that part of the mess had nothing to do with Higgs particles...just massive currents heating slightly imperfect conductors..
The argument is that universes with lots of Higgs particles are much less probable than universes without them. Therefore, if you start with a set of universes that simultaneously start constructing an LHC, only a relatively small measure of them will actually succeed in seeing Higgs particles. In most, the search will fail for some reason, maybe because of funding cuts, a chain of equipment failures, a terrorist attack on CERN, etc.
In other words, a priori probability of success of any large-scale high energy experiment is suppressed by the number of Higgs particles it produces if successful.
I think there's some good physics there, and the amount of ridicule it received in blogs was not justified.
An obvious way to falsify the theory is to wait and see ... their prediction is that, basically, that it will likely meet with some sort of misfortune ANYWAY, even if we choose not to do their experiment and proceed with construction. If it comes online, reaches full design energy of 14 TeV, and we see Higgs bosons, they are wrong. If it falls apart or ends up being not much more powerful than Tevatron, thanks to more bad luck, they may have something.