Reverie

Lancet Editor Gives Full-Throated Apology for Vicious Anti-Israel Article

shapeup1

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He should resign for letting trash and be published on the Lancet a medical journal.


Dr. Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of the British medical journal The Lancet, unreservedly apologized for running a virulently anti-Israel open letter accusing Israel of a “massacre” in Gaza during this summer’s Operation Protective Edge. The apology was made at the conclusion of a three-day visit to Rambam Medical Center and to the Technion Medical School, in Haifa.

The bitterly anti-Israel letter, written by Paola Manduca and signed by 23 other medical professionals, was published online on July 23.

The open letter accused Israel of committing war crimes, of “targeting whole families, killing them in their homes.” It claimed that Israel’s attacks on Gaza “aim to terrorise, wound the soul and the body of the people, and make their life impossible in the future, as well as also demolishing their homes and prohibiting the means to rebuild.”

The letter, published in such a prestigious medical journal, also painted virtually all Israeli academics as being complicit in the “massacre and destruction of Gaza” because of their failure to denounce the Israeli government and join with the letter writers in demanding that Israel cease the military action in Gaza.

Although Horton initially refused to apologize for publishing the highly politicized and intemperate letter, according to a press release issued by Rambam Hospital on Thursday, Oct. 2, he completely reversed himself, by the end of his trip.

Horton stated that his visit to Israel was a “turning point for me and my relationship with this region.”

The visit consisted of tours of Rambam’s medical units, a series of medical and ethical lectures, discussions, debates and visits. During his short visit to the region, Dr. Horton met with young Israeli and Arab doctors, in order to gain their perspective, and he met with doctors who treated the wounded on the battlefield in Gaza, both Israeli soldiers and Arab victims.

Discussions during his visit included “Science and Medicine as a Catalyst for Peaceful Coexistence,” and “The Ethics of Armed Conflict and Responsible Scholarly Journalism.”

On Thursday, the last day of his visit, Horton was a guest at a debate entitled, “Publications which promote political agendas have no place in scientific and medical journalism and academics should refrain from publishing in such journals.” Supporting the premise was a professor of Geriatrics at Ben-Gurion University, and opposing was a professor of psychiatry from Tel Aviv University.

Horton ended his visit by giving a lecture in the Rambam Grand Rounds, “Geopolitical Issues and Responsibilities of Medical and Scientific Journals.” (A video of the full lecture follows this article.)

The British doctor began his lecture by stating, “I need, very honestly, to set the record straight with you. First, I deeply regret the completely unnecessary polarization that publication of the letter by Paolo Manduca caused.” He continued, second, “I was personally horrified at the offensive video that was forwarded by two of the authors of that letter. The world view expressed in that video is abhorrent and must be condemned, and I condemn it.” Horton continued with the commitment that he will be “publishing what I have just said in The Lancet next week.”

In addition to making it absolutely clear that he was profoundly sorry that his publication was used in such a blatantly political and completely unjustified manner, Horton expressed the desire for The Lancet to receive papers from Israel and to promote collaboration between Rambam and The Lancet “to further the cause of health care at all levels of society for all peoples.”

Horton told his Israeli colleagues that his visit represents “a fresh start for a new and different future.”

http://www.jewishpress.com/news/bre...y-for-vicious-anti-israel-article/2014/10/03/
 

gryfin

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He should resign for letting trash and be published on the Lancet a medical journal.


Dr. Richard Horton, editor-in-chief of the British medical journal The Lancet, unreservedly apologized for running a virulently anti-Israel open letter accusing Israel of a “massacre” in Gaza during this summer’s Operation Protective Edge. The apology was made at the conclusion of a three-day visit to Rambam Medical Center and to the Technion Medical School, in Haifa.

The bitterly anti-Israel letter, written by Paola Manduca and signed by 23 other medical professionals, was published online on July 23.

The open letter accused Israel of committing war crimes, of “targeting whole families, killing them in their homes.” It claimed that Israel’s attacks on Gaza “aim to terrorise, wound the soul and the body of the people, and make their life impossible in the future, as well as also demolishing their homes and prohibiting the means to rebuild.”

The letter, published in such a prestigious medical journal, also painted virtually all Israeli academics as being complicit in the “massacre and destruction of Gaza” because of their failure to denounce the Israeli government and join with the letter writers in demanding that Israel cease the military action in Gaza.

