Peer review seems like a form of costly signalling. If you pass peer review, it only demonstrates that you have the ability to pass peer review. On the other hand, if you don’t pass peer review, it signals that you don’t have even this ability. (If so much crap passes peer review, why doesn’t your research? Is it even worse than the usual crap?)
This is why I recommend to treat “peer review” simply as a hoop you have to jump through, otherwise people will bother you about it endlessly. To remove the suspicion that your research is even worse than the stuff that already gets published.
Peer review seems like a form of costly signalling. If you pass peer review, it only demonstrates that you have the ability to pass peer review. On the other hand, if you don’t pass peer review, it signals that you don’t have even this ability. (If so much crap passes peer review, why doesn’t your research? Is it even worse than the usual crap?)
This is why I recommend to treat “peer review” simply as a hoop you have to jump through, otherwise people will bother you about it endlessly. To remove the suspicion that your research is even worse than the stuff that already gets published.