@IshChayil, I'm very familiar with the peer review process.
mazel tov
It's not all its cracked up to be. It certainly has value in ensuring that studies with no merit don't get published. However, it also has the problem of maintaining the status quo - Copernicus could never have published in a peer-reviewed journal as his peers wouldn't have approved his views on the earth and sun. And it can still let really bad studies be published if the 2 peer reviewers just happen to miss something critical, it's not flawless.
To compare the peer review process in the age of Copernicus is at best completely misleading and at worst something else. When the evidence is there, it can pass.
There are even Intelligent design papers which have passed peer review due to the very rigor of their process. If those guys can get their papers through peer review, there's a lot more sympathy among atheists (i.e. much of the scientific community) for 911 conspiracies than there is for a G-d designing things.
You complain of the burden of peer review as making it hard to overturn the status quo but I say that the status quo SHOULD be hard to overturn. It SHOULD be hard to say "hey this was an inside job" without a heavy burden of evidence.
You can't bang your chest "I'm a scientist" and I believe in the method, etc. in one breath and then say "well the method doesn't really work" in the other when it doesn't suit your cause.
The peer review process helps ensure that
agenda-driven people like the 4 who wrote the analysis in your article, don't get taken seriously.
All 4 guys, long term conspiracy club members, the peer review process is a way for them to put their money where their collective, highly educated Brigham Young scientific mouths are.
You can say snopes smears but you haven't refuted the conspiracy theory organizations all 4 of your authors are listed in. The process is a way to remove the stench of their association, hopes, and aspirations that the 911 conspiracies could some day be true. We can pretend that everyone is a super scientist or a super journalist and their personal hopes / aspirations / conspiracy hobbies won't influence their judgement but they do.
No posturing gets us past the embarrassing statement by the editors of the very journal your article was published in...the editors call the work you shared speculative and not meeting the normal scientific standards they have there. Not even talking peer review issue; the editors just want to flee from that article. This speaks volumes.
The continued 911 conspiracy theory mongering here *******
Why on Earth would a
moderator wish to push such a hot button and painful topic which the
op requested to close?
Maybe you don't get how personal this can be for Americans because nobody really hates New Zealanders (other than maybe the natives? I'm not sure on that one just guessing)
I get it. You're not an American so probably you don't understand the pain these crackpot 911 theories cause families who endured it and on soldiers who fought as a result of it. I also understand how countries which don't do a lot to influence the world can get caught up in conspiracies about America.
I've lived in enough places and seen the envy develop.
I know that's not you.
So unless you have something more than half-baked articles by a group of hobby conspiracy theorists, why don't we just let this one go.
Do we really want "
911 conspiracy" searches on google to be what brings people to Biblical Families forums? I sure don't.
All things may be permisssible but they aren't all profitable...
May G-d bless America and save us from divisive conspiracy theories; may the Islamo-fascists be filled with shame and their plans brought to null affect, and may we win the culture war ravaging the nation as the Satan tries to divide us. May we be again a light to the world as we have been for centuries.
Happy Thanksgiving everyone.