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  3. Succinct case for lab leak origin

Succinct case for lab leak origin

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  • George KG Offline
    George KG Offline
    George K
    wrote on last edited by
    #5

    IMG_0324-600x549.jpg

    "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

    The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

    RenaudaR 1 Reply Last reply
    • George KG Offline
      George KG Offline
      George K
      wrote on last edited by
      #6

      CIA tried to pay off analysts to bury findings that COVID lab leak was likely

      The Central Intelligence Agency offered to pay off analysts in order to bury their findings that COVID-19 most likely leaked from a lab in Wuhan, China, new whistleblower testimony to Congress alleges.

      A senior-level CIA officer told House committee leaders that his agency tried to pay off six analysts who found SARS-CoV-2 likely originated in a Wuhan lab if they changed their position and said the virus jumped from animals to humans, according to a letter sent Tuesday to CIA Director William Burns.

      Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic Chairman Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio) and Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence Chairman Mike Turner (R-Ohio) requested all documents, communications and pay info from the CIA’s COVID Discovery Team by Sept. 26.

      “According to the whistleblower, at the end of its review, six of the seven members of the Team believed the intelligence and science were sufficient to make a low confidence assessment that COVID-19 originated from a laboratory in Wuhan, China,” the House panel chairmen wrote.

      "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

      The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

      jon-nycJ 1 Reply Last reply
      • George KG George K

        IMG_0324-600x549.jpg

        RenaudaR Offline
        RenaudaR Offline
        Renauda
        wrote on last edited by Renauda
        #7

        @George-K said in Succinct case for lab leak origin:

        IMG_0324-600x549.jpg

        That may be closer to the truth than not. My first suspicion was always that human error or negligence in bio-waste handling at the Wuhan lab was the cause.

        Elbows up!

        1 Reply Last reply
        • MikM Away
          MikM Away
          Mik
          wrote on last edited by
          #8

          Pretty much had to be some version of that.

          “I am fond of pigs. Dogs look up to us. Cats look down on us. Pigs treat us as equals.” ~Winston S. Churchill

          1 Reply Last reply
          • George KG George K

            CIA tried to pay off analysts to bury findings that COVID lab leak was likely

            The Central Intelligence Agency offered to pay off analysts in order to bury their findings that COVID-19 most likely leaked from a lab in Wuhan, China, new whistleblower testimony to Congress alleges.

            A senior-level CIA officer told House committee leaders that his agency tried to pay off six analysts who found SARS-CoV-2 likely originated in a Wuhan lab if they changed their position and said the virus jumped from animals to humans, according to a letter sent Tuesday to CIA Director William Burns.

            Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic Chairman Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio) and Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence Chairman Mike Turner (R-Ohio) requested all documents, communications and pay info from the CIA’s COVID Discovery Team by Sept. 26.

            “According to the whistleblower, at the end of its review, six of the seven members of the Team believed the intelligence and science were sufficient to make a low confidence assessment that COVID-19 originated from a laboratory in Wuhan, China,” the House panel chairmen wrote.

            jon-nycJ Online
            jon-nycJ Online
            jon-nyc
            wrote on last edited by
            #9

            @George-K

            That doesn’t make much sense. I can’t even conceive of a motivation for CIA to do that.

            Only non-witches get due process.

            • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
            1 Reply Last reply
            • George KG George K referenced this topic on
            • George KG Offline
              George KG Offline
              George K
              wrote on last edited by
              #10

              Even the article says, "Long Read." So, not a "succinct case."

              So I didn't.

              Just putting it out there.

              https://www.spiked-online.com/2023/12/20/the-shameless-cover-up-of-the-lab-leak-theory/

              An excerpt:


