

Discover more from Karlstack
I’m Matt Wimble. I discussed suicide on EJMR. I was included in the study without my approval or knowledge. Florian Ederer, AEA, NBER, Yale IRB, Yale, and all signatories have refused to provide me the human subjects paperwork which I asked for weeks ago. This triggered an episode which landed me in the hospital and broke up my family. I am an Eagle Scout and a good guy. You people [on EJMR], in your weird way, helped me to recover from a tenure denial and subsequent suicide attempt. I count 5 violations of the Nuremberg Code in their “exempt” study. My PhD is from Michigan State. I stand up for suicidal people. Sue me.
I live in north Brookline (next to Boston University, where Florian Ederer now works) and offered to meet Ederer to discuss the hack. He is a coward… I’m from Detroit. Not a coward. My email is matt.wimble@gmail.com.
I should be out of the hospital in a few days and needed the healing. Zero responses from the authors. I’m moving back to Michigan to be with family, hopefully save my 17 year marriage, and heal my 8yo daughter who has a tremor now. Douchebags. All of them. Excuse my language. I am from Detroit and pissed off.
Nice use of my tax dollars, and I bet a few of the authors have national security clearances. This is bad.
This note was printed with the explicit permission of the author.
This is article #8 in an ongoing investigative series into the hack of EJMR.
I discussed suicide on EJMR
I know it's easy for others who aren't directly involved to say but you may be better off if you are able to take a step back and remove yourself from toxic non-family relationships and exchanges. I realise that can be very hard to do when someone is a victim of injustice, passionate about truth and honesty as well as integrity, but sometimes one just has to put oneself first. Take care. You are a good man.
Let's posit, for the sake of argument, that everyone in academia has the emotional maturity of middle schoolers.
Kids hate to be excluded from secret clubs. It makes them nuts. Ederer et al just couldn't bear it that some people *in their profession!* *In their field!* formed a private place to talk private talk and they weren't part of it!
So they did a tattling-to-teacher operation. And they feel very proud and smug about it.
Most things in life are governed by pretty basic human emotions. And I suspect quite a lot of people in academia spend a remarkable amount of time trying to get revenge on everyone who tormented or excluded them or just didn't like them in those middle school hallways. But who can admit *that*?