

It was as if Burning Man, or at least a part of Glastonbury, had landed in this unlikely festival site the Dugaradar in Chernobyls exclusion zone. Korshunovs company Artefacts aim was to create the largest digital sculpture in the world, and in doing so, he put on thisradioactive rave. On the face of it a resistible offer, something powerful propelled me into this tainted space to witness Korshunovs sinister but sublime son et lumiere on the vast metal frame.

A danse macabre it might have been, but Korshunovs post-fallout piece is part of a national florescence. Ukraine, Europes second poorest country, is presenting itself anew to the world and one can make the case that 2019 has seen the emergence of cool Ukrainia (as it turns out, its country branding was inspired by the UKs efforts). With EU accession on the cards, Ukraine is having a cultural moment that repudiates the world of fake news, associated with the old Soviet overlords and their supporters.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

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Chernobyl, selfies and radioactive raves: The art project illuminating our dark obsession with disaster - The Independent

The Evolution of Dance Music Genres in the 2010s – EDMTunes

Believe it or not the 2010s are over. Whats even stranger than that is realizing that EDM as we know it has existed entirely within this decade. Every event, every evolution, every EDM blog all began in the 2010s. Sure dance music existed in some form (trance, techno, prog) existed prior to 2010, but it was an entirely different thing back then. In this article we trance the evolution of EDM in the 2010s through the rise and fall of various genres.

The beginning of the decade saw EDM starting to come together as we came to know it today. David Guetta had shown the dance music world that dance music tracks could push into the mainstream. At this time Swedish House Mafia begin to make it big with hits like One and Miami 2 Ibiza. The group also released their first documentary, Until One, which capped off with the groups first performance at Ultra Music Festival.

In the Progressive House realm, Calvin Harris was riding high with tracks like You Used To Hold Me and Avicii began his rapid ascendancy. Avicii was all over the XM Radio BPM and Electro channels with legendary tracks like Insomnia, My Feelings For You, and Seek Bromance.

Also at this time, Electro began to rise with deadmau5 releasing his 4 x 4 = 12 album. Of course, trance continued humming along with the release of Armin van Buurens Mirage album as well.

This mini-era tracks the rise and fall of Swedish House Mafia. This period was the reign of Progressive Anthem House, Dubstep, and Electro. All of the biggest names in EDM rose to prominence here. Avicii, Swedish House Mafia, Skrillex, Zedd, Tiesto, Porter Robinson, Dada Life, Bingo Players, Calvin Harris, Hardwell, Afrojack, Steve Aoki, Fedde Le Grand, deadmau5, you name it.

In this period youll find hundreds of legendary singles, as you had tracks pumping out from big labels like Spinnin and Armada but also the labels of each of the SHM boys.

This was also the era that the EDM festival grew into a global phenomenon. EDC Las Vegas started in 2011 after its messy year in LA in 2010. Tomorrowland had its most legendary editions in 2011, 2012, and 2013. The most-watched festival aftermovie of all time is Tomorrowlands 2012 edition. This was also the time when Ultra and Tomorrowland began livestreamining the festivals, making fans all over the world feel FOMO for the very first time.

Also within this era was the short-lived but well remembered Complextro era. This was Electro that was sped up and intensified by DJs like Porter Robinson, Zedd, and Wolfgang Gartner. Just as quickly as it rose, it fell as Zedd and Porter abandoned the sound completely after 2013.

Of course this era capped off when Swedish House Mafia announced their breakup. The final shows at Ultra 2013 marked the end of this era. Swedish House Mafia led the Anthem House movement, and things changed without them at the top.

The next major era of EDM began in the golden age, but through a track that was actually made earlier. Quintino and Sandro Silvas smash hit Epic, was actually released in 2011. However, the track began a new life as a festival staple when EDM festivals took off. Everybody was dropping it and the crowd was loving it every time. Swedish House Mafia famously incorporated it into their sets along with other big room tracks like Dimitri Vegas & Like Mikes Wakanda.

