Friday, July 31, 2020

Hydroxy Hysteria Reaching a Fever Pitch [Excerpts] By Brian C. Joondeph, M.D. American Thinker 7-31-20

By Brian C. Joondeph, M.D.  American Thinker  7-31-20


 Ever since President Trump mentioned hydroxy as a possible therapeutic, the media have castigated it as worse than rat poison. They've criticized any use of it in a constant barrage of fear, telling everyone that this 60-year-old drug would kill anyone who dared tak 8-e it.

When Trump mentioned he was taking hydroxychloroquine as a preventative, Fox News' Neil Cavuto told his audience, “I cannot stress enough. This will kill you.” Tell that to those Americans taking hydroxy to the tune of five million prescriptions written each year.

Hydroxy was FDA-approved in 1955 and is taken for lupus and rheumatoid arthritis. FDA approval means the approved drug is both efficacious and safe. All of a sudden, after 60 years, the FDA decided hydroxy is no longer safe because of, “serious heart rhythm problems and other safety issues, including blood and lymph system disorders, kidney injuries, and liver problems and failure.” If it is so unsafe, why did the FDA not rescind its 60-year-old approval?

It is worth noting that diseases treated by hydroxy for the past half century can cause these problems as well. As can COVID, which if severe, can also cause death. So, the FDA deems it safe to treat those sick with lupus and autoimmune diseases with hydroxy but not those sick or hospitalized with COVID.


Several days ago, a group of physicians called “America’s Frontline Doctors held a press conference in front of the U.S. Supreme Court building discussing the  coronavirus and hydroxychloroquine. One physician in particular, Dr Stella Immanuel, gave an impassioned shout-out for hydroxy:

I’m here because I have personally treated over 350 patients with COVID. Patients that have diabetes, patients that have high blood pressure, patients that have asthma, old people … I think my oldest patient is 92 … 87-year old. And the result has been the same. I put them on hydroxychloroquine, I put them on zinc, I put them on Zithromax, and they’re all well.

All of you doctors that are waiting for data, if six months down the line you actually found out that this data shows that this medication works, how about your patients that have died? You want a double-blinded study where people are dying? It’s unethical. So guys, we don’t need to die. There is a cure. 

Not content with censorship, the media attacked the messenger, Dr. Immanuel, slamming her religious views and some supposed previous comments on alien DNA. Before CNN makes fun of alien DNA ,they should note that  Dr. Immanuel holds a Texas medical license in good standing with no disciplinary or malpractice actions against her.

Some studies say hydroxy doesn’t work, like giving hydroxy to patients too sick to benefit, already on a ventilator, as in the VA study. Other studies found safety concerns and were published in prestigious medical journals like The Lancet and The New England Journal of Medicine, only to be discovered to be bogus and retracted. Still other studies, as from the Henry Ford Health System noted that hydroxy cut the death rate in half.

This chart from the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons shows a much lower case fatality rate in countries where hydroxy is allowed and encouraged rather than banned or discouraged.

Credit: AAPS Online, fair use


Dr. Fauci says all the ‘valid’ scientific data shows hydroxychloroquine isn’t effective in treating coronavirus.” Perhaps he missed the Henry Ford study. Or conveniently forgot last March when asked if he would prescribe hydroxy he said, “Yeah, of course, particularly if people have no other option.” What other options are there? A ventilator? The morgue?

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EDITOR’S INSERT …. VIEW  +++ Fauci 8-22-05' "Chloroquine Is a potent inhibitor of SARS coronavirus infection and spread”

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The science isn’t settled as science rarely is. Coffee caused cancer until it was found beneficial in prolonging life. Butter was a killer until it became healthy. In the big scheme of risk versus benefit, hydroxy, in the opinion of this physician, falls on the benefit side. Ultimately, it’s about choice, that of the patient and their doctor.

Why then all the hysteria about hydroxy? One reason is that President Trump touted it. That’s enough reason to be against it. Other potential treatments have been suggested for COVID, including Remdesivirstatins, and antacids. These were promoted by prominent institutions including Columbia University and Massachusetts General Hospital, but none of them have panned out as a successful treatment. And all have side effects, some serious.

Were proponents castigated and cancelled? Were Fox News anchors telling viewers that statins will kill you? Would these potential but failed treatments have been maligned by the media if Trump had suggested them rather than simply ignoring them when they didn’t pan out?

Brian C. Joondeph, M.D., is a Denver-based physician and freelance writer.

