What happened to Goddard perhaps provides a lesson for today. During the 1920's Goddard's theories were the subject of much public ridicule (not just from the New York Times). Goddard was retiring and rarely took on his public critics. As a result, he found it difficult to get funding for his research and he had to run his rocket tests on a shoestring. When he did get some funding from the Guggenheim Foundation in the 1930's, he took his research to Roswell, New Mexico - both for safety reasons and so he could work far away from public scrutiny. He worked there in relative obscurity (although his earlier work had been well-studied by German scientists). In fact, his work was so unappreciated that, by the time of the outbreak of WWII, the US military saw little value in rockets as weapons. Meanwhile, by the end of the war, Germany had developed the V2.
The moral of the story seem to be “Take on your critics. Don’t hide your light under a bushel. If you don't
show that you believe in yourself, why should anyone else believe in you?”
I think we are actually very lucky to have someone with this type of personality in Dr. Mikovits. A lot of other researchers would no doubt wither under the type of criticism she’s come up against. Yes, she may ruffle some feathers (heavens!), but if you don’t want to get into the arena and fight for your ideas you can expect to wait 49 years until they become commonplace. Then you'll get the retraction - - - in Goddard's case, 24 years after his death.
“Every vision is a joke until the first man accomplishes it; once realized, it becomes commonplace.”
-Robert Goddard