Although Horton initially refused to apologize for publishing the highly politicized and intemperate letter, according to a press release issued by Rambam Hospital on Thursday, Oct. 2, he completely reversed himself, by the end of his trip.

Horton stated that his visit to Israel was a “turning point for me and my relationship with this region.”

The visit consisted of tours of Rambam’s medical units, a series of medical and ethical lectures, discussions, debates and visits. During his short visit to the region, Dr. Horton met with young Israeli and Arab doctors, in order to gain their perspective, and he met with doctors who treated the wounded on the battlefield in Gaza, both Israeli soldiers and Arab victims.

Discussions during his visit included “Science and Medicine as a Catalyst for Peaceful Coexistence,” and “The Ethics of Armed Conflict and Responsible Scholarly Journalism.”

On Thursday, the last day of his visit, Horton was a guest at a debate entitled, “Publications which promote political agendas have no place in scientific and medical journalism and academics should refrain from publishing in such journals.” Supporting the premise was a professor of Geriatrics at Ben-Gurion University, and opposing was a professor of psychiatry from Tel Aviv University.

Horton ended his visit by giving a lecture in the Rambam Grand Rounds, “Geopolitical Issues and Responsibilities of Medical and Scientific Journals.” (A video of the full lecture follows this article.)

The British doctor began his lecture by stating, “I need, very honestly, to set the record straight with you. First, I deeply regret the completely unnecessary polarization that publication of the letter by Paolo Manduca caused.” He continued, second, “I was personally horrified at the offensive video that was forwarded by two of the authors of that letter. The world view expressed in that video is abhorrent and must be condemned, and I condemn it.” Horton continued with the commitment that he will be “publishing what I have just said in The Lancet next week.”

In addition to making it absolutely clear that he was profoundly sorry that his publication was used in such a blatantly political and completely unjustified manner, Horton expressed the desire for The Lancet to receive papers from Israel and to promote collaboration between Rambam and The Lancet “to further the cause of health care at all levels of society for all peoples.”

Horton told his Israeli colleagues that his visit represents “a fresh start for a new and different future.”

http://www.jewishpress.com/news/bre...y-for-vicious-anti-israel-article/2014/10/03/
You've got it wrong again, you little dim witted zionist. He does not apologize for the letter at all. He simply said he regrets the polarization the letter caused. In fact, the article you cite leaves out important comments. For example, the words in bold were not included despite being part of the sentence:

"First, I deeply regret the completely unnecessary polarization that publication of the letter by Paolo Manduca caused, irrespective of our intentions which I am very happy to discuss.”

You should take the time to listen to the tape rather than parroting what you want to read.
 

IM469

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In fact, the article you cite leaves out important comments.
The source was the Jewish Press - I can't understand how there can be any bias involved ....

I think putting any material in a medical journal diminishes it's credibility no matter how egregious the provocation. It's a medical journal and once it becomes anything else, less professionals will use it and the patients and medical profession in general will suffer. There are a lot of other avenues for doctors to voice their concern.
 

shapeup1

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You've got it wrong again, you little dim witted zionist. He does not apologize for the letter at all. He simply said he regrets the polarization the letter caused. In fact, the article you cite leaves out important comments. For example, the words in bold were not included despite being part of the sentence:

"First, I deeply regret the completely unnecessary polarization that publication of the letter by Paolo Manduca caused, irrespective of our intentions which I am very happy to discuss.”

You should take the time to listen to the tape rather than parroting what you want to read.

Pig vomit was jerking off at this letter that was posted on lancet couple months ago, now with this apology and condemnation ... his ass is burning to hell. LOL
Eat your liver out you dickhead...
 

gryfin

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Pig vomit was jerking off at this letter that was posted on lancet couple months ago, now with this apology and condemnation ... his ass is burning to hell. LOL
Eat your liver out you dickhead...
When you find the apology let us know. Don't you get tired of swinging and missing?
 

shapeup1

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The source was the Jewish Press - I can't understand how there can be any bias involved ....
.
You prefer a different source?

Lancet editor apologises for Gaza article by scientists who promoted Ku Klux Klan

The editor of The Lancet has expressed his “deep regret” to Israeli doctors after his journal published a controversial letter in the wake of the Gaza war co-authored by two scientists who had previously circulated Ku Klux Klan material.

Addressing the physicians and staff at the Rambam hospital in the northern city of Haifa, Israel on Thursday morning at the end of his three-day visit to the country, Prof Richard Horton began by saying that he intended to “set the record straight” about his views and those of his colleagues.

