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Category[The Free Press]

Will Jordan Peterson Lose His License for Wrongthink? [Neeraja Deshpande, The Free Press]

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• Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson has been threatened with the revocation of his license to practice psychology by the College of Psychologists of Ontario for making controversial comments on Twitter and a podcast.
• The College is demanding that Peterson go through a re-education program and sign a statement admitting he “lacked professionalism” in his public statements.
• The College’s ultimatum is part of a larger trend of institutions of higher learning punishing dissenters and pathologizing political disagreement.
• The College’s actions have revealed its prioritization of punishing wrongthink over facilitating open discourse.

Published January 6, 2023. Visit The Free Press to read the original post.

The Reason There’s Been No Cure for Alzheimer’s [Joanne Silberner, The Free Press]

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• In the mid-1990s, Alzheimer’s disease began eroding my father’s brain, and medicine had nothing to offer him or millions of other Americans.
• Recently, a drug called lecanemab has been heralded as a breakthrough, but it only slightly slows a patient’s inevitable decline for a few months.
• The amyloid hypothesis has held a vise-like grip on Alzheimer’s research for decades, despite the fact that drugs designed to address amyloid have shown virtually no beneficial effects on patients.
• The incentives of big academic medicine, big governmental medicine, and big pharma have contributed to the persistence of the amyloid theory, despite the lack of evidence.
• Scientists whose ideas fell outside the dogma have recounted how, for decades, believers in the dominant hypothesis suppressed research on alternative ideas.
• Journals have turned down research papers and grants have been rejected, leading some talented researchers to other fields.
• The FDA recently approved the drug aducanumab, which has been met with criticism due to its ineffectiveness and high cost.
• Biogen and Eisai are now pushing for the approval of lecanemab, which has been touted as a “gamechanger” for Alzheimer’s treatment.
• Clinical trials of lecanemab showed a 0.45 point improvement on an 18-point scale, and three patients died from brain swelling and bleeding as a result of the treatment.
• There is concern that the focus on amyloid-targeting drugs will divert resources away from other possible treatments, such as anti-herpes drugs, antibacterials, and “cocktails” of drugs.

Published January 4, 2023. Visit The Free Press to read the original post.

There Is No Right Side of History [William Deresiewicz, The Free Press]

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• The phrase “the right side of history” is a dangerous myth that assumes an inevitable upward path of human events.
• History does not have sides and does not take sides. It is full of “sides” and disagreement.
• Believing in the progressive view of history can lead to complacency and arrogance.
• Talk of the right side of history is propaganda that attempts to persuade us that the largest issues have already been decided.

Published January 2, 2023. Visit The Free Press to read the original post.

Our Promise to You in 2023 [Bari Weiss, The Free Press]

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• The Free Press is a media company built on the ideals of honest, independent journalism.
• It is supported by a coalition of readers from all over the world and of all political persuasions.
• The Free Press has broken news and driven the conversation with investigative stories and provocative commentary.
• It has been cited in The Economist, The New York Times, Canadian Parliament, Reuters, Fox News, and NPR.
• Paid subscribers are encouraged to join for $8 a month to support the work of The Free Press.

Published December 31, 2022. Visit The Free Press to read Bari Weiss’s original post.

TGIF: One Last Time for 2022 [Nellie Bowles, The Free Press]

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  • The Biden administration ended the year flush, signing a $1.7 trillion spending bill, including $50 billion in aid to Ukraine and half a million in funding toward artificial intelligence that will detect microaggressions online.
  • The border crisis continues to escalate, with November seeing the highest number of border crossings yet.
  • Stacey Abrams raised $100 million through her PAC this most recent time, yet she owes vendors at least $1 million.
  • George Santos, a New York Republican congressman-elect, admitted to “embellishing” almost all of his compelling story.
  • America’s graduate schools are hellbent on making thousands of unemployed people fated to wander the country reminding us that they have PhDs.
  • The faculty of MIT have signed a pledge asserting that they value free expression and debate.
  • Stanford University has released a list of verboten words so crazed, so long, so thorough, that it would truly take a four-year $250,000 degree to learn it.
  • Stanford president is under investigation for faking his past research and one of his professors has had to pay more than $29 million for
  • Our latest Twitter Files: Internal documents at Twitter showed the company rigged the public debate about Covid.
  • Meanwhile at our friend TikTok: Nice, quirky TikTok, which would never do anything bad, has been tracking Forbes reporters.
  • The fall of Roe has created nightmare scenarios.
  • McConnell negs Trump: In another sign that Republicans are really ready to ditch Trump, Mitch McConnell was brutal on the former president in a recent interview with NBC News.
  • A Roomba’s-eye-view on the toilet: New smart Roombas, exploring your house and documenting its various nooks and crannies as it cleans, can share those images back to Roomba headquarters.
  • The New York Times declares Louisa May Alcott a man.
  • Remember Wi Spa? End of the year, end of a mystery.
  • Life expectancy in the U.S. keeps falling.
  • Fun startup going rogue to blot out the sun.
  • The end of 2022 we deserve: Because we live in a Clown World, it is only right that the end of this year saw a showdown between Andrew Tate.

