▲ | VikingCoder 6 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
She said she read the Review. You're not arguing in good faith. Throughout our entire discussion. And tell me what basis I should judge their excluding other research? How do I know they're not just rationalizing it? That they disagreed with the conclusions and worked backwards to exclude the sources? It comes down to trust, and frankly, you're making me less likely to trust it, with the way you've communicated. I shouldn't blame them for how people talk about them, but you're certainly not doing them any favors. If you genuinely want to be more persuasive, I'd be glad to walk you through the list of mistakes I think you made. Also, I won't ask you to come to your own conclusions, but feel free to read this: https://law.yale.edu/sites/default/files/documents/integrity... | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | sso_eol 6 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Here's what she actually said: > Also, not for nothing but this thing is 388 pages. I do not have the attention span to be sure I wasn't missing something. So I cooled my heels and waited for the people who do have that expertise to weigh in. She clearly did not do any sort of deep reading of the Review herself but instead just parroted what people who already ideologically agree with her have to say about it. If she had read it herself, maybe she could have attempted a skeptical analysis. But she didn't. Thanks for the link to that article by McNamara et al. I've already previously seen it and I would recommend you also read this peer-reviewed paper published in the British Medical Journal, which carefully eviscerates its claims: https://adc.bmj.com/content/early/2024/10/15/archdischild-20... | |||||||||||||||||
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