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by DC on Wed Apr 11, 2007 11:40 am
Phony science and public policy

WALTER WILLIAMS
By Walter E. Williams
April 11, 2007

The public has become increasingly aware the science behind manmade global warming is a fraud. But maybe Americans like bogus science in pursuit of certain public policy objectives. Let's look at it.
Many Americans find tobacco smoke to be a nuisance. Some find the odor offensive, and others have allergies or asthma that can be aggravated by smoking in their presence. There's little question tobacco smoke causes these kinds of nuisances, but how successful would antismokers have been in a court of law, or public opinion, in achieving the success they've achieved based on tobacco smoke being a nuisance?
A serious public health threat had to be manufactured, and in 1993 the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) stepped in to the rescue with their bogus environmental tobacco smoke (ETS) study that says secondhand tobacco smoke is a class A carcinogenic.
Why is it bogus? The EPA claimed 3,000 Americans die annually from secondhand smoke, but there was a problem. They couldn't come up with that conclusion using the standard statistical 95 percent confidence interval. They lowered their study's confidence interval to 90 percent. That has the effect of doubling the margin of error and doubling the probability that mere chance explains those 3,000 deaths.
The Congressional Research Service (CRS) said, "Admittedly, it is unusual to return to a study after the fact, lower the required significance level, and declare its results to be supportive rather than unsupportive of the effect one's theory suggests should be present." The CRS was being kind. This kind of doctoring of research results would get a graduate student expelled from a university.
In 1998, the World Health Organization's International Agency for Research on Cancer released the largest ever and best formulated study on ETS. The research project ran for 10 years and in seven European countries. The study, not widely publicized, concluded no statistically significant risk existed for nonsmokers who either lived or worked with smokers.
During the late '90s, at a Washington affair, I had the occasion to be in the presence of a Food and Drug Administration official. I asked him if he would approve of pharmaceutical companies using EPA's statistical techniques in testing drug effectiveness and safety. He answered no. I ask my fellow Americans who are nonsmokers: Do you support the use of fraudulent science in your efforts to eliminate tobacco smoke nuisance in bars, restaurants, workplaces and hotels?
You say, "OK, Williams, the science is bogus, but how do we nonsmokers cope with the nuisance of tobacco smoke?" My answer is that it all depends on whether you prefer liberty-oriented solutions to problems or more tyranny-oriented ones.
The liberty-oriented solution has to do with private property rights, whereby the owner of property decides whether to allow smoking. If one is a nonsmoker, he just doesn't do business with a bar or restaurant where smoking is permitted. A smoker could exercise the same right if a bar or restaurant didn't permit smoking. Publicly owned places such as libraries, airports and municipal buildings, where ownership is ill-defined, presents a greater challenge.
The tyranny-oriented solution is where one group uses the political system to forcibly impose its preferences on others. You might be tempted to object to the term "tyranny," but suppose you owned a restaurant where you did not permit smoking and smokers used the political system to create a law forcing you to permit smoking. I'm sure you'd deem it tyranny.
The public policy debate on smoking has been settled through bogus science. My question is: How willing are we to allow use of bogus science in pursuing other public policy agendas, such as restrictions on economic growth, in the name of fighting global warming?

Walter E. Williams is a professor of economics at George Mason University and is a nationally syndicated columnist.


THANK YOU WASHINGTON TIMES & WALTER WILLIAMS
DC Smokers Rights Activist
Smokers Rights Activist Joined: Apr 04, 2005 Posts: 820 Location: MD
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by BWilliams on Wed Apr 11, 2007 12:05 pm
DC - this is an awesome op/ed piece - can you post the link to the article on the original site?
BWilliams Site Owner
Site Owner Joined: Jun 05, 2003 Posts: 1081 Location: New York City
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by DC on Wed Apr 11, 2007 12:34 pm
Bill, here 'tis:

http://washingtontimes.com/commentar...1754-7163r.htm


Also, check out WWIII we have going on the Baltimore Sun site (Opinion/Talk/Local News/"Damn The Facts! Pass The Smoking Ban!"

We have nearly 3,000 hits and it's escalating. I think the banners have turned out their blogging reserve team to encourage the Gov to sign the ban bill.
DC Smokers Rights Activist
Smokers Rights Activist Joined: Apr 04, 2005 Posts: 820 Location: MD
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