Tom Bethell

Tom Bethell (born July 17, 1936) is a journalist who writes mainly on economic and scientific issues, and is known for his support of the market economy, political conservatism, and fringe science. He says that neither evolution nor intelligent design is falsifiable.

Life and career

Bethell was born and raised in London,[1] England. He was educated at Downside School and Trinity College, Oxford. A resident of the District of Columbia, he has lived in Virginia, Louisiana, and California. He is married to Donna R. Fitzpatrick of Washington, D.C.[2][3][4] He is a senior editor of The American Spectator and member of the Hoover Institution. He was formerly Washington editor of Harper's, and an editor of the Washington Monthly.[5]

Bethell is a member of the Group for the Scientific Reappraisal of the HIV-AIDS Hypothesis[6] which denies that HIV causes AIDS. In the The Politically Incorrect Guide to Science (2005), he promotes skepticism of the existence of man-made global warming, AIDS denialism, and skepticism of evolution (which Bethell denies is "real science"[7]), promoting intelligent design instead.[8] Bethell was hired as a researcher by New Orleans district attorney Jim Garrison to assist with his prosecution of Clay Shaw for conspiracy to assassinate John F. Kennedy.[9] Bethell gives no credence to Garrison's charges that Shaw was involved.[10] Bethell has written at least one article (American Spectator. Dec 98, Vol. 31 Issue 12, p. 20. 2p.) where he states "For about two years, I worked on New Orleans district attorney Jim Garrison's bizarre investigation of the Kennedy assassination" without disclosing that he was terminated by said investigation for providing Clay Shaw's' defense team with information they may not have had a legal right to and certainly did not have a right to at the time he provided said information.[11]

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