July 11th, 2007
Mark Tooley, of the Institute on Religion and Democracy, said this about Dr. James Holsinger’s nomination as Surgeon General:
Dr. Holsinger’s nomination should be evaluated based on his qualifications in the fields of medicine and public health. …Opposition to any nominee based exclusively on his church activities and traditional Christian beliefs sets a dangerous new precedent.
I think Mr. Tooley has it exactly right. Opposition to Holsinger’s nomination shouldn’t be based on his religious beliefs or church activities. Dr. C. Everett Koop was a conservative evangelical Christian who became an outspoken advocate for common-sense and science-based HIV/AIDS prevention, research and treatment programs. (Update: By the way, Dr. Koop endorses Dr. Holsinger’s nomination.) On the basis of religious beliefs alone, there’s no reason to believe that Holsinger can’t be a similarly principled advocate — assuming, of course, this administration would let him.
And so the real question centers around his qualifications as an impartial scientist and the nation’s chief health advocate. The only published evidence we have for his view of science is his sixteen-year-old paper, “Pathophysiology of Male Homosexuality,” a paper which presents his “scientific opinion” on homosexuality. What do you think? Does his paper qualify as science?
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