Big Room officially came into its own when Tiestos Musical Freedom label dropped a bomb called Cannonball onto the EDM world. This track exploded and the resulting obsession caused DJs all over the scene to emulate the style and Big Room was born. This culminated in the biggest track of the big room era, Tremor. This one surged in popularity years after its release and still remains a huge festival banger.

The leader of this era was Hardwell as his Ultra 2013 set catapulted him into the stratosphere. He captured the Big Room sound completely and he pushed Big Room forward more than anybody else in that era. He took the mantle of closing Ultra after SHM and his Revealed label released dozens of huge tracks.

This was the era when the undercard DJs of 2011 and 2012 began to reach headliner status. Alesso, Dannic, Showtek, Porter Robinson, R3hab, Zedd and others rose to fill the void left by Swedish House Mafia.

The growth in Big Room also dovetailed into a resurgence of trance. Beginning in 2012 trance began to flirt with Big Room sounds thanks to DJs like W&W, Dash Berlin, and of course Armin van Buuren. W&Ws The Code grew into a festival smash and showed the successful merging of trance and big room sounds. Then the duo remixed Armin van Buurens This Is What It Feels Like, and became legends. Trance grew into one of the bigger genres in this period through the Big Room sound and artists like Dash Berlin, Gareth Emery, and Cosmic Gate were playing mainstage sets.

By 2015 everybody had hit Big Room fatigue. The copycat movement had turned every producer into a Big Room producer, and something fresh was needed. It turned out that once again, Tiestos Musical Freedom label was going to launch a new artist and a new trend. Oliver Heldens became the vehicle that began Future House, which was a slightly more energetic version of deep house that focused on grooves. This sound grew and grew and became the new bandwagon trend. Everybody ditched Big Room to start making Future House. Soon, Future House led to further exploration of Deep House.

On the other end of the spectrum, Trap music was exploding in popularity. It started out as Festival Trap, which was a trap remix of big room festival anthems. Then trap music grew into its own phenomenon, blending rap and hip-hop with EDM sounds. This scene evolved continuously until EDM began blending completely into hip-hop and even pop.

This era also began to downswing of major music festivals. We saw the bubble burst with TomorrowWorld going down in flames and bringing SFX with it. We saw a number of other festivals canceled as well, leading to a major shift in strategy. During this time we saw the rise of genre-festivals and sub-brands like Dreamstate, Resistance, and so on. By 2017 a number of mainstage DJs decided to return to trance and leave the mainstage scene.

By 2017 the EDM world had become more fragmented than ever before. There really was no copycat genre anymore. Like the explosion of TV channels and on demand-content, there was a subgenre and a scene for everybody. Big Room and all of its remnants were gone and the mainstage EDM sound had evolved to the point where it was very much like pop music. Artists like The Chainsmokers, Major Lazer, Alesso, Calvin Harris, and Zedd began chasing pop music stardom. They dropped most of the EDM elements from their music and focused on catchy hooks and singable lyrics.

The producers of uplifting melodic Anthem House from the Golden Era that failed to evolve were left behind. Storied labels like Steve Angellos SIZE Records went practically silent.

Trap had grown into a fully-fledged Bass Music scene, comprising dubstep, trap, hip-hop, future bass, and bass house. Bass House (G House) evolved from Future House and was a bit more punchy and dubstep-oriented. It blew up the festival scenes, with its own stages and sometimes even taking over entire festival lineups. G-House was so big that it could take over 2 stages at a major festival or host its own events. Many of todays biggest names like NGHTMRE, Tchami, Malaa, SLANDER, JOYRYDE, Slushii, etc all came from this scene.

Notably, you had artists like Marshmello that began in the bass music scene, gaining his street credibility before ditching the niche for the mass appeal of mainstage pop music audiences.

In this time trance music peaked and began its downfall. Vini Vicis Great Spirit dominated trance in 2017 and pushed trance to new heights. As the floor fell out from the mainstage sounds, many DJs began wandering back to their trance roots. Arty, Sander van Doorn, and W&W all began new trance oriented projects in 2017 and they all performed at Ultras ASOT Stage. However, the Vini-Vici style psytrance sound smothered trance music and stumped its development. This among other things led to trances downfall.

