Homosexual science flawed
While personal gain—fame, fortune (research grants),
and careerism—are the probable explanation for much fraud, another and not
unrelated one is political correctness. Grants and promotion are surely more
certain when one’s results conform to social expectations.
Fortunately, there are enough conservative academics
and schools to provide more than one way of looking at reality. Both sides in
the debate over same sex “marriage” in the U.S. can therefore cite scientific
evidence for their opposite positions on its impact on the children. A federal
court considering a constitutional challenge of Michigan’s new law reserving
marriage to heterosexual relationships was presented with 57 studies showing
same sex couples produced identical outcomes as heterosexual ones. It also was
presented two or three studies showing the opposite, including one by Simon
Fraser University economist Doug Allen.
The Michigan judge not only threw out Michigan’s
marriage law, he also deemed Allen’s research to be “fringe,” while accepting
the 57 studies to the contrary. Allen told me: “I don’t think he looked at any
of them. I think he just counted.”
Had he bothered, and had he known a thing about
research, he would have noted that the pro-homosexual studies were
methodologically skewed: all were small, biased samples badly slanted by the
selection method; the raw data was not released (and so couldn’t be
refuted); the questioning was soft and sometimes biased. (A soft question: does
your child have good self-esteem? A hard question: did he fail any year of high
school?)
Allen’s study was truly random: thousands of Canadian
couples, both same-sex and heterosex, were asked about their children’s school
success during the Census. Children raised by heterosexual parents were 35%
more likely to graduate from high school. Luckily for Allen, Simon Fraser U
supports academic freedom staunchly and ignored calls for his dismissal.
American sociologist Mark Regnerus nearly got run out of his university and
academia for producing a study showing comparatively negative outcomes for children
of same-sex parents.
Dr. Robert Spitzer, past president of the American
Psychiatric Association, was similarly hounded by the homosexual lobby until he
retracted his 2002 study showing homosexual attraction was a treatable
condition.
Another way to be politically correct is to do honest,
solid research but bury the unpalatable findings. In 2014 the
journal Child Trends published one such study comparing the impact on
children of their parents’ marital happiness, across several parental “subgroups.”
The researchers gladly reported the happy-slappy
findings that the better the parents got on with each other, the better the
children did at school and in life. But, as the redoubtable conservative author
and thinker Elizabeth Marquardt exposed, the researchers did not admit that
their data also revealed that children did much better with two, married
biological parents.
“In other words,” summarized Marquardt, “the children
in stepfamilies were over twice as likely to be reported as having behavior
problems compared to children living with their own married parents. The
children in a co-habiting step arrangement (translation: in most cases, mom
living with her boyfriend) were almost three times as likely to have these
problems.”
The point is that the cultural wars now divide
science, though not 50-50. There are studies counting the manifest harms that
abortion does to the health of women; but for each of these there are two
showing there is no harm at all, and some that show childbirth itself is
harmful. There are studies claiming to show that Evangelicals are stupid
and credulous believers in Biblical literalness, and there are other studies
showing that liberals are superstitious believers in astrology and Tarot cards.
Retraction Watch is now reporting on a debate over
when fetuses first feel pain. At issue is a 2005 study carried by the Journal
of the American Medical Association indicating fetuses are incapable of feeling
pain before the third trimester. A conservative fact check organization called
JustFactsDaily has asked JAMA to withdraw the paper because subsequent research
has put the point where unborn babies feel pain around 20 weeks.
JAMA’s editors have refused, and rightly so in my
view, on the grounds the 2005 study hasn’t been faulted for its methodology or
its results. The existence of contrary evidence, even overwhelming evidence,
doesn’t mean the researchers didn’t find what they said they found in 2005.
But JustFactsDaily is on stronger ground in wanting
JAMA to admit the 2005 research team included an employee of the leading
abortion rights lobby group NARAL Pro-Choice America, the medical director of
an abortion clinic and a past employee of a different clinic.
JustFactsDaily has a good motive for wanting to knock
out this study: it is repeatedly cited by journalists whenever the fetal pain
issue arises, as it does when Republican states table bills to criminalize
abortion after 20 weeks.
Since we cannot depend on objective science, we are
left hoping that objective journalists not only cite the study that supports
their own biases, but look for studies to the contrary.
Sadly, most mainstream journalists are pro-abortion,
pro-same sex “marriage” (and pro-climate change, pro-Democrat, and pro
gun-control). Yet most also consider themselves objective and also believe in
the myth that science is objective, which is why it supports abortion,
homosexuality, climate change, etc. They routinely accept reports that beggar
common sense (such as, that abortion does no injury to woman and homosexual
parenting does no harm to children) and ignore reports to the contrary, such as
the Chinese metastudies linking abortion to breast cancer.
This puts a heavy onus on the public to be sceptical
not only of politicians and lobbyists with axes to grind, but even more on
people pretending to being unbiased such as reporters, scientists, bureaucrats,
educationalists and judges.
Our courtrooms acknowledge, with defence and
prosecuting attorneys, the usefulness of argument, contention and division in
attaining the truth. Sadly, we must accept that our society has reached such a
state of division—the Culture Wars—that knowledge itself is divided into
politically correct and incorrect, Liberal and Conservative in Canada, Democrat
and Republican in the U.S. and Christian and secular in both. The inexpert
public, like the inexpert judge, must weigh the competing arguments. It
is our job.