 

Thursday, July 30, 2020

Twitter Blocks Dr. Samadi for Hydroxychloroquine Comments By Marisa Herman

Twitter Blocks Dr. Samadi for Hydroxychloroquine Comments

By Marisa Herman   


[POSTING NOTE.  Twitter , Facebook, Google, etc. claim that they are not censoring materials….but when we attempted to post this article this is the response that we received: " You are being rate limitednWhat happened?

The owner of this website (www.searchmine.net) has banned you temporarily from accessing this website.”]



When Dr. David Samadi, M.D., lead medical contributor for Newsmax TV, logged onto his Twitter account on Wednesday, he noticed something was different. He couldn’t tweet out any messages.

Then he checked his email. In his inbox, an email from Twitter telling him his account “has been locked for violating the Twitter Rules.”

Samadi, a nationally renowned physician and surgeon dubbed one of New York City’s “top doctors” by New York Magazine, was placed on 24-hour Twitter timeout for breaking the social media platform’s policy on “spreading misleading and potentially harmful information related to COVID-19.”

This, for offering his professional opinion that hydroxychloroquine (HCQ) treatment can be effective against COVID-19.

In one of the tweets flagged by Twitter, Samadi wrote, “Hydroxychloroquine works and has worked.”

Over the past several weeks, he said, he has tweeted about the coronavirus treatment HCQ – which has drawn opposition on the left, in part because of President Donald Trump’s support for it -- because Samadi has seen studies showing the anti-malaria drug can work if it used early on in a patient’s coronavirus diagnosis. Several tweets about the medication appear to have landed Samadi in Twitter jail.

“If this medication can help one person, then I am all for it,” he said.

In a third flagged tweet, he ripped the media for not embracing the notion that hydroxychloroquine is an effective COVID-19 treatment. “Hydroxychloroquine works. This should be worldwide breaking news met with celebration!” he wrote.

“It’s major censorship,” he told Newsmax. “I have been in the media for 12 or 13 years and this is the first time I have been shut down.”

In another tweet, he called out The New York Times for calling the drug “unproven” even though “we’ve now gotten proof that hydroxychloroquine works.”

He also posted: “Why do you think the most important world leaders would be taking medicine if it didn’t work?”

GOP political consultant Anthony Angelini called Twitter’s move to lock Samadi’s account “extremely dangerous.”

“Why are they so afraid of this news getting out?” he asked. “What do they have to fear?”

Kris Ruby, CEO of Ruby Media Group, which specializes in health care public relations for doctors and social media marketing for doctors, said she believes that Twitter has “a long history of censoring conservative content."

Samadi currently serves as the director of men's health and urologic oncology at St. Francis Hospital in Roslyn, New York. He has in excess of 250,000 Twitter followers, doing medical commentaries on Fox News and other media outlets.

He said he can’t tweet or send any of his followers a message while his account is locked. His account is still active and Twitter users can still read his existing tweets.

As a surgeon who deals with life and death daily, he said he is always fighting for his patients' lives.

After seeing reports that using HCQ with azithromycin can help patients avoid being placed on a ventilator, he said he began supporting the use of the drug as a treatment.

He said patients should be given the option of being treated with the medication; government should stay out of the discussion.

“This medication has been around for decades,” he said. “It is a safe medication.”

Touted by Trump early on in the coronavirus outbreak as a “game changer” in fighting COVID-19, the antimalaria drug has been labeled by some experts as non-effective and even dangerous. The Food and Drug Administration pulled its emergency-use authorization for hydroxychloroquine on June 15 after several studies showed it could increase the risk for cardiovascular complications.

But many reports knocking the drug have subsequently been discredited.

Samadi said people with lupus and arthritis have been on the medication for years without any reports of deadly heart conditions. He said the medication would have been pulled if it were dangerous.

Other studies have shown a positive outcome in patients who took the drug. A study conducted by doctors at Henry Ford Health System in Michigan found that 26% of patients who did not receive the antimalarial drug died, compared to 13% of patients who received hydroxychloroquine during their hospital stay. A French study yielded similar results and indicated the drug could be a “potentially life-saving therapeutic strategy at a larger scale.”

Angelini  said the Twitter censors overstepped for the simple reason that “You can immediately fact check something on your own. It shouldn't be up to Facebook or Twitter to do that. " 

He said it is legal for the platform to censor content, per its user agreements, but he said in the marketplace of free ideas it is a dangerous practice.