              Pandemics are not acts of God. Somebody somewhere did something that caused the virus to enter the human species. The evidence that this virus probably came from the Wuhan Institute of Virology is now voluminous, detailed and strong. That an outbreak caused by a bat sarbecovirus should happen in the one city in the world that had been collecting hundreds of bat sarbecoviruses and experimenting on them is striking enough. That it happened one year after that lab proposed inserting the one feature that distinguishes SARS‑CoV‑2 from all other viruses of the same kind makes it a heck of a coincidence. That the virus was highly infectious from the start, highly attuned to human receptors and evolving comparatively slowly, implying it had been already trained on human cells, was a shock. That the lab in question refuses to this day to release the database of the viruses it had been working on is as insulting as it is suspicious.
              The Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan, China, August 2020.
              The Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan, China, August 2020.
              The coincidences of time and place are truly spectacular. The leading laboratory for bat sarbecoviruses in the world is not in Baltimore, Birmingham or Bombay. It is in Wuhan. When foot and mouth disease broke out near Pirbright in the UK in 2007, where the world’s leading reference laboratory for the foot-and-mouth virus is situated, it wasn’t a coincidence. When anthrax broke out downwind of a Soviet bioweapons factory in Sverdlovsk in 1979, it wasn’t a coincidence. When brucellosis broke out in Lanzhou in 2019, right by a brucellosis vaccine factory, it wasn’t a coincidence. And when smallpox infected a medical photographer at a smallpox lab in Birmingham in 1978, it wasn’t a coincidence. Lab leaks happen all the time. SARS itself leaked from labs after the end of the SARS epidemic of 2003 at least six times – once in Singapore, once in Taiwan and four times in Beijing.

              Yet the vested interests in ignoring and dismissing the possibility of a Covid lab leak are legion. They include the Chinese authorities, the World Health Organisation (which obsequiously does President Xi Jinping’s bidding these days), and the American scientific establishment – especially Dr Anthony Fauci, the former head of the National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases who funded some of the work at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. They also include EcoHealth Alliance, a New York non-profit headed up by Peter Daszak. EcoHealth Alliance has trousered millions of US taxpayer dollars since the SARS outbreak of 2003 for collecting viruses all over south-east Asia and sending them to the Wuhan Institute of Virology, all the while boasting of WIV’s gain-of-function experiments, which increase the infectivity of viruses.

              And there are many others also invested in denying or dismissing the idea of a lab leak. There are some virologists who don’t want a light shone on their risky gain-of-function gravy train. And there is the academic world in general, which is terrified of doing anything to slow the flow of funds from China.

              Indeed, we now know that the head of Harvard Medical School, George Daley, called Dr Fauci on 2 February 2020 to ask him to intervene to reassure a Chinese company, Evergrande, which was offering Harvard a donation of $115million. What could this Chinese property firm possibly need to hear from America’s top pandemic scientist? As investigative journalist Ashley Rindsberg reports, Daley wrote to Fauci saying: ‘I met yesterday with a team led by Jack Xia, CEO of China’s Evergrande company, and Dr Jack Liu, Evergrande’s chief health officer.’ They wanted ‘whatever information you are willing to share on your current efforts to coordinate a response [to Covid]’.

              Evergrande went bust this year before delivering the cash, but the incentive it was offering to shut up about the possibility of a lab leak was probably obvious to all. And sure enough, two days after the call with Evergrande, Dr Fauci and his colleagues started shutting down speculation about a lab leak, even though they had open-mindedly discussed the possibility over the preceding weekend, with some scientists deeming it ‘friggin’ likely’. (Harvard Medical School declined to reply to Rindsberg’s requests for a comment.)

              By contrast, there is almost nobody who has a vested interest in the origin of Covid being a lab leak. Even the media, which ought to see this as the story of the century, have mostly steered clear of it. That’s because unlike every other kind of journalist, science and health journalists for some reason generally see it as their duty to fawn over and echo but never challenge the establishment view. Where political, business, even arts reporters challenge and critique their subjects, science reporters almost never do. I should know: I used to be one and when I occasionally did question the establishment view, I was treated like a pariah.

              "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

              The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

              Doctor PhibesD 1 Reply Last reply
              • George KG George K

                Even the article says, "Long Read." So, not a "succinct case."

                So I didn't.

                Just putting it out there.

                https://www.spiked-online.com/2023/12/20/the-shameless-cover-up-of-the-lab-leak-theory/

                An excerpt:


                Pandemics are not acts of God. Somebody somewhere did something that caused the virus to enter the human species. The evidence that this virus probably came from the Wuhan Institute of Virology is now voluminous, detailed and strong. That an outbreak caused by a bat sarbecovirus should happen in the one city in the world that had been collecting hundreds of bat sarbecoviruses and experimenting on them is striking enough. That it happened one year after that lab proposed inserting the one feature that distinguishes SARS‑CoV‑2 from all other viruses of the same kind makes it a heck of a coincidence. That the virus was highly infectious from the start, highly attuned to human receptors and evolving comparatively slowly, implying it had been already trained on human cells, was a shock. That the lab in question refuses to this day to release the database of the viruses it had been working on is as insulting as it is suspicious.
                The Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan, China, August 2020.
                The Wuhan Institute of Virology in Wuhan, China, August 2020.
                The coincidences of time and place are truly spectacular. The leading laboratory for bat sarbecoviruses in the world is not in Baltimore, Birmingham or Bombay. It is in Wuhan. When foot and mouth disease broke out near Pirbright in the UK in 2007, where the world’s leading reference laboratory for the foot-and-mouth virus is situated, it wasn’t a coincidence. When anthrax broke out downwind of a Soviet bioweapons factory in Sverdlovsk in 1979, it wasn’t a coincidence. When brucellosis broke out in Lanzhou in 2019, right by a brucellosis vaccine factory, it wasn’t a coincidence. And when smallpox infected a medical photographer at a smallpox lab in Birmingham in 1978, it wasn’t a coincidence. Lab leaks happen all the time. SARS itself leaked from labs after the end of the SARS epidemic of 2003 at least six times – once in Singapore, once in Taiwan and four times in Beijing.

                Yet the vested interests in ignoring and dismissing the possibility of a Covid lab leak are legion. They include the Chinese authorities, the World Health Organisation (which obsequiously does President Xi Jinping’s bidding these days), and the American scientific establishment – especially Dr Anthony Fauci, the former head of the National Institute of Allergies and Infectious Diseases who funded some of the work at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. They also include EcoHealth Alliance, a New York non-profit headed up by Peter Daszak. EcoHealth Alliance has trousered millions of US taxpayer dollars since the SARS outbreak of 2003 for collecting viruses all over south-east Asia and sending them to the Wuhan Institute of Virology, all the while boasting of WIV’s gain-of-function experiments, which increase the infectivity of viruses.

                And there are many others also invested in denying or dismissing the idea of a lab leak. There are some virologists who don’t want a light shone on their risky gain-of-function gravy train. And there is the academic world in general, which is terrified of doing anything to slow the flow of funds from China.

                Indeed, we now know that the head of Harvard Medical School, George Daley, called Dr Fauci on 2 February 2020 to ask him to intervene to reassure a Chinese company, Evergrande, which was offering Harvard a donation of $115million. What could this Chinese property firm possibly need to hear from America’s top pandemic scientist? As investigative journalist Ashley Rindsberg reports, Daley wrote to Fauci saying: ‘I met yesterday with a team led by Jack Xia, CEO of China’s Evergrande company, and Dr Jack Liu, Evergrande’s chief health officer.’ They wanted ‘whatever information you are willing to share on your current efforts to coordinate a response [to Covid]’.

                Evergrande went bust this year before delivering the cash, but the incentive it was offering to shut up about the possibility of a lab leak was probably obvious to all. And sure enough, two days after the call with Evergrande, Dr Fauci and his colleagues started shutting down speculation about a lab leak, even though they had open-mindedly discussed the possibility over the preceding weekend, with some scientists deeming it ‘friggin’ likely’. (Harvard Medical School declined to reply to Rindsberg’s requests for a comment.)

                By contrast, there is almost nobody who has a vested interest in the origin of Covid being a lab leak. Even the media, which ought to see this as the story of the century, have mostly steered clear of it. That’s because unlike every other kind of journalist, science and health journalists for some reason generally see it as their duty to fawn over and echo but never challenge the establishment view. Where political, business, even arts reporters challenge and critique their subjects, science reporters almost never do. I should know: I used to be one and when I occasionally did question the establishment view, I was treated like a pariah.

                Doctor PhibesD Offline
                Doctor PhibesD Offline
                Doctor Phibes
                wrote on last edited by
                #11

                @George-K said in Succinct case for lab leak origin:

                Pandemics are not acts of God. Somebody somewhere did something that caused the virus to enter the human species.

                I'm not disagreeing that it came from the lab, however this statement is clearly not true. There were plenty of pandemics before we had all this technology.

                I was only joking

                1 Reply Last reply
                • jon-nycJ Online
                  jon-nycJ Online
                  jon-nyc
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #12

                  True usually the guilty agent is a point mutation that occurs during DNA replication.

                  Only non-witches get due process.