At the end of the decade, trance saw its biggest contraction since its inception. At regional festivals the trance stages were eliminated entirely and replaced by house stages. Armins A State of Trance was kicked out of Ultras Megastructure to make way for 3 days of techno. To make things even worse, Armin lost access to Tomorrowlands Freedom Stage due to its collapse. Anecdotally, many of the trancefam began migrating to other genres. Trance continued on, but many of their biggest names like Armin van Buuren, Andrew Rayel, Cosmic Gate, and Vini Vici took their sets to the mainstage.

In its wake came the rise of underground music. Techno, House, Tech-House, and its variants grew into the dominant sound in dance music. It all began in a sense when Ultra launched its Resistance sub-brand. By the end of the decade, EDC was promoting its own Factory 93 brand to compete with Resistance. The world of 2019 for techno was like the world of 2013 was for EDM. The events were plentiful and reasonably priced, the lineups were insane and never boring, the tracks were new and unknown, and the sets actually flowed from beginning to end without stops to jump on the mic.

The rise of techno dovetailed well with the shift towards genre, label, or artist events. Sure Tomorrowland, Ultra, and EDC continued on as normal, but now there were festivals within the festivals. You have Resistance with its own section of Ultra and that mindset carried on to separate events. The smaller regional festivals were replaced by single-genre or label events. You saw Above & Beyonds Weekender and the rise of Excisions Lost Lands along with Armins ASOT Festival making new stops in the US.

The mainstage scene at the end of the decade is a bit of a mess, without any clear identity. You have your major headliners that arent going anywhere like Alesso, David Guetta, Tiesto, Marshmello, The Chainsmokers et al. Below them is usually a random assortment of artists that may or may not be good. The return of Swedish House Mafia did not bring about a renewed Golden Era like we all hoped, and so the mainstages have become quite stale. However some festivals like Tomorrowland are using the mainstage to let audiences sample a little bit from each of its side stages. Theyre treated to Charlotte de Witte, Kolsch, Da Tweakaz, and other names youd never see on a mainstage at Ultra.

As we begin a new decade the underground scene is flourishing, but who knows what time will bring. The amount of evolution in 1 decade is staggering, so we should expect just as much evolution in the next decade. Will EDM go the way of disco and stay confined to one decade? We doubt it.

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The Evolution of Dance Music Genres in the 2010s - EDMTunes

Extravagant Photos of the Underground Techno Scene – VICE UK

Suitcase in hand and without knowing a scrap of English, Spanish photographer Kiev Ro, 28, arrived in the UK in 2012. Originally from the north of Spanish island Mallorca far from the vomit-strewn streets of Magaluf Kiev had never really been attracted to clubbing. That changed when he discovered the techno and trance scene in London.

At KAOS in Electrowerkz and gay parties such as Dirty Diana, Kiev started to meet like-minded people who became the inspiration for his photography. Seven years on, hes channelled his love of partying into these photographic portraits of the capitals late-night ravers.

VICE: Tell us a bit of your background why did you move to London? Kiev Ro: I got here in 2012 from Mallorca. I didnt use to go out as much. When I arrived in London, it was like an explosion of a lot of people and different things that you wouldnt see in Spain or anywhere else. Here everything is more visible than in a small island such as Mallorca. I came here and I started to meet a lot of people and to go out. I had been looking for a job in Spain but I couldnt find anything I came and I loved it here. I thought, Im not going anywhere.

Why did you decided to come to London in the first place? I had never been here before. I grabbed my suitcase, bought my flight ticket and came here. There wasnt anything behind it I didnt even speak English, zero. It was the easiest place that came to my mind. I didnt want to stay in Spain because I thought I didnt had many options back there. I love Madrid and Barcelona, I wouldnt mind living there, but I really like it here and I dont know how things would be if I were to move there. I feel like in a way I belong here [in London] now.

