So your logic is that Nature is staffed by incompetents who can’t tell a scam by doing research on it, but you, who have no discernible physics knowledge, can?
I repeat:
I answered your question precisely. You asked, in apparent incredulity, whether it were
possible that a Nature editorial could praise a crackpot experiment. I answered: yes, of course it is. It's particularly possible when the experiment in question is
merely mentioned (not analyzed) in an unsigned
policy editorial. Nature is staffed by
reporters, who are as good at anyone else at science news reporting.
(Note how they're capable of writing an article
entirely about fusion startups, at
http://www.nature.com/news/plasma-physics-the-fusion-upstarts-1.15592, without bringing in a domain-expert author (Waldrop is a career journalist with a particle-physics PhD from the 1970s) or doing original analysis---this is all straight-up "we called up some people for quotes" science reporting.)
Anyway, stepping back about one thing. I am a professional physicist with
more than average experience working with plasma physics, but, you're right, I am not the sort of person who the DOE wants to peer-review fusion proposals. I recognize this and I am 100% willing to listen to
that sort of person if they're telling me LPP's thing (or Lockheed's thing, or whatever) is going well. DOE panel reports? IAEA conference has a session about you? Peer-reviewed review articles from trusted parties? Yes, I'll listen.
I am not willing to trust the following---and I think this is defensible:
a) People praising their own startups. Of course
the inventor of X thinks X is a great idea, and is unaware of any misunderstandings that might have made them think that. Lockheed's self-description of their work gets some skepticism in this sense.
b) People praising their own crowdfunded startups. Crowdfunders have a motivation to exaggerate their confidence a bit. We hashed out the "TellSpec" Raman spectroscopy crowdfunding thing on this board and our criticism was right on the nose.
c) People with a particular reputation for past wrongness. Your astrophysics reputation precedes you. This does not mean LPP
can't be a good idea, but it does mean that I need
someone other than you to walk me through the argument that it is. We non-experts have to pick our sources extra-carefully, you see.