I wrote:

> The only time I ever saw him uncomfortable or unassertive was when the
> people from Amoco showed him their results. He turned green and fled the
> room! It is a fond memory.
>

I mean this paper, presented at ICCF4:

http://lenr-canr.org/acrobat/Lautzenhiscoldfusion.pdf

Huizenga refused to discuss these results or anything to the authors. I am
not suggesting he actually believed these results. My guess is that he was
thinking: "Shit, another one! From a major lab! Will these people never
stop this nonsense?"

It was fun watching him squirm, but I did not get the impression he doubted
his own convictions.

To him, Amoco was More Trouble. More pathological crap. As he said in the
book, his job as a the DoE hatchet-man was to get rid of these findings and
kill the field as quickly as possible before any money was wasted on it.

I am sure he was sincere when he said that cold fusion cannot be real, and
theory overrules experiments. He was not dishonest about his beliefs. He
was somewhat dishonest with his political tactics. He played hardball. For
example, when Miles told him he had no positive results, Huizenga added
that to the ERAB report. Before the report was published, Miles contacted
him again and said he was now seeing excess heat. Huizenga did not change
the report.

To take another example, Huizenga said that if someone detected helium
commensurate with heat he might change his views. Miles and others did
detect helium, and they told Huizenga that, in person, at ICCF4 and
elsewhere. He never acknowledged it. I am sure he did not believe it, any
more than he believed the excess heat and tritium from Amoco.

I am sure no prominent skeptic believes any of these results. You would
have to be crazy to secretly think these results are real, but to go on in
public, year after year, accusing the researches of fraud and incompetence.

- Jed

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