Back to the thread topic about what Medfeb can do about advocacy:
Twenty years ago when there were support groups everywhere, we only saw the people who could physically get there. On these forums we see the multitude of people who are even more desperately affected. What is most startling is that I don't see the old leaders, and when I searched, I found that all but 3 of my friends from 20 years ago have died, and one of those 3 is in a nursing home. But look at the link I put on your thread yesterday (
http://www.co-cure.org/audits1.htm ) ; 12 years ago we knew people were dying, but CDC wouldn't acknowledge it or any of the other issues we are still fighting.
Medfeb, you came to the forums (as did I) when there was more activity than ever in the movement. December was an incredible month, and it wore many of us out. What is astounding is to see so many good advocacy ideas, but there is no one coherent enough to carry them out. The world is missing out on the evidence that these people are not lazy and crazy at all; all the effort is going toward the choir. I have to assume that the posters are the writers in the group; there must be many more lurkers willing to help if they knew what to do.
So my thoughts for you are:
1. People are too sick to physically protest and too cognitively impaired to carry through targeted actions;
2. Many right now are busy chasing the virus story and interest will fade as they find out that science takes years, especially with so much to overcome;
3. There has never been a healthy support contingent, and I can't really blame them. As long as the CDC says we are crazy and families can't see evidence that we are sick, and their family doctors agree with the CDC, and "chronic fatigue syndrome" certainly sounds like we are crazy and lazy, they have to wonder, and doubt does not make advocates. And as with any chronic illness, pretty soon it becomes the patient's pattern and people stop talking about it. Family and friends disappear, and I can't blame them.
4. We have to find a way to make the people at the CDC so uncomfortable that they will at least stop harming us; they must stop the psychobabble and take down the website. Those who are inclined to believe in government action can haul them before Congress again, but history does not indicate that anything significant will happen. We are getting "words" from the people at NIH, but I warn to always disbelieve words and only believe actions. We have been there before.
5. Looking at our long 20+ years of really good advocacy, being nice and reasonable has never worked, like people trying to talk their way out of war. Eventually, they must take up arms and force the issue. This we have not tried yet, unlike all the other successful movements. Our people are still wasting time writing letters and worse yet, emails, which just get deleted, I'm sure.
I wish I could give a positive idea; the most positive idea I can give is to learn from our past and take into consideration that we cannot afford to waste either energy or money. There are many good ideas floated on these forums, and people coming from many viewpoints. I'm guessing that we don't need large numbers to agree on any project. Any individual that has an idea, and can convince a few others to work together for a short time, can make an impact. What we need is coordination, so that these small projects can build into a large result. CAA has let us down, and IACFS/ME has really let us down. We have no simple diagnostic criteria and no public website for basic information. Somehow we have to pull this fragmentation together, or we will continue to bang our heads against the wall. I honestly don't know what to do, but I know that what we do has to
create consequences that CDC cannot ignore.