Were you involved in photography before coming to the UK?Yeah some, but not based in the same topics and subjects I photograph here. Here is completely different. I started photographing what I saw. I started going out in queer places and my mind expanded in [a] certain way to see that, having not been exposed to it in Mallorca. I started taking pictures basically for that. I wanted to somehow grab all the information that I was seeing and archive it Thats why I started photographing.

Youve been studying at London College of Contemporary Arts. What has your work taken from it?I started studying there last year, but its not entirely related to the kind of photography Im most interested in My photography isnt really technical, it has a style of social [realism] but its not photography of perfection, like the one you do in university or art school.

How did you start getting commissioned for techno parties in London like Volt?I knew Polanski, who is one of the organisers [of Volt] and Antonio because I used to go out partying with him before taking pictures. I used to go out a lot and met a lot of people in the scene. It was like [it] all blended in together, no?

Now I dont go out as much in that way Im more chill. But when I came here I said to myself, I [want to go] big, and tried to meet people. I needed to see and take in everything to the max.

How do normally people react to you photographing them in clubs?Sometimes I think to myself: everyone must be thinking that Im really invasive when I just flash a picture in their faces... In general, people do react well. It depends on how you get around. If you are a bit cool and dance a bit around, not necessarily dancing, but if they feel that you are there with them not just looking... Normally everything is fine. People tend to get more uncomfortable if you are like an outsider and only there to take the picture, which has never been my case because Im always partying and dancing as well as enjoying the night.

Whats the best party and where do you find the most interesting people?People are mostly the same in all the parties I go to I love Fold, its really cool; I love Unfold on Sundays; Corner, I really like it. I started going out a lot to KAOS in Electrowerkz. I know the people who put on their parties as well. I like Inferno as well.. Theres a lot in London. Papa Loko is great.

Have you been around Europe much and its dance music scenes?I came back from Greece not long ago. I was in a place called Koukles, which is like an old drag show from like the 80s or 90s very cool. But other than that I havent moved around a lot... Here in London, the looks and and scene is so strong and the people that I meet are so visually powerful that having documenting London, when I go somewhere else, it doesnt strike me as much.

Have you experienced a more closed-minded environment since Brexit?I now have my permanent [immigration] status but I dont know what is going to happen I dont want to think about it... Its really sad because London is a lot more than this whole thing [of Brexit]. Theres a lot of people who bring a lot to the city in an artistic or creative way maybe it doesnt give a lot of money but it brings a lot of visibility to London and the UK in general and it helps tourism as well.

Is photography your main source of income?Im now studying and I have a job one day a week in a little cafe and then sporadic jobs. Yesterday I worked at the door of a club.

Your work is principally portraits why? What I really like is to find the difference in little things that, for me, are very beautiful. I never think of them as weird... The reality is that the people I photograph are people I know. Most of them are friends or people I met at parties. I dont see a weirdness in them because Im one of them!

@alupicabr

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Extravagant Photos of the Underground Techno Scene - VICE UK

Trance of gold | Cover Story – Mag The Weekly Magazine

Didnt it feel like everything just glimmered in gold this season? Spring through winter, gold dominated our wardrobes, add-ons and the fashion runways across the world and found its way in all the trends that followed, be it Eastern or Western, daytime look or night, street style or showstopping classy, gold shone through triumphant. Were predicting its going to keep shining next year too! Pair gold earrings with a solid black outfit and let the metallic sparkle add character and class to your look.

Even the most intricate of chain-links in gold around your neck amp your OOTN. And if you want thicker, bolder, louder chain-links, around your wrist is the way to go.

If there are some things you cannot go wrong with, trends that just dont run through their time on the radar, then its animal print. Pants, tops, jumpsuits, skirts the good ol animal print is chic enough for all seasons and a look anyone can pull off if paired with the right attitude.

Another one that has us skeptic at first but pairs oh-so-well is denim on denim. Currently trending, it is the epitome of effortless that works for casual step out, shopping sprees, dine outs and girls night out. On the makeup radar, weve already given our vote to gold. A swipe of shimmering gold and eyes lined in black is a look for all occasions.

