There's a blog for everyone, including hapless weekly newspaper photographers who must sally forth in pursuit of "miserable people pointing at dog turds." Hat tip: Susan Delacourt....

In response to this morning's post about mandated choice in organ donation progams, Contrarian reader JB points out this TED talk by Dan Ariely, author of Predictably Irrational, about counter-intuitive aspects of human decision making. The discussion of organ donation starts at the five minute mark, but the whole talk is fascinating....

Britain's 500-year-old Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons has thrown its weight behind a new approach to the shortage of organs for lifesaving transplants: make people decide whether they want to be donors. Health professionals involved in organ and tissue donation have long been aware of a maddening statistic: Although about 90 percent of adults express willingness to be organ and tissue donors, only about half get around to signing the consent form (which appears on on the health card renewal application in Nova Scotia). Without a signed card, it's harder to get distraught relatives to agree to donation in the...

British scientists are up in arms about the Labour government's sacking of Dr. David Nutt as head of the Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs after he refused to toe the government's strident line against marijuana and ecstasy. On Friday, Home Secretary Alan Johnson dismissed Nutt, head of the Psychopharmacology Unit in the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry at the University of Bristol, after the Centre for Crime and Justice at King’s College London published a paper containing criticisms he had made of the Brown government’s drug policies in a lecture last July. In the talk, Nutt said ecstasy...