Last month, The Telegraph published an article about the extreme opinions expressed by some of the authors of the British medical journal's ‘Open letter for the people of Gaza’.

Two of the authors - Dr Paola Manduca and Dr Swee Ang - had previously circulated and promoted a link to a video clip featuring an anti-Semitic diatribe by David Duke, a white supremacist and former Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard.

In the footage, Duke claims that “the Zionist Matrix of Power controls Media, Politics and Banking” and that “some of the Jewish elite practices racism and tribalism to advance their supremacist agenda”

In another email to his contacts, Dr Manduca forwarded a message suggesting that the Jews were responsible for the Boston marathon bombings.

“Let us hope that someone in the FBI us smart enough to look more carefully at the clues in Boston and find the real culprits behind these bombings instead of buying the Zionist spin”, the email stated.

“First, I deeply deeply regret the completely unnecessary polarisation that publication of the letter by Paolo Manduca did. [ ....] this outcome was definitely not my intention”, Prof Horton said.

“I was personally horrified at the offensive video by two of the authors of that letter. The world view expressed in that video is abhorrent and must be condemned and I condemn it”, he added, to the applause of the auditorium.

Prof Horton, who is editor-in-chief of The Lancet, added that he has made his views very clear “directly to those two individuals” - and said that he will publish “what I have just said in The Lancet next week”.

But Prof Horton made no mention of the other controversial aspect of The Lancet’s open letter, which wholly ignored Hamas’s role in the recent Gaza war - a fifty day conflict which was partly triggered by rocket fire on Israel from the coastal territory controlled by the Palestinian faction.

Following the publication of the letter, the staff of Rambam hospital were outraged and sent their own letter in response, which was not published by The Lancet, Prof Rafael Beyar, the Director General of the hospital told The Telegraph in an interview on Thursday morning.

“But we believed, and said ‘let’s invite him. It seems like he doesn’t know many facts about this region. Let’s invite the editor in chief of The Lancet to Rambam to see the reality of medical life [in Israel]”, Prof Beyar said.

During his three day visit, Prof Horton has met the staff of the hospital, over a quarter of whom are Israeli Arab citizens of Israel, as well as the Israeli, Palestinian and Syrian patients being treated there. Prof Horton also attended meetings with minority communities in Haifa, Acco and Tel Aviv.

Enthusiastically logging his visit with photos on his twitter feed, Prof Horton mentioned in his speech that he was particularly moved by a meeting with the imam and the rabbi of the city of Acco, in northern Israel.

“Yesterday, I had the huge privilege of visiting Acco, and meeting the imam and the rabbi of the city and seeing how they work together”, he said.

“At end, I asked the imam, ‘so what should I do?’ And he said to me very directly [...] you must work with Israelis, you must work with Palestinians and you must work to encourage to bring those two peoples together.” [...]

“I will simply say the whole of my time, from landing here to being here today has been a turning point, for me in my relationship with this region - and I thank you for it”, said Prof Horton to the medics.

Prof Gerald Steinberg, president of NGO Monitor - a Jerusalem-based research institute - which last month published an investigative report about The Lancet’s authors, expressed surprise at Prof Horton’s speech.

“I expected when Richard Horton came on Monday to hear a whitewash - to hear from someone trying to save his position, because for many years he has been the centre of a lot of demonisation of Israel through the Lancet and through false medical claims”, he told The Telegraph immediately after the lecture.

“What I heard was a changed man, someone who expressed regret - some would say it could have been greater, but the fact that he did this was very important.”

At the conclusion of his visit, Prof Horton said he hoped to “open a new chapter” in the relationship between The Lancet and Israel, whilst emphasising the importance of closer Israeli-Palestinian ties and understandings.

“The people of Gaza[...] don’t represent a terrorist regime. [...] [T]hey are just people who are trying to live their lives as peacefully and as safely as possible. Just like you, there is a hope for a different future - a future of success, prosperity, safety and peace. They want it, they try to live it, and it’s our hope that we can work with them, and with you, to achieve it”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...-by-scientists-who-promoted-Ku-Klux-Klan.html
 

gryfin

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You prefer a different source?

Lancet editor apologises for Gaza article by scientists who promoted Ku Klux Klan

The editor of The Lancet has expressed his “deep regret” to Israeli doctors after his journal published a controversial letter in the wake of the Gaza war co-authored by two scientists who had previously circulated Ku Klux Klan material.

