{"id":18968,"date":"2012-01-20T10:27:30","date_gmt":"2012-01-20T15:27:30","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/static\/?p=18968"},"modified":"2012-08-10T10:04:04","modified_gmt":"2012-08-10T14:04:04","slug":"to-pee-or-not-to-pee-on-peer-review-massachusetts","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/2012\/to-pee-or-not-to-pee-on-peer-review-massachusetts\/","title":{"rendered":"“To pee or not to pee on peer review?” (Massachusetts)"},"content":{"rendered":"

Editor\u2019s note<\/em>: \u00a0This is now the burning question, is it not? \u00a0“To pee or not to pee on peer review?” \u00a0Doubtless there are many scholarly contexts where peer review is a valuable exercise in “quality control.” \u00a0(Though not infallible, mind you. \u00a0I spent a university career both performing peer review and being subjected to it. \u00a0I could write an entertaining book on the “uses” and “misuses” of peer review.)<\/span><\/p>\n

But in the case of Wind Turbine Syndrome, the question is especially acute.<\/span><\/p>\n

Consider this. \u00a0Wind Turbine Syndrome (WTS) is really almost laughably simple:<\/span><\/p>\n

(a) People are hale and healthy before turbines turn up in the neighborhood.<\/span><\/p>\n

(b) The turbines go up and start spinning and these same people complain of the same dozen symptoms—the same damn list<\/em>, all over the world! \u00a0The same list is described by people in as many languages as Pierpont’s book has been translated into<\/span><\/a>. \u00a0 Japanese. \u00a0Czech. \u00a0Italian. \u00a0French. \u00a0German. \u00a0Polish. \u00a0Turkish. \u00a0Seven, so far, with number 8 (Estonian) on the way. \u00a0(Danish was abandoned when personal matters overwhelmed the translator. \u00a0Keep in mind, all these translations were done at the request of these translators in these various parts of the world—pro bono<\/em>. \u00a0Pierpont did not ask them to translate her book. \u00a0They<\/em> contacted K-Selected Books and they translated it for free.)<\/span><\/p>\n

(c) People not infrequently sell their homes, and even abandon them, merely to escape their WTS.<\/span><\/p>\n

(d) When these same people are away from the turbines for a significant period of time (a weekend, a week, or more), the symptoms disappear. \u00a0When they return to the turbines (whether it’s their home or place of work), the symptoms reappear. \u00a0They find, moreover, that over prolonged exposure, their symptoms worsen. \u00a0I.e., they don’t “get used to it.”<\/span><\/p>\n

(e) Many of these people either had no opinion regarding the turbines or in fact vigorously supported them. \u00a0I.e., they were not NIMBY’s.<\/span><\/p>\n

On closer inspection, the fact of WTS is not a matter for medicine to adjudicate. \u00a0The illness does not require “medicine’s” stamp of approval in order for it to, presto, become real<\/em>. \u00a0The same goes for courts of law or lawyers or government agencies. \u00a0Because (ready for this?) common sense<\/em>\u00a0plainly, screamingly, shows it exists. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

(Remember Descartes’ famous, “I think, therefore I am!<\/em>” \u00a0Here it’s, “Jeez, I’ve got sleep deprivation panic awakening headaches ear pressure tachycardia nausea vertigo dizziness tinnitus spatial-memory problems anxiety\/irritability vibrations in my chest. \u00a0Good Lord, I’m sick!\u201d<\/em>)<\/span><\/p>\n

“Cogito, ergo sum!”<\/em> (Descartes). \u00a0“Infirmus sum, ergo sum infirmis!\u201d<\/em>\u00a0 (Sue Hobart, Falmouth, MA).<\/span><\/p>\n

We all have common sense. \u00a0At least a smidgen? \u00a0You don’t need an M.D. degree to see that WTS exists. \u00a0You might require an M.D. or Ph.D. in neurophysiology to explain\u00a0the patho-physiology of this fascinating constellation of symptoms. \u00a0(Which is what Pierpont, with both a Ph.D. and M.D., did in her 300-page book.) \u00a0<\/span>But, to deny the symptoms—or dismiss them as self-inflicted fabrication—is palpably absurd. \u00a0Denial is not “medicine”; denial is stupidity. \u00a0At this point, given the voluminous evidence, government & corporate denial of WTS is tantamount to a crime against humanity. \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

