FQ, I don'tknow if you will agree with me on this, but I think so much of what now passes for peer review really isn't. I think much of this problem stems from the liberal idea that "everyone has a valid opinion." And that was an outgrowth of the "feel good" policies started in our school systems back in the '70s. Don't mark the paper in red because little Johnny will feel bad. No one should "fail" a grade because they would feel bad. My opinion is just as valid as your opinion on any subject and to deny that might make me feel bad. No one ever loses and everyone get an award.
So, a grad student in India postulating a contrived theory about Himalayan ice melting is taken as a "valid" opinion confirming the fact of global warming and then quoted by other supposed scientists in support of their own agenda. Thus, it achieves some elevation to fact because it was quoted in scientific papers by people who should have known better. If one actually went back and had a hard look at the data, one would find that it was all based on very unscientific observations in a poorly constructed experiment that completely ignored historical data.
And this nonsense goes on and on. Data contrary to what one "feels" is conveniently ignored in favor of data that tends to confirm the preconceived conclusion. This idiocy takes place more in the soft sciences so we see stranges trends in psychology and sociology and the like. Unfortunately, we are now seeing it in the hard sciences.
And FQ, it's good to have you back.