As consumers of news it’s our job to read between the lines and decide for ourselves what’s coincidence and what’s deliberate.
Two things happened yesterday:
1) Hundreds of lab-coated scientists marched on Parliament Hill proclaiming the death of evidence (a nice play on the Death of Innocence because there really has been a change in Ottawa where facts and figures no longer play a role in policy formulation); and
2) The Harper government announced Health Canada would study the (already well-studied) health effects of living near wind turbines.
Was it a coincidence or was it deliberate? I suspect the latter and here’s why: The reality is this federal government doesn't base policy on evidence so why do a study?
The date gives us a hint as to possible intentions. This ‘study’ will apparently be out in 2014, just in time to potentially play a role in the next provincial election.
You might remember that in the lead-up to the last election in Ontario, along with a conveniently-formed anti-wind lobby group, the Hudak Conservatives tirelessly campaigned against wind energy.
Some political observers suspect the wind disinformation and fear-mongering campaign may have even cost the Liberals a majority in the last election.
Chief among the demands of the Ontario wind conspiracy theorists was the call for a health study (they didn’t like the existing scientific evidence). They just got it.
Is it just me or does this look like a case of the Conservative government using science as a political tool?
Perhaps I’m too cynical.
Original Article
Source: rabble.ca
Author: John Bennett
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