Opinion The COVID lab-leak claim isn’t just an attack on science, but a threat to public health

The COVID lab-leak claim isn’t just an attack on science, but a threat to public health
Los Angeles Times (archive.ph)
By Michael Hiltzik
2024-08-15 10:01:23GMT

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Dr. Anthony Fauci, then-director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, responding to unfounded attacks on his integrity during a Senate hearing during the pandemic. (Greg Nash / Associated Press)

Here’s an indisputable fact about the theory that COVID originated in a laboratory: Most Americans believe it to be true.

That’s important for several reasons. One is that evidence to support the theory is nonexistent. Another is that the claim itself has fomented a surge of attacks on science and scientists that threatens to drive promising researchers out of the crucial field of pandemic epidemiology.

That concern was aired in a commentary by 41 biologists, immunologists, virologists and physicians published Aug. 1 in the Journal of Virology. The journal probably isn’t in the libraries of ordinary readers, but the article’s prose is commendably clear and its conclusions eye-opening.

“The lab leak narrative fuels mistrust in science and public health infrastructures,” the authors observe. “Scientists and public health professionals stand between us and pandemic pathogens; these individuals are essential for anticipating, discovering, and mitigating future pandemic threats. Yet, scientists and public health professionals have been harmed and their institutions have been damaged by the skewed public and political opinions stirred by continued promotion of the lab leak hypothesis in the absence of evidence.”

Before exploring further how the lab leak theory has been exploited to undermine public confidence in science and scientists, let’s examine what’s known and unknown about the origins of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID.

The so-called zoonosis hypothesis, which is favored by the vast majority of the virological and epidemiological communities, is that the virus reached humans via a spillover from the animal kingdom, probably through the unregulated wildlife trade in Southeast Asia.

“Validating the zoonotic origin is a scientific question that relies on history, epidemiology, and genomic analysis, that when taken together, support a natural spillover as the probable origin,” the Virology paper states.

The lab leak theory holds that SARS-2 was created or manipulated into existence in the Wuhan Institute of Virology and escaped from the lab, whether deliberately or by accident.

Lab leak adherents bristle at the accusation that they’re conspiracy-mongers. Anthony Fauci, the retired director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the target of some of the most febrile attacks from the anti-science crowd, acknowledged at a June 3 House hearing that the lab leak theory was not inherently a conspiracy theory, conceptually—but that it had been exploited to support some truly crazy conspiracy narratives.

Fauci testified that he remained open to a lab leak narrative in principle, and that if any evidence for it emerged he would consider it seriously. That’s typical of most scientists, especially biologists, who are led by the infinite variability of the natural world to be innately averse to declaring anything conclusively possible or impossible.

The fact is, however, that one can’t advance the lab leak theory without positing a vast conspiracy encompassing scientists in China and the U.S., and Chinese and U.S. government officials. How else could all the evidence of a laboratory event that resulted in more than 7 million deaths worldwide be kept entirely suppressed for nearly five years? Some external hint of the event inevitably would have surfaced somewhere, somehow, by now. None has.

“Validating the lab leak hypothesis requires intelligence evidence that the WIV possessed or carried out work on a SARS-CoV-2 precursor virus prior to the pandemic,” the Virology paper asserts. “Neither the scientific community nor multiple western intelligence agencies have found such evidence.”

Despite that, “the lab leak hypothesis receives persistent attention in the media, often without acknowledgment of the more solid evidence supporting zoonotic emergence,” the paper says. The paper doesn’t name all the media culprits, but they include the independent investigative news site ProPublica and Vanity Fair.

It does take direct aim, however, at the New York Times, which on June 3 published a column by researcher Alina Chan asserting that the “pandemic probably started in a lab.” In a 2021 book, Chan had aired almost identical arguments that were largely refuted by experts in the field. Her more recent article “misrepresents and underplays the existing scientific data supporting a zoonotic origin of SARS-CoV-2,” the Virology paper reported.

I’ve written before about the smears, physical harassment and baseless accusations of fraud and other wrongdoing that lab leak propagandists have visited upon scientists whose work has challenged their claims; similar attacks have targeted experts who have worked to debunk other anti-science narratives, including those about global warming and vaccines.

Some of these attacks have come from elected officials seeking partisan cred, such as Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.). They’ve been augmented by figures such as Donald Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

What’s notable about the Virology paper is that it represents a comprehensive and long-overdue pushback by the scientific community against such behavior. More to the point, it focuses on the consequences for public health and the scientific mission from the rise of anti-science propaganda.