Addressing the physicians and staff at the Rambam hospital in the northern city of Haifa, Israel on Thursday morning at the end of his three-day visit to the country, Prof Richard Horton began by saying that he intended to “set the record straight” about his views and those of his colleagues.

Last month, The Telegraph published an article about the extreme opinions expressed by some of the authors of the British medical journal's ‘Open letter for the people of Gaza’.

Two of the authors - Dr Paola Manduca and Dr Swee Ang - had previously circulated and promoted a link to a video clip featuring an anti-Semitic diatribe by David Duke, a white supremacist and former Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard.

In the footage, Duke claims that “the Zionist Matrix of Power controls Media, Politics and Banking” and that “some of the Jewish elite practices racism and tribalism to advance their supremacist agenda”

In another email to his contacts, Dr Manduca forwarded a message suggesting that the Jews were responsible for the Boston marathon bombings.

“Let us hope that someone in the FBI us smart enough to look more carefully at the clues in Boston and find the real culprits behind these bombings instead of buying the Zionist spin”, the email stated.

“First, I deeply deeply regret the completely unnecessary polarisation that publication of the letter by Paolo Manduca did. [ ....] this outcome was definitely not my intention”, Prof Horton said.

“I was personally horrified at the offensive video by two of the authors of that letter. The world view expressed in that video is abhorrent and must be condemned and I condemn it”, he added, to the applause of the auditorium.

Prof Horton, who is editor-in-chief of The Lancet, added that he has made his views very clear “directly to those two individuals” - and said that he will publish “what I have just said in The Lancet next week”.

But Prof Horton made no mention of the other controversial aspect of The Lancet’s open letter, which wholly ignored Hamas’s role in the recent Gaza war - a fifty day conflict which was partly triggered by rocket fire on Israel from the coastal territory controlled by the Palestinian faction.

Following the publication of the letter, the staff of Rambam hospital were outraged and sent their own letter in response, which was not published by The Lancet, Prof Rafael Beyar, the Director General of the hospital told The Telegraph in an interview on Thursday morning.

“But we believed, and said ‘let’s invite him. It seems like he doesn’t know many facts about this region. Let’s invite the editor in chief of The Lancet to Rambam to see the reality of medical life [in Israel]”, Prof Beyar said.

During his three day visit, Prof Horton has met the staff of the hospital, over a quarter of whom are Israeli Arab citizens of Israel, as well as the Israeli, Palestinian and Syrian patients being treated there. Prof Horton also attended meetings with minority communities in Haifa, Acco and Tel Aviv.

Enthusiastically logging his visit with photos on his twitter feed, Prof Horton mentioned in his speech that he was particularly moved by a meeting with the imam and the rabbi of the city of Acco, in northern Israel.

“Yesterday, I had the huge privilege of visiting Acco, and meeting the imam and the rabbi of the city and seeing how they work together”, he said.

“At end, I asked the imam, ‘so what should I do?’ And he said to me very directly [...] you must work with Israelis, you must work with Palestinians and you must work to encourage to bring those two peoples together.” [...]

“I will simply say the whole of my time, from landing here to being here today has been a turning point, for me in my relationship with this region - and I thank you for it”, said Prof Horton to the medics.

Prof Gerald Steinberg, president of NGO Monitor - a Jerusalem-based research institute - which last month published an investigative report about The Lancet’s authors, expressed surprise at Prof Horton’s speech.

“I expected when Richard Horton came on Monday to hear a whitewash - to hear from someone trying to save his position, because for many years he has been the centre of a lot of demonisation of Israel through the Lancet and through false medical claims”, he told The Telegraph immediately after the lecture.

“What I heard was a changed man, someone who expressed regret - some would say it could have been greater, but the fact that he did this was very important.”

At the conclusion of his visit, Prof Horton said he hoped to “open a new chapter” in the relationship between The Lancet and Israel, whilst emphasising the importance of closer Israeli-Palestinian ties and understandings.