                  • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                  Doctor PhibesD 1 Reply Last reply
                  • jon-nycJ jon-nyc

                    True usually the guilty agent is a point mutation that occurs during DNA replication.

                    Doctor PhibesD Offline
                    Doctor PhibesD Offline
                    Doctor Phibes
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #13

                    @jon-nyc said in Succinct case for lab leak origin:

                    True usually the guilty agent is a point mutation that occurs during DNA replication.

                    God, IOW.

                    I was only joking

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    • HoraceH Offline
                      HoraceH Offline
                      Horace
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #14

                      A charitable reading of that sentence is that someone did something, such as, walking into proximity with an infected animal.

                      Education is extremely important.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      • jon-nycJ Online
                        jon-nycJ Online
                        jon-nyc
                        wrote on last edited by jon-nyc
                        #15

                        Well often that’s not the novel thing. The novel thing is a mutation allows a virus that’s been around for years to jump the species barrier.

                        I guess one could interpret, for example, “farming chickens” as the thing someone did to get some avian flu.

                        Only non-witches get due process.

                        • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                        1 Reply Last reply
                        • jon-nycJ Online
                          jon-nycJ Online
                          jon-nyc
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #16

                          I don’t mean to diss the piece, I didn’t even read it. I just was commenting on Dohs post.

                          Only non-witches get due process.

                          • Cotton Mather, Salem Massachusetts, 1692
                          1 Reply Last reply
                          • HoraceH Offline
                            HoraceH Offline
                            Horace
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #17

                            It was a poorly written first sentence, but it strains credulity to think the author is unaware that viruses occur naturally. I'm trying to imagine what he meant, and I imagine that he meant to include "someone doing something" that would still align with a natural origin theory.

                            Education is extremely important.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            • George KG Offline
                              George KG Offline
                              George K
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #18

                              "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

                              The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              • JollyJ Offline
                                JollyJ Offline
                                Jolly
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #19

                                I don't think it was intentional.

                                “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                                Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                                George KG 1 Reply Last reply
                                • JollyJ Jolly

                                  I don't think it was intentional.

                                  George KG Offline
                                  George KG Offline
                                  George K
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #20

                                  @Jolly said in Succinct case for lab leak origin:

                                  I don't think it was intentional.

                                  Nor do I.

                                  But, "Trust but verify."

                                  "Now look here, you Baltic gas passer... " - Mik, 6/14/08

                                  The saying, "Lite is just one damn thing after another," is a gross understatement. The damn things overlap.

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  • taiwan_girlT Offline
                                    taiwan_girlT Offline
                                    taiwan_girl
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #21

                                    I dont think it was, and I also think that we will never know the true answer.

                                    And I have asked this question before - if we knew way back at the beginning that it was a lab virus that escaped, would anything have been different in the way the virus went around the world and the response to it?

                                    CopperC 1 Reply Last reply
                                    • taiwan_girlT taiwan_girl

                                      I dont think it was, and I also think that we will never know the true answer.

                                      And I have asked this question before - if we knew way back at the beginning that it was a lab virus that escaped, would anything have been different in the way the virus went around the world and the response to it?

                                      CopperC Online
                                      CopperC Online
                                      Copper
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #22

                                      @taiwan_girl said in Succinct case for lab leak origin:

                                      would anything have been different

                                      We would have the identity of the person Fauci responsible for 7,010,681 deaths.

                                      And that person would pay for every one of them.

                                      Doctor PhibesD 1 Reply Last reply
                                      • CopperC Copper

                                        @taiwan_girl said in Succinct case for lab leak origin:

                                        would anything have been different

                                        We would have the identity of the person Fauci responsible for 7,010,681 deaths.

                                        And that person would pay for every one of them.

                                        Doctor PhibesD Offline
                                        Doctor PhibesD Offline
                                        Doctor Phibes
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #23

                                        @Copper said in Succinct case for lab leak origin:

                                        @taiwan_girl said in Succinct case for lab leak origin:

                                        would anything have been different

                                        We would have the identity of the person Fauci responsible for 7,010,681 deaths.

                                        And that person would pay for every one of them.

                                        You've certainly changed your tune. I seem to recall in 2020 it was just a bit of flu.

                                        I was only joking

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        • CopperC Online
                                          CopperC Online
                                          Copper
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #24

                                          I was just playing the tg hypothetical

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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