Hair, Makeup, Styling & Photography: AKIF ILYASModel: Anmol

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Trance of gold | Cover Story - Mag The Weekly Magazine

CamelPhat Welcomes 2020 With New Year’s Eve Mix – We Rave You

British duo CamelPhat (Dave Whelan and Mike Di Scala) bring us the heat in December with their New Years Eve mix featured on Beats 1 Radio. The end of the decade treated the pair well, as they released massive hits such asPanic Roomfeaturing Au/Ra,Breathe featuring Cristoph and Jem Cooke andBe Someonefeaturing Jake Bugg.

The one-hour mix features a bunch of originals by CamelPhat as well as some lesser-known tracks such as the mix openerCrying Out (Praying Woman)by Oliver Knighta stellar track to lure us into the set. CamelPhat then brings our attention to more trance and techno during the heart of the set featuring songs such asOrbital by ARTBAT andWhere Is HomebyGuy Mantzur and Khen. The mix closes out on a rather sentimental note withCristoph andTemper Traps remix ofSweet Disposition.If youre looking for a stellar mix to begin 2020, look no further.

We cannot wait to see what CamelPhat has in store for us in the new decade, but we know its going to rock our world.

Click here for the complete tracklist of CamelPhats NYE Mix on Beats 1 Radio.

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CamelPhat Welcomes 2020 With New Year's Eve Mix - We Rave You

John-Luke Roberts: ‘Ive never laughed at something as much as Allo Allo when I was seven’ – The Guardian

The funniest sketch Ive ever seen

Theres a sketch in Chris Morriss Jam where a fight breaks out over some poppadoms and it doesnt really bear describing but it has me in hysterics every time.

Comedies Id watch again and again: The Comeback, The Day Today, The (American) Office. But Ive probably never laughed at something as much as Allo Allo when I was seven and I didnt understand the jokes.

I had a T-shirt with the Bristol Stool Chart on it when I was 17. Oh my lord, I just remembered I wore it on a Friday night out in Newcastle city centre.

If you wear a T-shirt with the Bristol Stool Chart on it, no one will laugh at your terrible spiky hair.

I was doing a sort of sublimated patricidal revenge show where I performed as my dead dad in a huge suit filled with balloons. I made some comment about hoping he wouldnt haunt it, and a balloon 10ft away from me burst. Beautiful timing on my dads part.

Kilroy Loops on YouTube. Its a video made from all of Robert Kilroy-Silks introductions to his TV show edited together. Thats it. About the two-minute mark youll find yourself entering a sort of trance-like hysteria.

John-Luke Roberts: After Me Comes the Flood (But in French) tours 18 January to 14 March

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John-Luke Roberts: 'Ive never laughed at something as much as Allo Allo when I was seven' - The Guardian

Above & Beyond’s Anjunadeep wraps up the decade with ‘Best of 2019’ mix – We Rave You

Founded in 2005 by the legends Above & Beyond and James Grant, Anjunadeep has been home to some of the best deep progressive trance songs and a lighthouse for upcoming talent, becoming the ultimate platform for this genre. Now, few days away from closing down the decade, the London-based label is following up the Best of Anjunadeep 2009-2019 playlist, with a special Best of 2019 mix.

For their 284th episode, Anjunadeep has released this very special Best of 2019 mix on their weekly The Anjunadeep Edition radio show featuring the labels favourite and finest tracks of the year. Several styles and sounds from plenty of different artists can be appreciated throughout this extended 9-hour long mix. To know to what extent this label is diverse and gives visibility and relevance to talent, this mix only includes one track from the label founders Above & Beyond, which in fact is not even their original track, as it is theSimon Dotyoutro edit of the trios recent track Dont Leave.

It compiles tracks from mixes by the best and most renowned deep artists of the year in the 228th (by Luttrell), 244th (by Marsh), 248th (by Lane 8), 262nd (by the mentioned Simon Doty) and 265th (by co-founder James Grant) episodes of the radio show. This compilation simply takes you to an electronic music journey, where you can really note the diversity in production style and choice of elements by the artists featured on the mix. However, the most impressive thing overall, is the high quality level of the artists and their amazing musical outcomes.

