"<Redacted> and some PACE authors" is some funny attempt at censoring.There are two redactions in a version of JE’s testimony that I downloaded from somewhere May 2025.
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"<Redacted> and some PACE authors" is some funny attempt at censoring.
It is discussed under our thread on Mendenhall’s book ‘Invisible Illness’ (see https://www.s4me.info/threads/invis...ria-to-long-covid-2026-mendenhall-book.44402/ ), but this is rather a long thread. The book was edited under pressure of legal threats from Wessely, as well as a related article by the author being withdrawn.
@dave30th wrote a blog in the Trial by Error series (See https://virology.ws/2026/02/01/tria...Fg655Yk94w9jMKQAfQ_aem_K75ePo70gH08iXhnBQhZhg ) and there is another in Long Covid Advocacy (see https://longcovidadvocacy.substack....tm_medium=android&r=1s0n2a&triedRedirect=true ).
Why?About a third we can't do much for.
I suspect he would say the ones they can't do anything for are the ones who are too wedded to our belief the illness is real. He would accuse us of not complying with the treatment, or not wanting to get better, or having deluded beliefs we're still ill, or some other excuse. It makes no sense. So many of us got sicker by trying to exercise. If we'd been deconditioned we would have got fitter, not sicker.Why?
If it's all thoughts and deconditioning, why doesn't this treatment work for everybody? Aren't you immediately invalidating your own argument?
I remember that quote, being used as the argument that it’s not worth trying GET and CBT because the chances of working were less than a third.Wessely, in a New Scientist interview in 2009:
How successful is your treatment of CFS?Roughly a third of people completely recover and a third show good improvement. About a third we can't do much for.
Ah. Of course; I should have realised; it's the patient's faultthe ones who are too wedded to our belief the illness is real
It’s true to say that is how the ME community regards him, though.I don't think that's accurate. He did a lot of the heavy lifting but it was already a popular idea and this was likely to happen even if he had never existed. One thing you can't fail to notice with psychosomatic ideology is how totally interchangeable the people involved are, no one has actually done anything unique, or even particular, that thousands of random replacements couldn't have done identically. You don't get the kind of media coverage he got by pushing an idea that people aren't ready, almost desperate, to accept.
If it wasn't him, it would have been someone else. Not that this removes blame from his actions, but he didn't popularize it so much as rode on a rising wave and mostly happened to have more political than medical skills, allowing him to push the idea a bit further, maybe a bit quicker than it would have. But the wave would have happened regardless.
LC has changed my perspective on a lot of this. The people who did are obviously guilty of disastrous wrongdoing, but everything they did was popular, had the full support of the systems of medicine and would have happened anyway. It's not as if there is a shortage of people who would have gladly taken the role he did.
Even Freud, who invented a lot of this nonsense, only has so much blame to go on. So many people love this fantasy fluff and took it further, while much of his ideas have barely actually changed from the days he made it up. At its core, this is still the same belief in the conversion disorder, and in conversion therapy as the answer. The labels and rituals may have changed, mostly to be maximally deceitful, but the modern concepts are still at least 95% identical to what Freud was rambling about. About the only thing that really changed is letting go of the weird sex stuff, the rest is pretty much identical today.