Its authors are drawn from the faculties of the state universities of Arizona, California, Connecticut, Maryland, Florida and Ohio, as well as from Johns Hopkins, Duke and the Cleveland Clinic.

“Scientists have withdrawn from social media platforms, rejected opportunities to speak in public, and taken increased safety measures to protect themselves and their families,” the authors report.

“Some have even diverted their work to less controversial and less timely topics. We now see a long-term risk of having fewer experts engaged in work that may help thwart future pandemics, and of fewer scientists willing to communicate the findings of sophisticated, fast-moving research topics that are important for global health....Most worrisome for future preparedness, the next generation of scientists has well-founded fears about entering fields related to emerging viruses and pandemic science.”

The paper revisits the scene at the public interrogation by House Republicans on June 3. “The hearing,” it observes, “was often disrupted and marked by contentious, disrespectful, and unfounded calls for Dr. Fauci to be ‘prosecuted’ and imprisoned for ‘crimes against humanity.’”

By presupposing that evidence of a lab leak has been deliberately suppressed by leading scientists and scientific administrators, its promoters have cast “unsupported blame on scientists, many of whom had warned of the potential threat of, and need for effective countermeasures to prevent, zoonotic transfer of viruses into humans,” the authors write.

At a certain level, the popular embrace of scientific conspiracy theories is understandable. As the Swiss molecular biologist and science writer Philipp Markolin has observed, disinformation relies on myths that provide simple explanations for traumatic world events, like the pandemic, by positing that it was caused by shadowy, powerful actors. There’s never a shortage of grifters and manipulators using this public confusion to their advantage.

Thanks in part to social media, anti-science has become more virulent and widespread, the Virology authors write. Large numbers of researchers into SARS-2 have reported “harassment ranging from personal insults to threats of violence, ‘doxing,’ and personal contact,” according to the paper— of 1,281 scientists in several fields who responded to a survey by Science, 51% said they had experienced at least one form of harassment, sometimes over a period of years.

The Virology authors warn that the vilification of scientists whose research supports the zoonosis hypothesis will leave society defenseless when the next pandemic threat emerges.

“If these narratives are left unchecked, we become a society that dismisses and vilifies those with expertise and experience relevant to the challenges we face,” the authors write. “We then base decisions affecting large populations worldwide on speculation or chosen beliefs that have no grounding in evidence-based science.”

That’s what the future holds if we allow misinformation and disinformation, weaponized by sociopaths seeking financial or partisan gain, to guide our actions. We have been warned.
 
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A Maryland state employee stuck me with a needle and then went "huh wait this was for Moderna, your card says Pfizer, why did you do this to yourself??"

I fell in love with a British woman during covid because that's how life works I guess. I genuinely only got shot up because I was desperate to go to some rainy depressing island for its own sake I guess.

I got dumped because I'm a legitimately alcoholic kiwi farmer.

I don't know what the globo homo faggots want from me anymore.

I still love my British girlfriend. She (totally fairly) doesn't tolerate me because I'm a drunk.

Why do people write these articles?
 
The lab leak theory holds that SARS-2 was created or manipulated into existence in the Wuhan Institute of Virology and escaped from the lab, whether deliberately or by accident.
No, you stupid asshole. It holds that it escaped from the lab, but that could involve a virus that was collected in the wild escaping from the lab. This fucking piece of shit wants to whine about people not trusting the science but can't stay honest for a single fucking article.

The fact is, however, that one can’t advance the lab leak theory without positing a vast conspiracy encompassing scientists in China and the U.S., and Chinese and U.S. government officials.
The fact is, fucknuts, that such a conspiracy is plausible as both nations have vast governmental secrecy regimes and one is a full on totalitarian state. Both are also implicated in setting up the lab and its research so neither has a motive to reveal a lab leak if it happened. If a lab leak happened and only one nation or the other was responsible, there would be motive for the non-involved nation to reveal it. As it is, both would be better off staying silent if it happened.

They both have a track record of lying to the public countless times and both have a motive to lie. So do people bristle when you call them crazy for suggesting they lied? Well I can't imagine why you asinine CCP bootlicker.
 
TLDR.

Soon as I saw article was from the LA Times knew it was lies and bullshit.

The excreable way the response to the Chinese Flu was handled in most places alone justifies a total lack of trust and faith in government, law enforcement, the judiciary, 'science' and the mainstream media at all levels. The writer of this dogshit is apparently unhappy people aren't reacting much to the latest strain of the Chinese Flu going around.