Reaching this point, a big heads up must be for the Anjunadeep A&R team that has displayed an amazing work getting and retaining this big amount of qualified talented producers. Hopefully, this next decade will be filled once more with massive Anjunadeep tunes.

Listen to The Anjunadeep Edition 284: Best of 2019 mix below:

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Above & Beyond's Anjunadeep wraps up the decade with 'Best of 2019' mix - We Rave You

Out of bone flakes? No worries for I have other means of predicting the future – The Daily News Online

I am out of bone flakes. Now, this usually doesnt cause me trepidation because in the past, all I had to do was make a call to my bone flake dealer and voila! A drone arrives on my doorstep the next day.

My bone flake dealer, however, is dead, something I actually predicted would happen when I made my yearly predictions last year.

My studious readers will recall that a year ago I wrote that My bone flake dealer will die this year.

And he did.

Except that now I am out of bone flakes, which are the key ingredient for my potion that helps me see the future. Amazon says my shipment will arrive in six to 10 days.

Now, with the new year already three days old, I am in a quandary.

As luck would have it, though ...well, not luck but Google, I was able to find a simple potion made from various items I found right here at work, on my desk.

(A note: Its technically not my desk. My desk is over there but my computer, like my bone flake dealer, died in 2019 and I had to move to Toris old desk, Tori being a girl who worked here on occasion and is now in the Adirondacks but who left her desk a mess full of her things.)

Heres what I put together: A Mutual of Omaha beer koozie, a miniature version of the Chrysler building, colored gel pens, a broken stapler, a granola bar and three packets of Burger King pepper.

Google tells me to put all the ingredients in a basket and throw them into the Dumpster, which I did.

Within minutes, I was sitting back at the desk, my brain mired in a trance.

Here is what I see in the year 2020, in no particular order ...

The Buffalo Bills will win a playoff game. Today, actually. My faithful readers will remember that I correctly picked every playoff win the Bills have ever had, in part because of my bone flake stew but also because I pick them to win every year.

Tensions will rise, then fall, then rise in the Middle East. Some people will die.

I see a long winter with snow a distinct possibility, mixed in sometimes with rain.

Dozens of people will be trampled, some to death, by great herds of angry deer on State Street.

Speaking of deer, City Council will embark on an exhaustive, 10-year Master Plan on how to address the ongoing deer problem.

President Donald Trump will continue to Tweet his every waking and non-waking thought this year.

The Stock Market will fluctuate, sometimes wildly.

Democrat presidential hopefuls, after their 187th debate, decide to have a Battle Royal, sometimes known as a Battle Royale, to choose a candidate.

Jesse The Body Ventura is named the next Democrat presidential candidate after slinging Bernie Sanders over the top rope, by his hair.

In a Tweet, Donald Trump announces that he is the next Republican candidate and names Sgt. Slaughter as his running mate.

Summer in Western New York will feature some sun, warmth and a few rainy nights.

Vladimir Putin announces that he will not, in any way, shape or form, conspire with any presidential candidate to sway the election.

Just weeks before the ELECTION, Donald Trump Tweets YA russkiy, which is reminiscent of President Kennedys most famous Tweet: Ich bin ein Berliner!

n Thousands of people at a rally somewhere in the Deep South or Texas are shown waving their YA russkiy flags and Make Russian Great Again hats or MRGA for short.

At the final presidential debate before the ELECTION, Jesse The Body Ventura hoists Trump over this head and performs his signature move, The Body Breaker, much to the delight of CNN.

And now, the much-awaited prediction for who will win the presidential ELECTION ...

What? My shipment of bone flakes has arrived?

Thank the aligned stars.

Now, where did I put my pestle?

Scott DeSmit is a general assignment reporter for The Daily News and a world-renowned prognosticator. He can be reached at desmitmail@yahoo.com or with any working Ouija board.

The fork ratings are based primarily on food quality and preparation, with service and atmosphere factored into the final decision. Reviews are based on one unsolicited, unannounced visit to the restaurant.

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Out of bone flakes? No worries for I have other means of predicting the future - The Daily News Online