Good testing directly tests the claim not just a by-product of the claim.
I don't know what your point is, but I do know it has nothing to do with the objections I raised about immediate feedback and setting the number of trials in advance.
Blondie’s claimed ability is that she can see through clothing, skin and flesh with 100% accuracy and this is what should have been tested.
I have to admit I'm getting more than a little irritated at this point.
* Anita has made over 30 claims, many of which are
documented here, not just the one claim you keep focusing on. Why did the IIG focus on missing kidneys? Because that's what the claimant presented to them.
* I and many others have made probably hundreds of suggestions for various ways Anita could be tested, some which were incredibly simple. She rejected every single one of them.
* The IIG negotiations lasted two years because Anita would not present any single claim and conditions which were acceptable to the IIG . The kidney test was the first and only specific claim for which both sides could arrive at a reasonable protocol.
* Anita is a human being who doesn't have to do anything she doesn't want to do. She's not a lab rat.
So, to say they "should have" tested a particular something a particular way ignores the reality. Do you think they had much choice? It came down to this test or no test at all. If you want to discuss the ways this test could have been improved, then go read the very involved Kidney Protocol thread and look at all the suggestions Anita rejected.
You can keep harping about how seemingly inconsistent it is for her to reject screens as "remote viewing" and thus not part of her claim, but it won't change the fact that from Day One this was never on the table.
If she can’t give a definite answer she can “pass with no penalty” and continue with a different person.
This creates an obvious logistical problem. You have to limit the number of passes because you can only get so many people together for so long. What happens when she makes 10 passes, gets three right (none of whom were missing a kidney), and you run out of people?
The subject people are “screened” so she can’t tell if a kidney is missing from an external view. The lower back area only needs to be screened with clothing.
Without actually using this "screen" in person, how does Anita "know" her ability works? Obviously, she's never done it that way before, so it seems perfectly reasonable for her require some test runs. That's not so easy with her being 3,000 miles away. You can come up with the best ideas in the world, but if she doesn't agree, there's nothing you can do about it.
Anita repeatedly rejected full screens and expressed serious doubt in regards to suggestions similar to yours. What? You thought you were the first person to make such a suggestion? No, you weren't.
The method the IIG used was very similar to what Anita said she had done in the past, and the addition of hats and scarves was not considered by her to be an impediment. There's "ideal" and then there's "acceptable to both parties."
If she gives a correct answer another person is tested and this continues until an incorrect answer is given or a pre-agreed number of tests has been successfully completed. The number of tests is sufficient to reasonably reduce the chance of success from lucky guess. 10 - 11 times should be sufficient for a preliminary test (1 in 1024 - 2048 odds).
Which means you need to find at
least 6 people missing kidneys. Since you're allowing her to pass on people, you need even more on-hand just in case.
Suppose she gets the first one right - the person is missing a kidney. Suppose she gets the second one wrong (both kidneys). You stop the test. Do you
really think the Average Joe is going to call that a fair test?
All, Some or none of the subject people may have a missing kidney or not.
You need to know how many are missing a kidney in order to calculate the odds. It's not a 50-50 test if you don't have an equal distribution of targets and decoys *and* if she doesn't pass on targets and decoys equally.