Samadi said he has been noticing changes on his account before he was locked out of it on Wednesday.

Since July 4, videos he posted on the site that once had hundreds of thousands of views and likes suddenly had far fewer. He said he has seen the amount of followers he has dwindle, chunk by chunk.

He said some of the posts that had altered views and likes were interviews he posted with Newsmax TV’s Greg Kelly.

“There is something going on,” he said. “They are playing with my account big time.”

Ruby said it’s likely Samadi’s account was flagged because his posts contained information about hydroxychloroquine.

“Every doctor across the board regardless of their political spectrum has to be extremely careful with the COVID-19 content they post right now,” she said. “This content is getting flagged and a lot of it is getting incorrectly flagged at times, too. The algorithms are specifically looking for keywords like COVID or hydroxychloroquine. If you want to get your account flagged or blocked, that is a surefire way to do it.”

She said medical doctors are at “high risk” for being censored because their content is looked at more carefully.

“Big tech has a big problem right now with censorship and free speech,” she said. “If you have a large following and you tweet anything pertaining to COVID, you are more likely to be flagged right now.”

Carl Szabo, VP and general counsel of NetChoice, a nonprofit advocate for online free speech, said social media platforms are “much more willing to push a pause button” on coronavirus related content.

“These platforms get it wrong sometimes,” he said. “Sometimes they are overly aggressive and sometimes they are under aggressive.”

Samadi said his tweets are all very well thought out before he posts because he knows the “whole world is watching.”

“Every thing is very well thought out, not because of Twitter, but because I know other doctors are watching,” he said. “Health ministers from around the world are watching my account. They are saying it is helping them and then they shut it down.”

He said he isn’t endorsing anything and doesn’t benefit in any way from writing about HCQ.

But if the treatment can save one life, he said, it is worth tweeting about.

Twitter has deployed a plan to flag and even remove any information from the platform that it deems “misleading” about COVID-19.

According to the policy, the company will “remove demonstrably false or potentially misleading content that has the highest risk of causing harm.”

The social media company states that for content to be removed, it must meet be measured against three criteria: Does the post advance a claim of fact about coronavirus? Is the claim false or misleading? Is the content, as presented, something that could lead to harm?

Per Twitter, the company determines if claims are false or misleading if they have been flagged as false by experts like public health officials, or if the post can confuse or deceive people who read it.

A post must meet all three of the criteria for it be considered for removal from the site. If accounts repeatedly violate the rule, they can be permanently suspended.

A Twitter spokesperson declined to comment and directed Newsmax to the company’s COVID-19 policies, applicable to "everyone on the service.”

To put an end to the social media platform’s censorship of posts, Rep. Paul Gosar, R-Ariz., introduced the “Stop the Censorship Act of 2020” on Wednesday.

“Freedom of speech is paramount to the fabric of America. No one should have the power to censor political speech, including ‘Big Tech,’” co-signer Rep. Lance Gooden, R-Texas, said in a release announcing the bill.

“I can’t believe this is happening,” Samadi said of his frozen account. “This is America.” 

© 2020 Newsmax. All rights reserved.



Tuesday, July 28, 2020

WHERE DID COVID-19 REALLY COME FROM? Unclassified communication from IDF Lt. Col. (res.) Dany Shoham. July 28, 2020 .

WHERE DID COVID-19 REALLY COME FROM?


Unclassified communication from  IDF Lt. Col. (res.)  Dany Shoham. July 28, 2020 .(Note that all information relating to US funding of certain aspects of the research conducted by these laboratories and all references as to approvals and participation by VP Joseph Biden and other members of the Obama administration have been redacted from this authorized version.) .
 Dr.  Shoham is a microbiologist and an expert on chemical and biological warfare in the Middle East. He is a former senior intelligence analyst in the IDF and the Israeli Defense Ministry.