Remember, three times as many people, per the CDC themselves, died of heart problems/cancer during the 'pandemic', and doubt those numbers overall have gone down much at all. And we didn't fuck up our society and our economy, still don't, trying to stop the spread of those diseases. Personally am far more concerned about a return of the heart problem and the cancer than I am about getting the coof again.
 
No, you stupid asshole. It holds that it escaped from the lab, but that could involve a virus that was collected in the wild escaping from the lab. This fucking piece of shit wants to whine about people not trusting the science but can't stay honest for a single fucking article.


The fact is, fucknuts, that such a conspiracy is plausible as both nations have vast governmental secrecy regimes and one is a full on totalitarian state. Both are also implicated in setting up the lab and its research so neither has a motive to reveal a lab leak if it happened. If a lab leak happened and only one nation or the other was responsible, there would be motive for the non-involved nation to reveal it. As it is, both would be better off staying silent if it happened.

They both have a track record of lying to the public countless times and both have a motive to lie. So do people bristle when you call them crazy for suggesting they lied? Well I can't imagine why you asinine CCP bootlicker.
Imagine a scientist arguing that something didn't happen because the government didn't acknowledge it.....

No, you don't have to.

ALL our scientists are inexplicably in love with the possibility that ever bigger, ever grander and ever more censorious institutions will fix the world, despite zero empirical evidence that they do one single lick of good, and will defend them to the death in a way that's, ironically, closer to religion than science.... with no rationale given except "trust us" and "you aren't smart, you don't have credentials"
 
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Dr. Fauci and his NIH have sat in front of congress multiple times over their attempts to silence and threaten the careers of whistleblowing doctors blowing the whistle over gain of function research.

Why do journos never report on this fact? Is it an attack on Science™’s credibility?

Well, congressional Republicans are mean to Fauci, you see, and...
 
Omicron was also released deliberately
In all fairness, if it was really so important to fast-track developing herd immunity of a sort to covid classic it basically worked. The ethical implications and wisdom of doing so when the whole incident was caused by (at best) retardation and hubris with regard to modified viruses is a whole other discussion, however.

"Public health" in current year+9 is just another weasel word construction to steal economic resources and civil liberties from the working class to a) restribute the economic assets to illegals and shitskins and the billionaire class and b) give the state more totalitarian power over everyone. So, fuck public health and fuck journalists.
So depressingly true. I wish I didn't have to feel this way about science or medicine. It legitimately irks me that greedy, power-crazed, manipulative fucksticks managed to take perfectly decent ideas like "don't shit upstream of where you get your drinking water" and abused every logical fallacy in existence until they perverted the field of "health science" into what could more accurately be described as "niggercattle studies". And yes fuck journalists as well for more or less the same reason.
 
There's no such thing as "public health"
I mean, there absolutely is. During callups for service in the Crimean War 6 out of every 10 Englishmen were physically unfit for service due to how shit living conditions were in England at the time. Turns out things like sanitation are absolutely vital unless you want people shitting themselves to death. Even the Romans knew better than to leave shit lying around in the streets, after all.
 
I mean, there absolutely is. During callups for service in the Crimean War 6 out of every 10 Englishmen were physically unfit for service due to how shit living conditions were in England at the time. Turns out things like sanitation are absolutely vital unless you want people shitting themselves to death. Even the Romans knew better than to leave shit lying around in the streets, after all.
That's not what they mean
 
Didn't one of the 41 scientists who called the lab leak theory a conspiracy theory email Fauci like three weeks before and say 'Oh, I'm a bit concerned that this covid may actually be entirely man-made'? Then Fauci sent his organisation something like several million dollars and the guy came out and was like 'This lab leak theory is a conspiracy theory!'
 
I mean, there absolutely is. During callups for service in the Crimean War 6 out of every 10 Englishmen were physically unfit for service due to how shit living conditions were in England at the time. Turns out things like sanitation are absolutely vital unless you want people shitting themselves to death. Even the Romans knew better than to leave shit lying around in the streets, after all.
It wasn't until shortly after the American Civil War/Crimean War that disease and food poisoning stopped being the number one cause of battlefield casualties.

"Public Health" as an objective measurement of how sanitary things are and how life expectancy is going is one thing, but, modern social tinkerers are all about making it mean anything and everything they want as a means to funnel money and power from places where it is to places they'd like to see it go based on the emotional blackmail of "you wouldn't want to cause preventable death, would you?!" , hence, racism and handguns are suddenly "public health issues".
 
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