I am converting some old files to modern formats. I came across a newspaper editorial published in 1989. I believe this is the first use of what I call the "none of this matters" excuse. People opposed cold fusion such as Dieter Britz and the editors Wikipedia often invoke this. They say: 'I may be wrong and this article may be inaccurate but cold fusion is inconsequential; we all know it cannot become a useful source of energy, so none of this matters.' When an opponent begins a sentence "we all know" you want to take cover.

This is from the Tulsa Tribune, December 8, 1989. Evidently the editor at the Tulsa Tribune was an expert in nuclear physics and clairvoyant to boot, since there was not much information published at that time.

QUOTE:

Fusion flap

EDITORIAL

Cold fusion is still a hot topic on campus, and it has reached the boiling point at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. MIT physicist Peter Hagelstein, who defends claims of a Utah researcher and a British colleague that they fused hydrogen atoms at low temperatures, may be granted tenure. Other MIT physicists ridicule the idea of cold fusion and Hagelstein's defense, thus confirming Henry Kissinger's observation about campus polities: It is so vicious because so little is at stake.


By the way, Henry Kissinger might have said that but Woodrow Wilson said it long before he did.

- Jed

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