 Behind the great challenge of how to deal with the global COVID-19 pandemic are the questions of the virus’s true genomic origin and direct source. These questions will likely be answered through synergies between science and intelligence, the combined findings of which will ultimately converge into a critical mass of evidence.
SARS-CoV-2 is the strain of coronavirus that causes COVID-19. According to unofficial reports and taking into account the virus’s incubation period, Patient Zero was apparently infected in Wuhan, China in October or November of 2019. However, it was not until Dec. 31, 2019, that the Wuhan Municipal Health Commission issued an alert that there was a cluster of cases of “viral pneumonia” in Wuhan. At the time, the initial source of the virus was said to have been an unidentified infected animal from the Wuhan wet market. This claim was later abandoned by China.
An alternative possibility is that the virus—whether natural, manmade or otherwise modified—leaked from a lab at the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) or another Wuhan-based facility.
In 2015, an article in Journal of Defence Studies profiled the Chinese biological warfare program and noted that the WIV, basically a civilian facility, dealt with certain pathogens, including the SARS virus. In 2019, the WIV was involved in the improper dispatch of highly virulent viruses (not coronaviruses) from Canada to China, which bolstered that case. In January 2020, the WIV was identified as a facility from which SARS-CoV-2 had possibly leaked.
Whether or not the WIV’s labs, civilian or otherwise, were holding the COVID-19 virus, it could be an intact natural virus strain. A lab leak might have occurred via an accidentally infected worker, an infected lab animal, or a technical failure.
In February 2020, Maj. Gen. Wei Chen, a prominent Chinese biological warfare expert affiliated with the military’s Beijing Institute of Biotechnology, was appointed head of the WIV wing, which is at biosafety level 4 (the highest level). In Wuhan, she collaborated with the Wuhan Institute of Biological Products and Wuhan-based academic institutions. Her object was to develop vaccines, anti-sera and other countermeasures to guard against the spreading COVID-19 virus.
In the United States, professor Francis Boyle claimed on Feb. 2 that the virus had  held at the WIV as a bioweapon and leaked from its lab. Sen. Tom Cotton amplified the lab virus theory on Feb. 17, when he said the virus might have leaked from the WIV. Concrete evidence beyond the circumstantial was not offered, which discredited the theory.
On the intelligence level, however, evidence was being accumulated that gave credence to the possibility of a Chinese lab leak. On April 5, British intelligence indicated that the features of SARS-CoV-2, as well as the extensive studies conducted in Wuhan on similar coronaviruses, rendered the “lab script” a “credible alternative view.” U.S. intelligence officials said “there is no evidence the pandemic coronavirus was created in a laboratory as a potential bio-weapon or engineered,” but those words do not negate the possibility of a lab leak.
A few days after that statement, nine officials from the current and former U.S. intelligence and national security services who are familiar with the investigations in progress said the possibility that the pandemic was triggered by an accident at a research facility in Wuhan was “certainly real” and was “absolutely under scrutiny at the highest level.” Several weeks later, President Trump noted with “a high degree of confidence” that the outbreak emanated from the WIV, though he added that he could not reveal details.
“We are all trying to figure out the right answer.”
U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo (who was head of the CIA until April 2018) said that in addition to the WIV, “There are multiple labs where the Chinese Communist Party is working on various levels of pathogens.” He has also made these statements:
• “We, collectively the world, still have not had access to the Chinese labs.”
• “We are still trying to get an actual sample of the virus [from China]” (i.e., the genuine index virus strain).
• “There is a significant amount of evidence that this virus came from that laboratory in Wuhan.”
He has also said, however, that “the intelligence community is still figuring out precisely where this virus began. We are all trying to figure out the right answer” and “there are different levels of certainty expressed at different sources” of information. Pompeo added that he has “no reason to doubt the U.S. intelligence community’s consensus that the virus was not man-made or genetically modified.”
A contemporaneous statement from the office of the acting Director of National Intelligence confirmed this, saying the U.S. intelligence community “concurs with the wide scientific consensus that the COVID-19 virus was not a man-made or genetically modified virus. … The community will continue to rigorously examine emerging information and intelligence to determine whether the outbreak began through contact with infected animals (a natural contagion) or if it was the result of an accident at a laboratory in Wuhan.”
At about the same time, a preliminary U.S. government analysis compiled from open information said there was no smoking gun with regard to either the Wuhan Institute of Virology or the Wuhan CDC branch, but “there is circumstantial evidence to suggest such may be the case … while all other possible places … have been proven to be highly unlikely.”
“All the evidence at this point points to two labs in Wuhan.”
