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Margaret Anna Alice's avatar

Denis, it is an honor to welcome you (belatedly) to Substack. I consider your mortality data analyses to be the definitive nail in the coffin of the COVID narrative and am grateful to you for introducing me to psychological concepts such as “cooling the mark out,” which I referenced in this piece (https://margaretannaalice.substack.com/p/mistakes-were-not-made-one-poem-to).

Thank you for this well-considered and desperately needed set of guidelines for reforming the thoroughly corrupted industry of high-impact journals (which Pierre Kory has been diligently exposing at his Stack: https://pierrekory.substack.com/archive?sort=search&search=%22high-impact%20journals%22).

The first two things I look for when evaluating the trustworthiness of a scientific article are 1) funding sources and 2) conflict of interest statement, so #11 is especially critical (and should explicitly include not only financial interests but also other mechanisms of influence such as board appointments and NGO associations).

The recent discoveries of widespread academic fraud and a “peer-review ring” resulting in the retraction of hundreds of academic papers (e.g., Hindawi/Wiley retracted 511 articles across 16 journals, including 265 articles on COVID: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5-K3obvnKYQ; see also https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pAdZ10TVNrc by DrBeen) drive home the importance of addressing this vehicle for manufacturing the dangerous illusion of scientific consensus (https://www.illusionconsensus.com/).

That said, I do not expect any high-impact journals to actually implement these guidelines as their very existence necessitates collusion with corrupting influences.

We may need to simply begin developing a parallel set of scientific publications with some sort of certification/indicator showing they are adhering to these rules—much like “organic” and “non-GMO” labels emerged to combat Big Ag.

One example of a good starting point is Primary Doctor Medical Journal (https://pdmj.org/), whose tagline is “A peer-reviewed journal by physicians and scientists without commercial influence” and whose articles on masking I referenced in this piece:

• “Letter to the Oregon Health Authority” (https://margaretannaalice.substack.com/p/letter-to-the-oregon-health-authority)

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Ken's avatar

Now if it was somehow possible to de-politicize funding.

Every publisher will read this piece in fear.

All research relies on funding, and it will be difficult to protect the publishing of it as well.

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