That's "Natural News," so take it with a fifty pound grain of salt. Corcept lists 6 papers (not 8, as NN claims) on which Ford was only a co-author; never lead. Which usually means she didn't get any of the research grant money, if it even came from Corcept. Companies commonly reference any paper that doesn't say their product is terrible, regardless of the source.
You might note that of the six papers: 2 are about reducing weight gain in men (who rarely get pregnant), 2 on weight gain in rats, 1 is weight gain in mice, and 1 is reducing amnesia from electroshock "therapy." Nothing on abortion.
I find Ford non-credible because she can't remember when, or where the alleged incident occurred, has changed her story on how many guys it was, and didn't recall it was Kavanaugh until this summer.
That's "Natural News," so take it with a fifty pound grain of salt. Corcept lists 6 papers (not 8, as NN claims) on which Ford was only a co-author; never lead. Which usually means she didn't get any of the research grant money, if it even came from Corcept. Companies commonly reference any paper that doesn't say their product is terrible, regardless of the source.
ReplyDeleteYou might note that of the six papers: 2 are about reducing weight gain in men (who rarely get pregnant), 2 on weight gain in rats, 1 is weight gain in mice, and 1 is reducing amnesia from electroshock "therapy." Nothing on abortion.
I find Ford non-credible because she can't remember when, or where the alleged incident occurred, has changed her story on how many guys it was, and didn't recall it was Kavanaugh until this summer.