“The people of Gaza[...] don’t represent a terrorist regime. [...] [T]hey are just people who are trying to live their lives as peacefully and as safely as possible. Just like you, there is a hope for a different future - a future of success, prosperity, safety and peace. They want it, they try to live it, and it’s our hope that we can work with them, and with you, to achieve it”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...-by-scientists-who-promoted-Ku-Klux-Klan.html
Another miss. Why can't you just bold the text where he apologizes? C'mon...bold the text. Is that too hard for you?
 

shapeup1

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Another miss. Why can't you just bold the text where he apologizes? C'mon...bold the text. Is that too hard for you?
I don't need to show you, two papers are saying it. LOL Unfortunately you continue to make an ass of your self and troll on minutia rather than admit that the asshole doctors you gloated about are racist garbage. You need to come up with substantial items rather than stupidity such as grammar. Until then no one will respect you. Try to grow up...
 

gryfin

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I don't need to show you, two papers are saying it. LOL Unfortunately you continue to make an ass of your self and troll on minutia rather than admit that the asshole doctors you gloated about are racist garbage. You need to come up with substantial items rather than stupidity such as grammar. Until then no one will respect you. Try to grow up...
On the contrary, you've provided two sources that contain no apology whatsoever. It seems you lack the intellectual horsepower to provide the text that says they apologize.

You are just another dopey Zionist who can't put two and two together.

C'mon, half wit...I'll give you another chance. Highlight the text where they apologize.
 

fuji

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No apology, other than where he said he deeply regretted it.

Gryfin you are, bar none, the stupidest idiot on terb.
 

groggy

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How is deep regret not a retraction?
He regrets the 'deep polarization' not the clip.
In other words, he's upset that talking about the loss of lives in Gaza so inflames people like you that it destroys chances for peaceful and meaningful dialogue.
 

basketcase

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CNN hasn't retracted it's video of Palestinian hate speech yet you don't seem concerned about that.

Of course CNN is a political news organization reporting on politics so are likely to know what they are talking about. The Lancet is a medical journal reporting on politics; so far out of their depth that it's the equivalent of asking the authors of C-36 to review escorts.
 

fuji

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So Groggy, Gryfin, direct question:

Do you agree the KKK supporters who wrote the original letter?
 

groggy

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So Groggy, Gryfin, direct question:

Do you agree the KKK supporters who wrote the original letter?
I don't believe they were KKK supporters.

For her part, Dr Ang said: “I didn’t know who David Duke was, or that he was connected to the Ku Klux Klan. I am concerned that if there is any truth in the video, that Jews control the media, politics and banking, what on earth is going on? I was worried.”
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/11112930/Lancet-hijacked-in-anti-Israel-campaign.html

Naive and a bit sloppy, but KKK supporters?
Nonsense.
 
Last edited:

basketcase

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No, not KKK supporters directly ( promoters of the KKK? ;) ) but that quote shows her to be believe that Jews control the media, politics, and banking .



p.s. The whole article grog selectively quoted from

Lancet 'hijacked in anti-Israel campaign'
Senior British medical figures say the well-respected journal is being used as a platform by alleged conspiracy theorists


For almost 200 years, it has been regarded as a well-respected medical journal.

But according to senior British medical figures, the Lancet is being hijacked to campaign indefatigably against Israel, and used as a platform by alleged conspiracy theorists.

In August, it published a controversial “open letter for the people of Gaza” that condemned Israel in the strongest possible terms, but strikingly made no mention of Hamas’ atrocities.

The five principal authors of the letter made it clear that they had “no competing interests”. However, all of them have campaigned vociferously for the Palestinian cause over many years.

In addition, a cache of emails openly available in Google groups show that two of the authors, Dr Paola Manduca and Dr Swee Ang, have sympathies with the views of David Duke, a white supremacist and former Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard.

Dr Swee Ang, an orthopaedic surgeon, and Dr Manduca, a professor of genetics at the University of Genoa in Italy – who are both members of pro-Palestine NGOs – sent round-robin emails to their contacts promoting a video entitled “CNN Goldman Sachs & the Zio Matrix”.

The video features an extended anti-Semitic rant by Duke, in which he claims that “the Zionist Matrix of Power controls Media, Politics and Banking” and that “some of the Jewish elite practices racism and tribalism to advance their supremacist agenda”.

Dr Ang wrote: “This is a shocking video please watch. This is not about Palestine – it is about all of us!”


In another email, Dr Manduca forwarded a message alleging that the Boston marathon bombings were in fact carried out by Jews. “Let us hope that someone in the FBI us smart enough to look more carefully at the clues in Boston and find the real culprits behind these bombings instead of buying the Zionist spin”, it said.

Elsewhere, she shared an article comparing the Jewish state to a “strangler fig”, which grows around other trees and takes their sunlight, often resulting in the death of the original trees.