Published December 30, 2022.

Visit The Free Press to read Nellie Bowles’s original post.

What We Learned in 2022 [The Free Press]

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  • Sebastian Junger on underdogs: Empires don’t win every war.
  • Thomas Chatterton Williams on self-restraint: Learning to hold my tongue (and tweets).
  • Masih Alinejad on freedom: The future (in Iran) is female.
  • Jennifer Sey on marriage: Putting my marriage first.
  • Jay Bhattacharya on government power v. people power: Government power v. people power.
  • Alex Perez on real friends: Who my real friends are.

Click HERE for original. Published December 29, 2022

Drink Your Way to Sobriety in 2023 [Teddy Kennedy, The Free Press]

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  • Katie Lain realized she had a drinking problem in 2011 while sitting on a beach in California.
  • Despite trying AA meetings, 30-day challenges, workshops, cleanses, and spiritual retreats, she could not seem to quit.
  • In 1972, John David Sinclair moved to Helsinki to work at Alko Laboratories and test his theory that it was possible to find a cure for Alcohol Use Disorder.
  • Sinclair’s theory was based on Pavlov’s dogs, which showed that if a reward was taken away, the desire for it would eventually stop.
  • Sinclair tested this theory on rats and found that if they were given an opioid-blocker before drinking, they would eventually lose the desire for alcohol.
  • The same theory was tested on humans and found that nearly 80 percent of people who followed the protocol saw major reductions in drinking.
  • Katie Lain hit extinction after nine months and has now been sober for four years.
  • Drinking came naturally to me, but I realized the extent of my problem in 2007.
  • I tried 12-steps, SMART Recovery, Moderation Management, and more, but nothing worked.
  • I found The Sinclair Method, which requires taking naltrexone while drinking in order to reach extinction.
  • I took the pill, tracked my drinks, and formed new habits and routines.
  • Gradually, my consumption started to drop and I had my first sober week, then month.
  • After eight months, I was able to attend a holiday party sober.
  • The Sinclair Method is effective, but not widely known due to lack of money and cultural bias.

Click HERE for original. Published December 28, 2022

How Twitter Rigged the Covid Debate [David Zweig, The Free Press]

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  • Twitter suppressed true information from doctors and public-health experts that was at odds with U.S. government policy.
  • The Trump and Biden administrations directly pressed Twitter executives to moderate the platform’s content according to their wishes.
  • Twitter acted as a kind of FBI subsidiary, re-writing the platform’s policies on the fly to accommodate political bias and pressure.
  • Twitter suppressed views and even scientific evidence that ran to the contrary.
  • Bots and contractors were used to moderate content, leading to a significant error rate.
  • Higher level employees at Twitter chose the inputs for the bots and decision trees, and determined suspensions.
  • Content that was contrarian but true, and the people who conveyed that content, were still subject to getting flagged and suppressed.
  • Twitter propped up the official government line that prioritizing mitigation over other concerns was the best approach to the pandemic.
  • If Twitter had allowed the kind of open forum for debate that it claimed to believe in, could any of this have turned out differently?

Click HERE for original. Published December 26, 2022

I Was Taught ‘God Hates Christmas.’ Now, I Love It. [Megan Phelps-Roper, The Free Press]

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  • Megan Phelps-Roper grew up in the Westboro Baptist Church, where Christmas was seen as a pagan farce and public celebrations were an opportunity to set themselves apart from others.
  • She was taught to hate Christmas, but now, as an adult, she has come to appreciate the beauty of the holiday.
  • She has found a way to bridge her past and present without burning it all down, by recognizing the beauty of Christmas traditions and the joy of coming together with family and friends.
  • She has also come to understand that we can choose the meaning we assign to our experiences, and that they need not be tethered forever to the evils of an unchanging past.

Click HERE for original. Published December 25, 2022

Was Santa Actually a Mushroom-Tripping Reindeer Herder? [Leighton Woodhouse, The Free Press]

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  • The traditional explanation of Santa Claus is an ancient fable about Christian virtue which spread across medieval Europe and then, upon landing in the United States, was promptly commercialized.
  • The revisionist version is a tale of pre-Christian, indigenous pagan spirituality that was somehow smuggled into our modern Christian/consumerist holiday.
  • The traditional explanation is the story of Saint Nicholas, a Greek bishop who was persecuted for his faith by the Romans and gave away his inheritance to the poor.
  • The revisionist version starts with the Amanita muscaria, a psychoactive mushroom that gives humans the sensation of flying.
  • The indigenous people of Lapland used to consume the drug safely by drinking the reindeers’ urine and shamans would dress in its likeness, in a red and white costume, and visit prominent Sámi households to pass along the insights that they achieved through their hallucinogenic trips.
  • It’s possible that, like Easter, our Christmas traditions are a blend of Christian and pagan themes.
  • Maybe the mushroom is even more connected to the birth of Jesus than to Santa Claus.

Click HERE for original. Published December 24, 2022

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