A load of our current medications were developped before we had any understanding of the mechanism underpinning them.
While the idea of building-up a formal mechanistic understanding to support drug development is very attractive, is that how many major drugs have been developed, or is there a need for serendipidy here?
I'm confused... I cant follow your reasoning... What i'm talking about is researchers exercising animals to exhaustion & then testing things on them, and assuming their results tell us something about ME. Whatever the results are they will only be results on what works (or doesnt), for treating a mouse who has exercised to exhaustion, & therefroe possibly a human.
Since ME does not = having exercised to exhaustion, i dont see how it can serendipitously tell us anything about it. It can only tell us something about what happens in a mouse body when they have swam until the point of collapse (Or sometimes they stress them out psychologically as well or instead of, the exhaustion).
Its like giving a bunch of mice very nasty psychological shocks, until they start trembling & shaking with it, & then expecting experimentation on them in that state to tell us something about parkinsons, just because it looks superficially similar. Its illogical.
I eat meat, with guilt but i do eat it, but i do not find it acceptable to kill more animals
than we need for food (i know that happens but the question was what we find acceptable). Neither do i find it acceptable to do all kinds of experiments on animals hoping to discover something out of the experiments 'serendipitously'.
Yes we are going to need a pretty big stroke of luck to get anywhere, but i dont see it as necessary to toy with extreme cruelty, with animals, until we have a damn good reason to do so.
I'm not certain i find it ethical even then, but that for me would be a different question.
Again, to be clear i am talking ONLY about studies on animals where researchers try to
simulate ME/CFS - i dont believe that is possible, so to my mind research on animals with simulated ME/CFS is wrong and a waste. Playing around with them hoping for a stroke of luck is appalling.
The example you gave of injecting an infected person's blood to see if it will give them symptoms... well that is slightly different, i dont know about that, but i defer to Jonathan's comments both here and on the thread about that study, since it is all a bit scientifically beyond me.
All i'm saying is : No experiments on animals that are exercised to exhaustion , and or stressed to collapse, that are being performed because the researchers are too ignorant to know that that is simply not what ME/CFS is. I wish it were that but it isnt, it only looks a little like that to people who confuse it with CF or TATT.
LOL I honestly cant eat my ham sandwich now, i didnt think about that pig's death when i bought it. I dont find it acceptable to treat animals inhumanely during life or slaughter, and try to buy my meat accordingly, but i dont always, so i need to face that and stop it.
I only started eating meat for ease when i got too ill to cook for myself & was cutting out all kinds of other things trying to 'nutrition' my way out of this hell. But i carried on eating it even when i resumed bread etc, because it tastes good and it is easier.
Sorry if that was very waffly i not good at succinct even before the fog descended