One of the main reasons that third-rate research continues to prosper, most notably in the UK, is the lack of people willing to challenge it, especially if it means speaking out against the establishment view.
You are probably aware of the controversy surrounding the PACE trial: it doesn’t take a lot of training or experience...
...a reliance on subjective assessments in unblinded trials, and ignoring or downplaying objective assessments...
...(the hypotheses explicitly set out in the PACE trial)...
David Tuller produced a number of articles spelling out many of the problems. [Might be worth making it clear that these are journalistic articles, not articles in peer-review journals.]
The decision was made to exclude studies carried out by UK psychiatrists from consideration, due to poor quality and the use of overly loose selection criteria (Oxford).
I can only conclude that virtually no-one in the UK scientific community is prepared to stand up against the old-boy network: that the fear of creating waves far exceeds their belief in scientific values. [I'd cut this whole sentence.]
Are you going to speak out about the poor methodological and ethical quality of PACE trial, MAGENTA, FIT-NET, and SMILE? Already, in the USA, the PACE trial is being used in academic lectures as an example of how not to run a trial.
Or is this new network simply going to be an elite sub-group of the existing old boy network? [I'd probably cut that too.]