One U.S. intelligence viewpoint is that there is growing evidence that the virus likely came into being in a Wuhan laboratory, not as a bioweapon but as part of China’s effort to demonstrate that its ability to identify and combat viruses is equal to or greater than that of the United States. Further, a majority of the 17 agencies that provide and analyze intelligence for the U.S. government concurred in May that they believe the pandemic started after the virus leaked from a Wuhan lab, a claim based mostly on circumstantial evidence.
Sen. Cotton, meanwhile, who is a member of the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, bolstered his lab leak argument with details based on unclassified general information:
“All the evidence at this point points to two labs in Wuhan, while no evidence at all points to the wet market in Wuhan. The fact that they research coronaviruses, that they used bats, that they have a history of bad safety practices, that Patient Zero had no contact with the wet market, all of that is circumstantial evidence to be sure. But in intelligence questions, we rarely get direct or conclusive evidence. So I agree that all of the evidence, albeit circumstantial, points directly at those labs. And if the Chinese Communist Party has evidence to the contrary, they need to bring it forward to the world.”
Cotton added, “Whether the virus was genetically modified or engineered is a highly technical, scientific question. And the weight of scientific opinion right now [May 5, 2020] says that, no, this was a naturally occurring virus. But a naturally occurring virus can, of course, be present in a laboratory where it’s being studied.”
“That virus was a product of the Chinese Communist Party.”
Statements made afterward by U.S. Assistant to the President Peter Navarro were sharper:
“I think personally the virus was spawned in a P4 weapons lab [WIV] … the Ground Zero patient in Wuhan was within yards of that P4 lab … I think it’s incumbent on China to prove that it wasn’t that lab … the Chinese spawned the virus, not created it. That virus was a product of the Chinese Communist Party, and until we get some information about what happened in those labs or what happened in that wet market, we know that the virus was spawned in China. Whether it was purposefully spawned in the Chinese lab is still an open question.”
Navarro apparently meant that in a classified military lab of WIV (nominally, and largely in reality, an institute affiliated with the Chinese Academy of Sciences), the Chinese enabled the virus to emerge, whether or not they intended to give rise to the virus that actually came into being. The roles of that lab and the wet market in propelling the initial outbreak remain to be explained. One possibility is that infected animals from the lab were illegally sold in the market. This would fit Navarro’s description of Patient Zero, who came down with the virus before the market became associated with the contagion.
At any rate, Navarro—like Cotton—said it is China’s responsibility to provide evidence of a natural contagion of SARS-CoV-2. As long as China fails to do this, the contagion is to be regarded as unnatural.
In late June, an unclassified report by the U.S. State Department referred to China’s biological warfare program at large, stating:
“The United States does not have sufficient information to determine whether China eliminated its assessed biological warfare program, as required under Article II of the Convention … [China’s submissions to the convention] have neither documented that offensive program, nor documented that China has eliminated the program or any remaining biological weapons [as required under the accord].”
British military and intelligence expert Col. (ret.) Richard Kemp said he had been told by an unnamed insider that there was a “very high probability” that SARS-CoV-2 was released unintentionally from a Wuhan lab and was a “man-made variation.” He said he was tipped off about a warfare facility near Wuhan by a senior foreign intelligence source who said analysts “strongly suspected” China’s WIV.
Kemp added, “It is very likely to be the case. I was also led to believe governments were very unlikely to come out and say it outright, but that China had been made aware that intelligence agencies had significant evidence. The virus came from an animal that had been involved in testing in the WIV, and had ended up in the wet market. It was believed then and now that an unscrupulous member of staff sold it for personal profit without considering it may be infected. That is how it got out … a postulation known to be true but [that] cannot be backed up by absolute evidence.”
While this report was highly informative, it has not been verified or refuted.
‘We have to be open-minded about all possibilities’
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison declined on April 30 to buy into the lab theory, stating that he had “not seen anything that suggests that conclusively, while virus emergence from [the] Wuhan wet market appears more likely.” Other voices in the Australian government held that it would be “unwise to rule out the possibility” of the lab scenario. Australian Chair of the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Intelligence and Security Andrew Hastie was diplomatic on the question: “I think there are a lot of contentions, and all of them deserve to have a serious consideration. We have to be open-minded about all possibilities.”
The specific evidence obtained by the U.S. intelligence community has not been revealed in detail. More concrete intelligence information is generally given a higher classification as it is inadvisable to disclose classified intelligence that could give the opponent room for maneuver. This means there is a sort of Catch-22 with regard to the persuasiveness of evidence and the intelligence community’s freedom to publicize it. This would certainly apply to evidence proving the unnatural origin and source of COVID-19. In any event, it is hoped that a critical mass of convincing information will soon be reached and brought out in detail.
