2021-03-15: Taxpayer-funded pseudoscience rak ================================================================ Rant: When Canadian taxpayers pay the CBC (Canada's state broadcaster) $1.2B yer year [0], they expect real journalism, not pseudoscience. At the top of the CBC homepage [1], nestled between news articles titled "Former reservist says military doctor warned her of reprisals for reporting sexual assault" and "2 men charged with assaulting U.S. Capitol Police officer who died following Jan. 6 riot", we find the article "Your horoscope for the week ahead: Mercury enters reflective Pisces allowing deep insights to flourish" [2]. At the risk of sounding like a crotchety old man (guilty as charged), this is problematic for several reasons: 1) Juxtaposing pseudoscience with news articles legitimizes it. You might think "Everybody knows that astrology is just fun fluff!". This is not so. In 2018, the National Science Foundation found that 39% of American adults [3, Table S7-32] thought that astrology was "very scientific" or "sort of scientific". A 2019 survey [4] by Canadian pollsters had similar findings. The juxtaposition of pseudoscience and news by an allegedly reputable source only reinforces this view. 2) The CBC could instead have used this money to pay a real journalist to write a real news article that would actually have informed its readers. PS: The above "tempest in a teapot" is perhaps a reflection of my current general disappointment in the Canadian government: its abysmal vaccination rates, the Trudeau government's failure to take seriously sexual misconduct in the Canadian armed forces, its wanton violation of civil liberties, etc. [0] https://cbc.radio-canada.ca/en/impact-and-accountability/finances/annual-reports/ar-2019-2020/financial-sustainability/revenue-and-other-funds [1] screenshot: gopher://rak.ac/I/files/2021-03-15-Taxpayer-funded-pseudoscience/2021-03-15-170525_922x950_scrot.png [2] https://www.cbc.ca/life/culture/your-horoscope-for-the-week-ahead-mercury-enters-reflective-pisces-allowing-deep-insights-to-flourish-1.5948039 [3] National Science Board, "Science and Technology: Public Attitudes, Knowledge, and Interest", Report NSB-2020-7, May 15, 2020. Report: https://ncses.nsf.gov/pubs/nsb20207/ Table: https://ncses.nsf.gov/pubs/nsb20207/supplemental-tables [4] https://researchco.ca/2020/01/01/canada-astrology/