Absurd. \u00a0This is exactly what the State of Mass. just did—something monumentally absurd. \u00a0It empaneled a group of Ph.D.’s and several M.D.’s and charged them with deciding whether turbines make people honest-to-god sick. \u00a0(As opposed, presumably, to whether people are “faking” it—malingering, in other words.) \u00a0The Commonwealth of Mass. set the wrong goal: \u00a0The question isn’t “Are people getting sick?<\/em>” \u00a0The question is, “What is the pathological mechanism for their illness?<\/em>” \u00a0(Pierpont’s answer: \u00a0“Fucked up signals to the vestibular organs<\/em>.”) \u00a0And, “What is it about wind turbines that causes the illness?<\/em>” \u00a0(Pierpont’s answer: \u00a0“Infrasound, chiefly from the blades passing the tower and other blade\/air dynamics<\/em>.”) \u00a0 \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

(Back to ham-handed bureaucratic comedy in the Commonwealth of Mass.) \u00a0The Ph.D.’s and M.D.’s concluded turbines don’t make people sick. \u00a0They gave turbines a clean bill of health. \u00a0(No, they didn’t interview a single victim. \u00a0No, they didn’t do any on-site, primary research. \u00a0No, they didn’t interview any physicians who have interviewed or treated WTS victims. \u00a0Yes, they conducted their meetings in secret, in private. \u00a0Yes, several of them have monumental conflicts of interest with wind energy.) \u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n

This is not a case of peer review gone awry; this is plain orneriness and cussedness on a scale of the Emperor disporting in his “new clothes.”<\/span><\/p>\n

Does one call this Mass. WTS Report an exercise in “academic stupidity”? \u00a0Maybe. \u00a0These people are certainly not stupid. \u00a0But, collectively, the report they just crafted is stupid beyond words and perhaps beyond comprehension.<\/span><\/p>\n

I repeat, the Mass. WTS Report is not a matter of corrupt peer review, since “peer review” wasn’t solicited. \u00a0Rather, it’s an instance of—stupendous academic bullshit, maybe? \u00a0Academic bullshit wrapped in scholarly pretense? \u00a0(I keep having the image of the Emperor parading down main street, bare balls, loudly announcing his costume is real<\/em>.)<\/span><\/p>\n

But I digress. \u00a0Eric Bibler, a redoubtable critic of wind-turbines-in-everyone’s-backyard, has written (below) a satire worthy of Jonathan Swift. \u00a0(Notice Bibler’s reference to “a modest proposal.”) \u00a0Bibler lays bare the absurdity of “peer review” in adjudicating whether WTS exists. \u00a0His response is an unequivocal, “Now is the time to pee on peer reviews that deny the unbelievably obvious (as the nose on your face!) fact of Wind Turbine Syndrome!”<\/span><\/p>\n

\"\"<\/p>\n

.<\/span>
\nDear Victims of Wind Turbine Syndrome,<\/p>\n

As you may already know, the current Commissioner of the Mass. Dept. of Environmental Protection, Ken Kimmell, was the co-author of the failed \u201cWind Energy Siting Reform Act\u201d (WESRA) legislation which sought to deprive local Mass. communities of their autonomy over the siting of land-based wind energy projects by consolidating control in the hands of a siting board appointed by the governor.<\/p>\n

\"\"
\nMass. DEP Commissioner, Ken Kimmell<\/span><\/p>\n

The panel of \u201cexperts\u201d named by the Dept. of Environmental Protection & Dept. of Public Health were nothing of the kind and a number of them had ties to wind developers. The panel operated in total secrecy \u2014 despite promises to the contrary \u2014 refusing to deliberate in public or to provide any information on their activities.<\/p>\n

I think that this report by the DEP\/DPH might ultimately prove to be a blessing in disguise because it is so transparently biased that I think that it can be discredited relatively easily.<\/p>\n

