She’s just being open-minded and neutral guys. What’s so wrong with that?
yellownumbersix on
DEI hiring for quacks.
Mx_Brightside on
How it started: “I left the New York Times because the woke left was putting ideology over basic reality!”
How it’s going:
SleeplessInPlano on
>Dr Mark Hyman, who claimed he reduced his biological age by 20 years, brought on as a contributor
Apparently did not affected the physical appearance. I have no idea who bari Weiss is
Maximilianne on
Broke: people denying voting for bush.
Woke:people denying ever liking Bari weiss
Fickle_Diamond220 on
Wow thank you Bari, very cool!
algebroni on
America has entered its Lysenkoist phase.
Eurolib0908 on
Submission statement
This situation shows how personal beliefs, venture capital and media influence can merge to shape public health messaging, turning TV news into a platform for lucrative wellness trends rather than science-based medicine. When figures such as Hyman, who are supported by wealthy tech investors and political allies, are given key positions on major networks, the line between entertainment, profit, and public service blurs, raising difficult questions about who has the authority to define ‘truth’ in institutions intended to inform the general public. Readers should pay attention not only to what is being said about health, but also to who benefits and why a network once known for its journalistic rigour would gamble its credibility by promoting supplements and pseudoscience.
11 Comments
She’s just being open-minded and neutral guys. What’s so wrong with that?
DEI hiring for quacks.
How it started: “I left the New York Times because the woke left was putting ideology over basic reality!”
How it’s going:
>Dr Mark Hyman, who claimed he reduced his biological age by 20 years, brought on as a contributor
Apparently did not affected the physical appearance. I have no idea who bari Weiss is
Broke: people denying voting for bush.
Woke:people denying ever liking Bari weiss
Wow thank you Bari, very cool!
America has entered its Lysenkoist phase.
Submission statement
This situation shows how personal beliefs, venture capital and media influence can merge to shape public health messaging, turning TV news into a platform for lucrative wellness trends rather than science-based medicine. When figures such as Hyman, who are supported by wealthy tech investors and political allies, are given key positions on major networks, the line between entertainment, profit, and public service blurs, raising difficult questions about who has the authority to define ‘truth’ in institutions intended to inform the general public. Readers should pay attention not only to what is being said about health, but also to who benefits and why a network once known for its journalistic rigour would gamble its credibility by promoting supplements and pseudoscience.
https://preview.redd.it/ld0sxt4jucgg1.jpeg?width=1008&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=7db2b297e18cbf0d5d770dcddea235143a9b3b84
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