Michelle
Decennial ME/CFS patient
- Messages
- 172
- Location
- Portland, OR
I'm still unhappy with the presence of Wallit and others but see it more in the perspective of "jobs for the boys." It's Buggins turn. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Buggins'_turn
He's an artifact of a failed policy, one of systematic neglect and trivialization.
Yes! Precisely. Thank you for providing a concise way of explaining something my slow brain has been struggling to put into words. That is exactly what Wallit is.
I keep feeling in this "debate" that many woefully misunderstand how a vast bureaucracy with a politically-appointed head (i.e. here today, gone tomorrow) works, though @viggster has been trying his damnedest to provide such context. Collins is not our problem and genuinely does seem to want to help us despite the abuse he's been getting from a small but determined group within our community for a few years now. He is not a dictator. He does not snap his fingers and his will is done. He does have a lot of power but also a lot of vulnerabilities. Its the vast middle of the NIH that stays while directors come and go that is far more problematical and of which Wallit, Gill, and others listed represent. They can do a lot of obstructing and foot dragging regardless of what the director wants (and even lead an insurrection if there are enough of them and they think he's way off base). Moreover, when you add in all the many many many petty turf wars and battles for resources for each pet research field, it becomes extremely complicated -- way beyond some sort of mere trying to stick it to those "crazy chronic fatigue patients." We are but one tiny piece in one tiny complex machine among many little complex machines inside one ginormous complex machine.
BUT, that said, I'm glad @medfeb will be with Carol Head in meeting with an NIH rep. She can provide NIH with plenty of context about why our concerns regarding Wallit, Gill et al. as well as the use of FMD patients as controls are so vehement and relevant.
I have no problem giving NIH hell for what they've done and not done for the last 30 years. But, you know, it helps to have some perspective at where precisely to fire the (metaphorical!) torpedoes.