Hi, I just rewatched this piece.
To address the two issues (parphrasing mostly, not exact quotes):
1. The contamination was schoolboy error claim: He responded by saying it was well peer reviewed and involved recognized experts. He could have said that MLVs have slipped into cultures and labs everywhere, and nobody has realized the extent of the problem.That would have been consistent with his views and probably true, even if it does dodge the central question. Again I think this was too short a piece for real reporting. The other thing is they were talking about contaminated data? Say what? Did they mean the slide mislabelling? I presume they mean MLV contamination but didnt know enough to ask a proper question. Maybe I am wrong about that, I would certainly be interested in hearing another view. It is possible the question were scripted and deliberately made to be unclear, that certainly fits a pattern I am seeing, but its more likely in my view the reporter or her research staff did not do a very good job.
2. On death threats, in relation to activist campaign to stop the truth from getting out, he said he would be annoyed too if he was one of us and that they possibly had not done enough to help these people as we might have expected. He then said, and I gather this is the offending piece: "I wouldn't have liked to have death threats."
I think he is mistaken about a number of things, and overly cautious. I would dispute him on the facts. I don't think its evidence of intentional bias (not that there might not be, but that this is not enough for such a claim). I also think he is likely to have bought the death threat claims. I think, though as I am not a mind reader and probably bad at reading body language, he actually believes what he is saying.
So we can refute his claims, including the death threat angle - what death threats, by who, where, when, in what context? He is not the originator of such claims, and I think he has uncritically accepted these claims as they probably came from mulitiple sources he has worked and communicated with. This means he has been overly accepting without even more than a cursory examination of the facts (of course the alternative view is he is doing this deliberately but I would want to see evidence before claiming that). Keep in mind the people who are making such claims have been making all sorts of unsubstantiated claims and presenting unsubstantiated theory as factual. They are very good at making their case without actually presenting solid evidence.
Now, on the XMRV front, other things did not come out, other statements made to the press by various people. I would not expect them to come out in a brief interview though.
Now it is clear the reporter did not ask hard or incisive questions. It was more a "please have your say" piece, which is why I asked if Stoye had known the questions before hand.
This is not evidence of Stoye knowingly spreading unfounded death threat claims deliberately. He is repeating such claims uncritically. I really wish an investigative journalist, perhaps from outside the UK, would dig into this. A scandal lurks beneath the surface but ... I think the problem is that some people are buying it, including uncritical scientists who are operating way out of their comfort zone (ask me what I think of Stoye as a scientist privately, it does not belong on a thread).
So this is not enough evidence for an attack on Stoye. It is enough to show, unequivocally, that the apparent misrepresentation by Wessely is altering public and scientific debate. Its another problem for Wessely, not Stoye, when this is finally investigated and, I presume, he is proven to be making unfounded allegations against very sick people. This would perhaps be an ethical violation, although I am not sure of the rules for this in the UK. If Wessely can be shown (not claimed) to be making unfounded allegations and it can be brought to media attention, the medical authorities would have to claim he has brought the profession into disrepute.
To recap, I do not particularly like Stoye, I am distrustful of his take on science (I am from a different school of thought, far more critical). I do not think this shows he is anything more than too careful about challenging anyone, and too accepting of what he has been told.
If this were even a twenty minute investigative piece and the whole thing was like the two minutes, I would be much more critical of it. A two minute soundbite though is always to demonstrate an editorial point, and so is never going to look at all sides.
The real issue is this: how many other pieces like this are there, and who has been examining and presenting the other side of these arguments? I doubt there is much of that at all, only a brave few. I think it more fair to say that if a pattern exists this could show gross media bias, and perhaps systemic journalistic failures, rather than it shows deliberate bias from Stoye. I could be wrong about that, but so far I do not see enough evidence.
Now I have forgetten a lot of what Stoye has said in the past, and I have not re-read any of his opinion pieces lately. My take on a scientist making claims alongside political advocates for this view is that they are outside their depth and probably deeply mistaken, but thats about it. I too have come from a science background, and I have been very much out of my depth in politics on occasion. If on the other hand we can find more concrete evidence, or a large body of similar evidence, that is a different situation. I am looking for such evidence, which is what makes me much more critical of standards of evidence at the moment. So perhaps the issue is that I want to see solid evidence before making allegations. One brief clip is not enough.
Bye, Alex
PS Perhaps it would be more clear if I put it this way. I am not much interested in evidence that is an any way equivocal. I am looking for the kind of evidence that will nail BPS/CBT/GET to the wall of shame. So the pattern of advocacy from me will probably change, and this is definitely bias on my part, but for a specific purpose. If I can show what I think the evidence shows, unequivocally, I want to consign the current BPS movement for CFS to the dustbin of history. Evidence to do that needs to be either clear, or easy to show by logical inference.