The headline in the Cape Cod Today newspaper proclaims \u201cWind Turbines Not Harmful\u201d and says that the panel found \u201cNo Evidence\u201d that wind turbines harm people.<\/p>\n

Really? Well what about the thousands of first person accounts to the contrary \u2014 like the woman in Nantucket who lives near the high school and has been traveling to Boston for CAT scans?<\/p>\n

No one can credibly say that there is \u201cno evidence of harm.\u201d They can say that they don\u2019t know the cause, or that they don\u2019t understand the mechanism, but they cannot say that there is \u201cno evidence\u201d of harm.<\/p>\n

I would pose the same question to this panel that I posed to the selectmen in Falmouth<\/a>:<\/p>\n

Are all of these people lying \u2014 all over the world? Is it a coincidence that they all report similar symptoms; that the symptoms commence with the operation of the wind turbines; and that the symptoms disappear when the victims remove themselves physically from the influence of the wind turbines?\u201d<\/p>\n

Why is this not \u201cevidence of harm\u201d \u2014 regardless of whether some \u201cpeer reviewed study\u201d \u2014 or a whole sheaf of them \u2014 provides a statistical tabulation of victims, their age, their symptoms, distance from the wind turbine, size of the machine, wind speed, etc?<\/p>\n

\u00bb<\/span>\u00a0If you put your hand on a table and I hit it with a hammer, does it hurt? How do you know\u2026\u2026without a peer reviewed study? If you don\u2019t have a study to prove the harm, does that mean that there is \u201cno evidence\u201d that it hurts?<\/p>\n

\u00bb<\/span>\u00a0Twenty-four centuries ago, Socrates drank hemlock and died. Was it the hemlock that killed him? How did they know? Did they have a peer reviewed study to prove it? If his students understood that the hemlock was poisonous \u2014 and the cause of his death \u2014 I\u2019ll bet they couldn\u2019t begin to tell you why it was toxic and how it killed him. They knew that it killed him, but they didn\u2019t understand the mechanism. Does that mean that there is \u201cno evidence\u201d that the hemlock was fatal \u2014 despite the fact that this has been accepted at face value \u2014 for obvious reasons \u2014 for centuries?<\/p>\n

\u00bb<\/span>\u00a0If a man robs a bank, is captured, and half a dozen eye witnesses identify him, by recalling their personal experience in the bank and picking him out of a line-up, leading to the bank robber\u2019s conviction, should we let him go because these first person accounts are \u201cnot peer reviewed\u201d? Are these first person accounts by credible witnesses \u2014 all of them corroborated with each other to inspire faith in their accuracy \u2014 invalid as evidence? Are they meaningless?<\/p>\n

All of the above examples are subjected to the same \u201cpeer review\u201d: first hand experience that provides compelling evidence of cause and effect.<\/p>\n

We know that these things are true because there is no other reasonable explanation for the end result, other than the obvious cause.<\/p>\n

We all know that if you hit your hand with a hammer it hurts like hell because we\u2019ve figured out since the age of two (or earlier) that blunt force trauma is painful.<\/p>\n

The Greeks knew that hemlock killed Socrates (and he knew it would kill him) because every time someone drinks hemlock, they die.<\/p>\n

The witnesses could identify the bank robber as the perpetrator of the robbery because they remembered what he looked like and what he was wearing.<\/p>\n

Barry Funfar, Sue Hobart, Mark and Annie Cool, Neil Andersen and his wife \u2014 and thousands of others \u2014 know that wind turbines are harmful because as soon as they start to spin, their lives become a living hell.<\/p>\n

But as far as the DEP is concerned, this is not \u201cevidence\u201d of harm. These are \u201cmere anecdotes.\u201d This information is not \u201cmedical literature\u201d and it is not peer reviewed.<\/p>\n

May I make the following modest proposal:<\/p>\n

I suggest we visit Mr. Kimmell at his next press conference \u2014 and bring a five pound hammer. I suggest that we insist that Mr. Kimmell allow us to smash the fingers of his right hand against the lectern, where he is speaking in front of the assembled ladies and gentlemen of the press, taking care not to break any bones, which might provide obvious evidence of \u201charm.\u201d<\/p>\n