Possible intelligence footholds could ultimately prove to be a key to answering the big questions. A variety of firms and scientific institutions, mainly in the United States, Canada, France, Australia and Singapore, have been collaborating with the WIV (as well as other bio-labs engaged with coronaviruses in Wuhan). The British intelligence community also likely still maintains significant ties in Hong Kong. With that said, it is by no means assured that all those potential intelligence footholds are willing to fully cooperate with intelligence collectors and forward information, either documented or undocumented.
There is a similar challenge regarding the full sharing of intelligence within NATO’s Joint Intelligence, Surveillance and Reconnaissance system, as well as within the “Five Eyes” intelligence community (the United States, Britain, Canada, Australia and New Zealand). Taiwan, India, South Korea and Japan might also collect valuable information due to their proximity to and interfaces with China.
“I think people will be shocked.”
Former U.S. presidential adviser Steve Bannon revealed on July 13 that “They don’t speak with the press yet, but there are people from Wuhan’s laboratory and from other laboratories who have come to the West and are wrapping up evidence in favor of the Chinese Communist Party. I think people will be shocked.” According to him, lab staff have been leaving China and Hong Kong since mid-February and “certain defectors are working” with the FBI to figure out what happened at Wuhan’s laboratory. U.S. intelligence, in conjunction with British counterintelligence, is preparing a lawsuit.
If this broad international intelligence process takes shape optimally, an informational critical mass will likely be reached eventually that either clears or identifies the WIV (or a similar lab) as the origin and source of the pandemic. How much of that information will be made public is another issue, considering both its classification and sensitivity and China’s immense global geostrategic position.
Intelligence is generally proof-free, in scientific and/or juridical terms. Proofs obtained by intelligence systems are certainly desirable and do occur, but substantively, intelligence analysis relies on the tracing and deductive recognition of pertinent evidence, even if circumstantial. At times, this essential characteristic of intelligence analysis can be a great disadvantage, but it is rarely insurmountable.
A proper intelligence estimate will always say “there are indicative or indirect data pointing to X” rather than “there is no proof or hard evidence of X.” Broadly speaking, any analytical context that is not merely technical but relies on deduction might ultimately reach the point that evidence, even if circumstantial, allows a solid pragmatic conclusion to be drawn. These assessments are considered valid due to their plausibility, even those that are inferential.
In the case of the origin of the COVID-19 pandemic, because of geopolitical considerations and constraints, this approach will probably not suffice to reach a clear-cut conclusion one way or the other.
Intelligence communities can produce (if not autonomously) scientific judgments as well. The scientific dimension related to SARS-CoV-2 is no less complex, in its way, than the intelligence one. Within the scientific dimension polarity prevails, at least for now.
On one side is the concept that both the origin and the source of SARS-CoV-2 are completely natural, and on the other is the idea that its origin was an engineered virus (whether designed as a bioweapon or for other purposes). Between those two polar concepts lies a wide range of variations and combinations, since viral affinities toward humans (which are exceptional in the case of SARS-CoV-2) can be attained or enhanced in different ways. One hypothesis is that the origin of COVID-19 was a manipulated virus, which, if true, is probably technically unprovable.
Be that as it may, synthetic virology and genetic engineering are not the only ways humans can manipulate the evolutionary course of viruses. It could be that a wild-type virus underwent a spontaneous genetic drift after being administered to or seeded in experimental animals or tissue cultures. This would constitute human intervention or manipulation even though it is neither synthesis nor engineering.
A “manmade” virus literally means one that is wholly synthetic, but there are variations on the term “man-made” like partly synthesized, hybrid, recombinant, mutant and so on, all of which are artificial and preplanned. Often, too, evolutionary processes leading to similar changes take place spontaneously in viruses due to “man-induced” courses in a lab. Chinese biotechnology has mastered both modes of virus handling.
Two recent scientific observations might be highly significant. One is that humans are not yet clever enough to create a virus as sophisticated as SARS-CoV-2, which means it evolved endogenously within an animal or a tissue culture. The other is that certain components of the virus suggest an interaction with a host immune system, which means it could not have formed solely within a tissue culture. If this is true, the implication is that the virus came into being in an animal, either in nature or in a lab.
One possibility, then, is that a wild-type virus was first propagated repeatedly in human tissue cultures, and the resulting spontaneously upgraded virus was subsequently used to experimentally infect monkeys or ferrets—one of which then accidentally infected a person in the lab. (The WIV has long been routinely supplied with rhesus monkeys from the Macaque Breeding Base in Suizhou City.)
