Orac has done a wonderful job of organising a slew of links to skeptical blogging into the Skeptics’ Circle. (We’re talking about the good kind of skepticism here, not global warming/ozone depletion/evolution sceptics.)

However, I must take issue with one small thing. Orac names Penn and Teller as heroes of the skeptic fellowship. They’re not. Last year, an alert reader noticed that their show on Safety Hysteria cited as an expert none other than Steve Milloy. (In an obvious attempt to hide from my scrutiny access to their website is blocked from Australia, so I’ve linked to Google’s cache.) Even more troubling are their shows on second hand smoke and the environment which “A Skeptical Blog” deals with here and here. To complete the circle to my submission on the DDT hoax to the Skeptic’s Circle, Penn and Teller’s expert on second hand smoke is Elizabeth Whelan, who may well be the first person to tell the bogus story about Sri Lanka and DDT. In 1985 she wrote:

Why was there an increase in malaria in Ceylon [now called Sri Lanka] after 1964? It is clear that the effects of Silent Spring was not limited to the United States. Following the publication of this book, the use of DDT was discontinued in Ceylon. Epidemic conditions reappeared and it has been estimated that between 1968 and 1969 “considerably more than two million cases occurred,” all related to the campaign against DDT.
And she’s still at it. Just a few days ago in her a glowing review of State of Fear she wrote:
Crichton’s Dr. Kenner notes that DDT was the best defense against malaria-causing mosquitoes: “altogether, the ban has caused more than 50 million needless deaths . . . [B]anning DDT killed more people than Hitler . . . and the environmental movement pushed hard for it.”

All right, I’ll calm down now. Go and read the Skeptics’ Circle.