Then I propose that we observe Mr. Kimmell\u2019s reaction to this \u201cmere annoyance.\u201d<\/p>\n

If Mr. Kimmell protests \u2014 even if he howls \u2014 we will inform him that although we \u201csympathize\u201d with his distress, we respectfully ask that he get hold of himself and refrain from unnecessary \u201chysteria\u201d over his condition. Regrettably, there is no \u201cpeer reviewed study\u201d to confirm any harm and \u201csmashed finger syndrome\u201d is not an established medical condition. So, therefore, there is no harm.<\/p>\n

And since there is no harm, Mr. Kimmell \u2014 as our panel of experts have established, beyond a doubt \u2014 no further study is needed \u2014 we\u2019d now like you to place your other hand on the podium so that we can repeat the exercise \u2014 to confirm for the audience the lack of harm.<\/p>\n

If, as we suspect, there is no harm to the left hand, we would like to extend our research to your toes; and your elbows; and your kneecaps.<\/p>\n

Regardless of any additional \u201chysteria\u201d which may ensue, we feel supremely confident that, in the absence of any peer reviewed medical studies that relate specifically to Mr. Kimmell, his age, the time of day, the size and shape of the hammer, and so forth, we can pronounce that \u201cthere is no evidence of harm\u201d to Mr. Kimmell.<\/p>\n

Mr. Kimmell may wish to differ from this assessment. But Mr. Kimmell is no doctor \u2014 and therefore, not qualified to evaluate this situation. And \u2014 let\u2019s be honest \u2014 Mr. Kimmell can hardly be considered to be an objective observer in this exercise.<\/p>\n

Even if Mr. Kimmell has a point; even if we give Mr. Kimmell the benefit of the doubt, and admit that there may, indeed, be some modest degree of \u201cannoyance\u201d \u2014 which may actually increase over time, as we move from his hands, to his feet, to his elbows, to his kneecaps \u2014 I think that we can all agree that some sacrifice is necessary \u2014 and beneficial \u2014 in the pursuit of scientific knowledge.<\/p>\n

Who is Mr. Kimmell to stand in the way of progress; to assert his selfish desire to be left alone, frustrating our need to know \u2014 to confirm \u2014 that there is no real harm to us from smashing his fingers, toes, elbows and kneecaps?<\/p>\n

Even if Mr. Kimmell does experience some \u201cannoyance\u201d or some \u201cmild discomfort\u201d from having his extremities smashed, I think that we can all agree that our experiment will \u201conly affect a minority of the people in the room\u201d \u2014 namely, Mr. Kimmell.<\/p>\n

I think that we can all agree that this is an acceptable price to pay \u2014 that some \u201ccollateral damage\u201d is always necessary, in the name of progress. And that Mr. Kimmell should be willing to endure this \u201cannoyance\u201d for our sake, in light of the greater social good that we will achieve, on balance.<\/p>\n

After the \u201cexperiment\u201d is concluded \u2014 to the satisfaction of everyone but Mr. Kimmell; and after this experiment proves what we already knew \u2014 that there is no credible medical \u201cevidence\u201d to support Mr. Kimmell\u2019s unproven claim that \u201cthat goddam hammer hurts like hell!\u201d \u2014 we might offer a bit of unsolicited advice to Mr. Kimmell.<\/p>\n

It just won\u2019t do, Mr. Kimmell, for you to complain about your so-called symptoms. And don\u2019t think that you are winning any sympathy from your erstwhile friends and neighbors by parading around in those bandages. It\u2019s unseemly, really. And it will do you no good.<\/p>\n

In fact, it\u2019s embarrassing \u2014 by which we mean, we\u2019re embarrassed for you. If you continue to complain, people in your community will abandon you \u2014 and ostracize you \u2014 because no one wants to be reminded of your stubborn refusal to submit to our experiment, without complaint. So if you know what\u2019s good for you \u2014 and I\u2019m telling you this for your own good \u2014 you\u2019ll submit in silence to this \u201cannoyance\u201d and \u201cdiscomfort\u201d because, the fact is, we\u2019ve already decided that we\u2019re not going to pay any attention to you anyway.<\/p>\n

