Re: A bit of clarification
by
Trevor Butterworth
05/14/2008, 3:06 PM #
If I were Jeanne Lenzer or Shannon Brownlee, I'd be more concerned about whether I was encouraging people to forgo medicine they actually need than rushing to pick cherries to lob at their critics.
Yes, STATS has received money from Scaife. So has Planned Parenthood. We have not received money from any pharmaceutical company. Our director of research is an award-winning mathematician, Rebecca Goldin, Harvard and MIT educated, and one of the most formidable minds I have had the pleasure of working with. We're affiliated with the Math and the Communications departments at GMU, and CMPA - our sister organization - has been praised by Bill Clinton and funded by the NRDC and Rockefeller Brothers as well as the cherries plucked by Lenzer and Brownlee. That's why we describe ourselves as non-partisan.
One of the reasons so many news organizations trust us is that we take the side of the data, not the party. (It's also one of the reasons why we're so poor). In fact, if you read the piece, we *did* the reporting that Lenzer and Brownlee couldn't be bothered to do - and which would have made their article more credible. Thanks.
At the same time, we think the kind of reporting Brownlee and Lenzer actually did for Slate is intellectually lazy, deeply misguided and, fundamentally, dangerous. And we're not afraid to say that either. Sorry. Sorry too for pointing out that the "minor correction" in the BMJ article was nothing of the sort. But that's the kind of trap a prosecutorial approach to industry can lead you into.
At STATS, we've taken on many unpalatable causes, pointing out what journalists, too quick to jump to conclusions, and too reluctant or scared to do some hard math and science, failed to point out. This has been the case with OxyContin epidemic (which Slate will remember all too well) and Avandia. Yes, I guess that could make us appear to be pro industry; same too with BPA and phthalates. .
But we have also taken on the Global warming deniers, the war on drugs and the boot-camp/tough love industry. Read what's on the site. Compare to Sourcewatch (not the most reliable enterprise in DC, btw - and equally agenda driven. I do appreciate, though, that, after four years of STATS publishing almost daily, Sourcewatch now has taken down the line about us being inactive).
It is precisely because we follow the data wherever it goes that our work has been instrumental in driving the recent Congressional hearings (led by Rep George Miller - a Democrat) and a GAO investigation into an industry that has strong ties to the Republican Party. To give us fair credit would, of course, mean that we're not part of some evil empire of astro-turfing shills.
So where does that leave Lenzer and Brownlee's insinuation that we're just another front group? I suspect offense is the best defense when you've screwed up, but it also makes their position look more and more desperate and partisan.