David Duke has been delighted by the apparent support of these respected doctors. “The latest group of people to join the ranks of those who have broken the chains of Zionist censorship have been a brave group of medical professionals,” he wrote on his blog.

In response to questions by the Daily Telegraph, Dr Manduca issued a statement in which she denied being anti-Semitic. “[But] I legitimately use my right of freedom of opinion,” she said, “and do not agree or value the politics of the government of Israel, nor of many others, including Jews in and out of Israel.”

For her part, Dr Ang said: “I didn’t know who David Duke was, or that he was connected to the Ku Klux Klan. I am concerned that if there is any truth in the video, that Jews control the media, politics and banking, what on earth is going on? I was worried.”

She said that she was made aware of the video by a friend, Dr Kamal Alubaid, who appears to have been active on 9/11 "truth" websites. In one post, he referred to the Jewish State as "Racist Apparthide (sic) Israel".

Moreover, Dr Mads Gilbert, a third author of the letter, gave an interview with the Norwegian newspaper Dagbladet in 2001 in which he said that the 9/11 atrocities were as a result of Western foreign policy, and that he supported terror attacks in that “context”.

Israeli campaigners brought this information to the attention of the Lancet in a letter sent on 1 September. However, the journal has refused to issue a response and has not removed the open letter from its website – through which it collected 20,000 signatures in support of the letter.

“It's utterly irrelevant. It's a smear campaign,” the editor of the Lancet, Dr Richard Horton, told the Daily Telegraph. “I don’t honestly see what all this has to do with the Gaza letter. I have no plans to retract the letter, and I would not retract the letter even if it was found to be substantiated.”

Dr Horton, who has in the past spoken at rallies organised by Stop The War Coalition, denied that the journal's reputation would be damaged by giving a platform to people who appear to hold such views, and said that the Lancet is not intending to investigate the allegations.

According to its critics, the current episode is just the latest example of anti-Israel prejudice that the Lancet’s editors have encouraged.

“For many years, the Lancet has been consistently using its reputation to attack Israel,” says Professor David Katz, an expert in infection and immunity at University College London.

“The Lancet is supposed to be a politically neutral medical journal. The fact that they have given proven anti-Semites a platform and not rescinded it, even when confronted with the evidence, is appalling.

“They have allowed their hatred of Israel to blind them to the norms of medical science and the pursuit of reason.”

NGO Monitor, an Israeli watchdog, points out that over the past 15 years, the journal has formed a number of partnerships with Palestinian groups, including the Lancet-Palestinian Health Alliance, Medical Aid for Palestinians and the Gaza Community Mental Health Programme.

By contrast, there have been no comparable collaborations with Israeli groups.

Professor Katz and a number of other senior medical figures have written to the medical ombudsman to register their complaints.

On 29 August, Professor Sir Mark Pepys, director of the Wolfson Drug Discovery Unit at UCL, wrote: “The failure of the Menduca et al authors to disclose their extraordinary conflicts of interest… are the most serious, unprofessional and unethical errors.

“The transparent effort to conceal this vicious and substantially mendacious partisan political diatribe as an innocent humanitarian appeal has no place in any serious publication, let alone a professional medical journal, and would disgrace even the lowest of the gutter press.”

He accuses Dr Horton, the Lancet editor, personally: “Horton’s behaviour in this case is consistent with his longstanding and wholly inappropriate use of The Lancet as a vehicle for his own extreme political views,” he says. “It has greatly detracted from the former high standing of the journal.”

In response, Dr Horton said: “How can you separate politics and health? The two go hand-in-hand.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/healthnews/11112930/Lancet-hijacked-in-anti-Israel-campaign.html
 

fuji

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I don't believe they were KKK supporters.
Then why were they promoting really vile, racist, antisemitic garbage from a KKK Grand Wizard?

"Jews control the media"

Is this the sort of antisemitic bile you ate going to be passing around soon too?

You are clearly aligning yourself with extremist antisemites line Hamdan and these KKK dweebs.
 

groggy

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Then why were they promoting really vile, racist, antisemitic garbage from a KKK Grand Wizard?
They linked a video that had a number of interviews, one of which included Duke.
The video is most likely total junk (I'm not going to watch it, go ahead and send me the coles notes) and possibly worse.

But to take that as meaning they are KKK supporters is nonsense.
You really are getting out of control.
 
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