Robert 1973
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Interesting interview in the FT with Richard Horton, who has become a prominent critic of UK’s Covid-19 strategy: https://www.ft.com/content/8e54c36a-8311-11ea-b872-8db45d5f6714
I’m not a subscriber but I seem to be able read about one FT article a week for free. However, the second time I clicked the link I couldn’t get access it, so be sure to read it the first time you click.
I hope this post is allowed because it’s about Horton rather than UK politics.
The article mentions the Wakefield MMR paper which took so long for the Lancet to retract but (unsurprisingly) makes no mention of his controversial decision to fast track publication the PACE trial.
I didn’t know that Horton has cancer and clearly believes that he may not have long to live. This may explain why he has been so forthright in voicing his criticism of the medical and scientific establishment over its response to Covid-19. He clearly feels he has nothing to lose:
It’s hard to equate this man with the attitude he has taken to PACE. He is clearly currently preoccupied with Covid-19 but I just wonder if he may now find the courage to hold his hands up and say he got it wrong about PACE and ME – particularly if it transpires that some of the PACE supporters are responsible for some of the mistakes that have been made over Covid-19.
in the meantime I wonder if the medical and scientific establishment will accuse him of harassment and abuse.
Another quote which jumped out form the article:
I’m not a subscriber but I seem to be able read about one FT article a week for free. However, the second time I clicked the link I couldn’t get access it, so be sure to read it the first time you click.
I hope this post is allowed because it’s about Horton rather than UK politics.
The article mentions the Wakefield MMR paper which took so long for the Lancet to retract but (unsurprisingly) makes no mention of his controversial decision to fast track publication the PACE trial.
I didn’t know that Horton has cancer and clearly believes that he may not have long to live. This may explain why he has been so forthright in voicing his criticism of the medical and scientific establishment over its response to Covid-19. He clearly feels he has nothing to lose:
He is now writing a book about why, despite the warning signs, the Covid-19 pandemic caught the world by surprise. Meanwhile, that formidable to-do list leaves no time to answer his critics: “You said earlier that people think I’m a pariah. Maybe in previous years that might have upset me. But now? I really don’t care what people think of me. If I’m not here in six months or a year . . . f*** them. Seriously.”
It’s hard to equate this man with the attitude he has taken to PACE. He is clearly currently preoccupied with Covid-19 but I just wonder if he may now find the courage to hold his hands up and say he got it wrong about PACE and ME – particularly if it transpires that some of the PACE supporters are responsible for some of the mistakes that have been made over Covid-19.
in the meantime I wonder if the medical and scientific establishment will accuse him of harassment and abuse.
Another quote which jumped out form the article:
So much easier to see cognitive bias in others.Western countries have fared poorly in their coronavirus response compared to Asian countries, he thinks, because they saw the threat through the lens of influenza. China and Hong Kong feared a rerun of Sars, a much deadlier illness, and clamped down quickly. The cognitive bias, he says, has cost us dearly.
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