
Interview: Christopher Borgert on an Infamous Glyphosate Paper
In 2024 the journal *Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology* retracted a 2000 peer‑reviewed study that claimed Roundup glyphosate posed no human health risk, citing methodological flaws and undisclosed corporate involvement. The paper, heavily cited in regulatory assessments, listed Monsanto scientists as contributors, prompting accusations of ghostwriting. Christopher Borgert, a pharmacologist with past industry consulting, organized over 60 toxicology researchers to contest the retraction, arguing the evidence for misconduct is thin. The dispute highlights enduring tensions over conflicts of interest in chemical safety research.

Book Review: An Impassioned Lament for Our Imperiled Wild Forests
Suzanne Simard’s new book, "When the Forest Breathes," expands on her earlier work by documenting how clearcutting devastates forest ecosystems and accelerates climate risks. Drawing on four decades of field experiments across British Columbia, she shows that preserving "mother trees"...

Medicine Misses the Mark on African and Black Hair Health
Black and African patients remain dramatically underrepresented in dermatology, especially alopecia research, creating a knowledge gap that hampers accurate diagnosis and treatment. An undergraduate survey of ten participants revealed that hair loss is frequently linked to chemical straightening, tight braids,...

When Scientific Debate Steps Into Custody Cases
Professor Ben Hine, who endured parental alienation as a child, now champions the concept as a legitimate psychological phenomenon. His research links alienation to long‑term harms such as anxiety, depression and identity disturbances, yet the term is fiercely disputed by...

Student Athletes Feel the Heat as States Adapt to Climate Change
As extreme heat becomes routine, U.S. schools are scrambling to protect student athletes from life‑threatening heat illness. More than 9,000 high‑school athletes receive treatment each year, and nine deaths were recorded in 2021, prompting states to adopt their own heat‑safety...

Scientific Journals Need Dedicated Fact-Checkers
A team led by chemist Brett Pollard uncovered about 20 scientific papers that cite nonexistent WHO and EPA standards for drinking‑water metal concentrations. The fabricated values have been repeated across multiple studies, some predating the rise of generative AI, suggesting...

The Push for Artificial Inheritance
A Berkeley Genomics gathering of roughly 100 scientists, investors and futurists highlighted a growing commercial push to edit human embryos using CRISPR technology. Startups such as Bootstrap Bio, Manhattan Genomics and Preventive are courting parents and investors despite U.S. bans...

As Rocket Launches Increase, They May Be Polluting the Skies
Rocket launches have surged, nearly tripling in the past five years to about 320 flights in 2025, driven largely by private megaconstellations like SpaceX’s Starlink. Researchers warn that exhaust—especially black carbon from kerosene‑based fuels and chlorine from solid boosters—accumulates in...

The Nuclear Safety Protections in Federal Crosshairs
President Trump’s recent executive orders are prompting the Department of Energy and the Nuclear Regulatory Commission to roll back the long‑standing ALARA radiation‑protection standards that have limited worker and public exposure at federal nuclear sites. The changes could allow up...

The Future of Sex as a Biological Variable in Health Research
On Jan. 20, 2025 President Donald Trump signed an executive order that recognizes only two sexes and mandates federal agencies use the term “sex” instead of “gender.” The order abruptly removed the NIH Sex as a Biological Variable (SABV) policy webpages, unsettling...

Book Review: How Genetics Shapes Our Ideas About Vice and Blame
Kathryn Paige Harden’s new book, Original Sin, blends memoir, history, and behavioral genetics to ask whether DNA predisposes people toward vice and how that shapes blame. Drawing on two decades of research, she shows that genes modestly raise risk for...

Where There’s Wildfire Smoke, There’s Poor Mental Health
Recent research connects wildfire smoke to a surge in mental‑health disorders, showing that fine particulate matter can infiltrate the brain, trigger neuroinflammation, and alter neurotransmitter pathways. Laboratory studies on mice reveal serotonin depletion and amyloid‑beta accumulation after short‑term smoke exposure,...

Why Environmental Tipping Points Don’t Have to Spell Doom
Environmental tipping points are often portrayed as irreversible catastrophes, but recent research shows many ecosystems can recover if disturbances cease. In 2024 the planet exceeded 1.5 °C warming and experienced its first global‑scale tipping event with widespread coral reef die‑back. Field...

Why the FDA Is Embracing Old Math for New Drugs
The FDA released draft guidance encouraging the use of Bayesian statistics in drug and biologic clinical trials, aiming to shorten development timelines and lower costs. By allowing external data—known as priors—to be incorporated, the approach promises more efficient, adaptive studies,...

Under Trump, mRNA Skepticism Threatens a Promising Technology
Under the Trump administration, the U.S. government slashed nearly $500 million in mRNA research funding, canceling 22 projects and a $766 million Moderna contract. The FDA’s initial refusal then reversal to review Moderna’s flu vaccine highlighted regulatory skepticism toward the platform. Private‑sector...