Esther12
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
i get your point. But when you present your fully powered trial as a feasibility study, I think it's fair to call that a lie.
But the BMJ's careful investigation found that "this was not due to error on behalf of the authors"! Not even an error.
I agree. I see little point in being English and sticking to niceties when people are walking all over the rules.
I am in medical research and would once not have used the word lie but times have changed dramatically. People are lying here and maybe more than one lot.
Given the way that those complaining about problems in CFS research can still get dismissed for not sticking to niceties I worry that anything which encourages harsher language could be counter-productive. At least, unless it's all carefully laid out with an explanation of why the use of such language is now needed. I think that we need to consider how we come across to the academics who are part of a culture that would almost never accuse another researcher of lying. It seems that this sort of tone/language stuff is the main defence those doing poor quality CFS research are able to hide behind.
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