It is also possible that a wild-type virus became highly human-adapted through a fully natural genetic process that has not yet been pinpointed, and that it infected a person (either through natural contagion or in a lab where it was held). The probability of such a specific adaptational genetic shift taking place completely in nature has been questioned, though various scientific analyses do rely on it.
There is also always the chance that a wild-type strain that would unequivocally demonstrate natural evolution has not yet been isolated from an animal, or has been isolated but not yet sequenced, or has been sequenced but not published. The point is whether or not the existing genomic data relating to coronaviruses at large are sufficiently representative to be relied on for comparative phylogenetic analyses of the pandemic virus in order to determine whether the genomic difference between the pandemic virus and other coronaviruses is an outcome of a natural evolutionary process or of a non-natural, human-induced technical process.
There have also been observations that the extent (rather than the content) of the genetic shift undergone by the pandemic virus prior to its emergence is discordant with the regular spontaneous course of the natural evolutionary clock.
The timing of Patient Zero’s infection and subsequent presentation with the disease is a medical matter, but intelligence can play a role here. For example, information could emerge that verifies that on a certain date a technical mishap occurred in a lab while scientists or technicians were handling monkeys that were infected by a virulent, SARS-like coronavirus. Information could also be gathered that on a certain date a lab technician got ill and was later diagnosed as Patient Zero. Such information may, indeed, have already been obtained and corroborated.
Alternatively, it is conceivable that Patient Zero contracted the virus (or a closely related precursor virus) in a bat cave in Yunnan province and then returned, asymptomatic, to Wuhan. If that is the case, an intermediate animal host species between bat and man is not evolutionarily essential. Still, the fact that nothing of the kind has been reported by China appears to imply that it did not take place.
One hypothesis that might be significant is that the progenitor strain of SARS-CoV-2 was a virus that infected six miners in Mojiang, Yunnan Province in 2012. The mine in which they contracted their illness is known to be a breeding ground of bats infected abundantly with assorted coronaviruses. The virus killed three of the six infected miners.
The virus was isolated at the WIV from specimens taken from the infected miners, as discovered recently by Dr. Jonathan Latham and Dr. Allison Wilson. The details are contained in an unremarkable Chinese master’s thesis called “Analysis of Six Patients with Severe Pneumonia Caused by Unknown Viruses” from Kunming Medical University.
According to the hypothesis of Latham and Wilson, the crucial genetic human-adapted shift the virus underwent (or a major part of it) took place during the infection of one or more of the miners. This shift could have continued while the isolated virus was being investigated at the WIV, prior to the initial COVID-19 outbreak and/or during the infection of Patient Zero in Wuhan. This scenario is consistent with the lab leak theory, whether the virus partially evolved in the WIV or not.
The origin and source of the SARS-CoV-2 virus are still a puzzle, and they need to be explained. The World Health Organization said on July 7:
“WHO experts will travel to China to work together with their Chinese counterparts to prepare scientific plans for identifying the zoonotic source of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. The experts will develop the scope and TOR for a WHO-led international mission. Identifying the origin of emerging viral disease has proven complex in past epidemics in different countries. A well-planned series of scientific researches will advance the understanding of animal reservoirs and the route of transmission to humans. The process is an evolving endeavor that may lead to further international scientific research and collaboration globally.”
“Zoonotic” refers to an infected animal source, including lab animals.
The WHO system responsible for gathering information about emerging and spreading pathogens worldwide is called “Epidemic Intelligence from Open Sources.” It remains to be seen how far the WHO investigative mission to China will go (if at all) beyond obtaining open information. It is to be hoped that the mission will conduct a comprehensive, vigorous and objective investigation and will ignore whatever pressures it might face.
Two WHO experts have gone to China as a first step. Executive director of the WHO Health Emergencies Program Mike Ryan underlined that figuring out the true source of the virus requires detective work that will entail an integrated approach and a lot of hard work.
There are important common denominators between intelligence and science, two paramount spheres that are fundamentally different in both essence and substance. A merging of these spheres would be immensely complicated. They are better used to complement one another. The lines between them are often subtle, with a degree of overlap. It is very much to be hoped that they will be able to work together constructively to reach a critical mass of information on the origin and source of COVID-19.

Saturday, July 25, 2020

George Soros

George Soros
Subject: Who really runs the Democrats👹



 
 
Subject: Fwd: Who really runs the Democrats👹
 
This Guy.     
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