here, what I consider bad journalistic categorization/manipulation/undeclared bias:
001. at forbes.com, Joni Sweet writes in "4 Supplements To Help You Stay Healthy While Traveling, According To A Naturopathic Doctor"[2021 archived]:
"[the reference] 'leading up to your travel date, stay consistent with nutrition, exercise, sleep, and supplement routines' [...] says Erin Stokes, a naturopathic doctor and medical director at MegaFood";
ND Stokes's bio. tells us she is a Bastyr ND grad. And there's a hot link within the Forbes article to ND Stokes's Megafood website which promotes her massive line of supplements, supplements, supplements. While obviously an immediate promotion/advert., this comes across as presented as a travel article there there is no objective counterpointing. E.g.: generally speaking, supplements are quite dubious though there are EXCEPTIONS. What I'm more interested in is the credential from BU and the nonsense epistemic foundation of naturopathy, that goes unmentioned. And once such is known, why would someone trust the naturopathic perspective?

No comments:
Post a Comment