It is possible that this experiment, even if it were carried out, would not convince the redoubtable Mr. Kimmell, current Commissioner of the Department of Environmental Protection and co-author of the infamous Wind Energy Siting Reform Act (WESRA) \u2014 which even the Massachusetts legislature eventually understood to be a naked outrage and a scam \u2014 might not be persuaded. After all, Mr. Kimmell was nobody before Governor Duval Patrick plucked him from obscurity to do his dirty work \u2014 first with WESRA, then at DEP. It is possible that Mr. Kimmell\u2019s loyalty runs very deep.<\/p>\n

In that event, I offer another modest proposal: summon the \u201cexpert panel members\u201d assembled by Mr. Kimmell to the podium, one by one, and repeat the previous experiment.<\/p>\n

We can use the \u201cdata\u201d from Mr. Kimmell\u2019s response as a \u201cbaseline\u201d for comparison with the results obtained from each of the other panel members as we determine whether there is any harm in smashing their fingers, toes, elbows and kneecaps.<\/p>\n

I will hazard a guess that, in the absence of any peer reviewed studies specific to the age and weight of the panel members, the time of day, the size of the hammer, and so forth, we will have no more luck proving that any harm exists than we had in the previous case of Mr. Kimmell.<\/p>\n

But perhaps \u2014 and admittedly, I am speculating here \u2014 perhaps we may persuade some of the panel members to reconsider their steadfast conclusion that, in the absence of any \u201cpeer reviewed medical studies\u201d to confirm it, there can never be any harm.<\/p>\n

I suppose that depends upon how many fingers, toes, elbows and kneecaps the \u201cexpert panel members\u201d are willing to sacrifice before this new knowledge is revealed to them.<\/p>\n

Perhaps the true result of this series of experiments will be to prove another unfortunate, but equally obvious, fact: namely, that \u201cvisionaries\u201d like Governor Patrick, Mr. Kimmell, the expert panel members, et al., are all too willing to sacrifice the welfare of innocent victims, like people in Falmouth and elsewhere, in the pursuit of their grandiose schemes \u2014 so long as there is no sacrifice to themselves.<\/p>\n

.<\/span>
\nEric Bibler (Connecticut)<\/p>\n

\"\"
\nEric Bibler
\n<\/span>(The glasses and nose are real.)<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

Editor\u2019s note: \u00a0This is now the burning question, is it not? \u00a0“To pee or not to pee on peer review?” \u00a0Doubtless there are many scholarly contexts where peer review is a valuable exercise in “quality control.” \u00a0(Though not infallible, mind you. \u00a0I spent a university career both performing peer review and being subjected to it. \u00a0I could write an entertaining book on the “uses” and “misuses” of peer review.) But in the case of Wind Turbine Syndrome, the question is especially acute. Consider this. \u00a0Wind Turbine Syndrome (WTS) is really almost laughably simple: (a) People are hale and healthy before turbines turn up in the neighborhood. (b) The turbines go up and start spinning and these same people complain of the same dozen symptoms—the same damn list, all over the world! \u00a0The same list is described by people in as many languages as Pierpont’s book has been translated into. \u00a0 Japanese. \u00a0Czech. \u00a0Italian. \u00a0French. \u00a0German. \u00a0Polish. \u00a0Turkish. \u00a0Seven, so far, with number 8 (Estonian) on the way. \u00a0(Danish was abandoned when personal matters overwhelmed the translator. \u00a0Keep in mind, all these translations were done at the request of these translators in these various parts of the world—pro bono. \u00a0Pierpont did not ask them to translate her book. \u00a0They contacted K-Selected Books and they translated it for free.) (c) People not infrequently sell their homes, and even abandon them, merely to escape their WTS. (d) When these same people are away from the turbines for a significant period of time (a weekend, a week, or more), the symptoms disappear. \u00a0When they return to the turbines (whether it’s their home or place of work), the symptoms reappear. \u00a0They find, moreover, that over prolonged exposure, their symptoms worsen. \u00a0I.e., they don’t “get used to it.” (e) Many of these people either had noRead More…<\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[163],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/18968"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=18968"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/18968\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=18968"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=18968"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.windturbinesyndrome.com\/static\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=18968"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}