Five years ago this week, based on a highly misleading “model” forecast from one academic, Neil Ferguson, the British government ditched its pandemic plan and locked the entire country down with disastrous and—as Sweden has proven—unnecessary consequences. It was the first of many dreadful mistakes the government made during the Covid pandemic: shutting schools at the behest of unions, assuming the virus was not airborne, vaccinating children, and overclaiming for vaccines and masks. Government thought it knew best and let us down.
But all those errors pale beside the biggest lie of the lot, the one that has done most to undermine trust in scientists: that the virus did not originate in a laboratory accident. It almost certainly did. The evidence is now overwhelming as I have repeated many times.
New information has now come to light in a huge stack of documents inadvertently made public and spotted by two open-source investigators, Billy Bostickson and Gilles Demaneuf. This shows just how systematically we were deceived about this mother of all scandals. (Image Source: X)
Let me place you inside a taxi travelling to Geneva Airport on 12th February 2020. In the cab are two people. One is Dr. Peter Daszak, the $400,000-a-year head of the EcoHealth Alliance, an organisation that boasted about funnelling millions of dollars to the Wuhan Institute of Virology to harvest wild bat viruses and do risky experiments on them—and about singing karaoke with the scientists there. He and his organisation would later be debarred from federal funding by the Biden administration for failing to divulge vital information about EcoHealth’s support for suspiciously risky gain-of-function experiments on close relatives of the virus that caused Covid.
The other is £500,000-a-year Dr. (now Sir) Jeremy Farrar, then head of the Wellcome Trust, the world’s largest charitable funder of scientific research, and now Chief Scientist at the World Health Organisation.
Farrar sent an email at 9:34 am that day to Daszak, Michael Ryan of the WHO (the person who hotly denied that the virus was airborne), Christian Drosten, a German virologist, and Bernhard Schwartländer, a former Beijing-based scientist with a tendency to fawn over the pronouncements of Xi Jinping and then chief of staff to the Beijing-backed head of the WHO, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
The email read:
“Got a taxi to airport and on flight with Peter. I hope there is a paper/letter ready this week to go to Nature (and WHO) which effectively puts to bed the issue of the origin of the virus. I do think important to get ahead of even more discussion on this which may well come if this spreads more to US and elsewhere and other ‘respected’ scientists publish something more inflammatory.”
The paper Farrar was referring to was something he had already commissioned. Ten days earlier he had called for a teleconference to discuss the emerging, strong evidence that the virus looked like it had been engineered in a lab. After the teleconference, he said in private he was 50-50 on the topic and bought himself a burner phone. But neither he nor any of the dozen people in the meeting thought it appropriate to tell us, the plebs, of their suspicions. Oh, no, that might annoy Beijing.
Now, 10 days later in the taxi, Farrar wants the issue “put to bed” even though he knows the last hope of finding evidence for a natural origin of the virus—the pangolin theory—has already fallen apart. The pangolin virus lacks the very addition that alarmed the scientists, a thing called a furin cleavage site.
Five days after his taxi ride, Farrar will indeed help “put to bed” the lab leak theory by reading the draft paper (written at his suggestion, remember) and asking that the authors change the wording from “unlikely” to “improbable.” He then promises to “push” the paper towards the journal Nature, all while refusing to be listed as either an author or in the acknowledgements. That itself is a breach of scientific ethics.
The day after the taxi ride, Daszak replies to Farrar’s email asking him and the other recipients to sign a separate letter “to strongly condemn conspiracy theories suggesting that COVID-19 does not have a natural origin.” By return, “50-50” Farrar—who knows this is not a conspiracy theory but a reasonable possibility—agrees to sign this letter. He goes further, pushing Daszak to publish the letter at The Lancet rather than on a website.
Daszak writes to the letter’s signatories on 16 February:
“As a way to get our statement across directly to the senior leaders in the governments of China and around the world, Jeremy Farrar (Director of the Wellcome Trust, and co-signatory) suggested that I submit this letter to the editor of The Lancet for possible publication.”
This time it was Daszak who would disguise his own role in organising the letter, saying he would “put it out in a way that doesn't link it back to our collaboration so we maximize an independent voice.” The Lancet, disgracefully, took more than a year to correct the statement at the end of the letter that none of the authors had a conflict of interest.
Why this urgency to prejudge the debate? Demaneuf thinks it was all about appeasing China to get access:
“There is no escaping the conclusion that, at the time, Farrar and the WHO were quite happy to sacrifice any proper investigation of the origin, for the sake of getting access to some epidemiological data and isolates, and be able to demonstrate that the WHO was still relevant.”
Thus, we now know that the two documents that persuaded the entire political, media, and scientific establishment that a lab leak was not just unlikely but a daft conspiracy theory, were highly misleading propaganda efforts by people with conflicts of interest who knew them to be misleading.
I should know, since at the time of these events I was on the Science and Technology Committee of the House of Lords. I thought a lab leak was unlikely but possible. Then these two statements were published. To my eternal shame I—and my committee colleagues—took these two papers as definitive evidence against the lab leak theory from experts in the field. Several peers and journalists asked me if a lab leak was likely. “No,” I said, “These two papers have ruled it out.”
Several months later, I discovered that I had been lied to—deliberately, maliciously, and consequentially. Yes, I am angry about that. So should you be.
Sir Jeremy Farrar did more than anybody else to mislead the entire world. I have been unable to find out what his salary is at the WHO, but it will be in the six figures, or whether he pays any income tax on it. These Geneva panjandrums are remarkably nontransparent. Reader, you and I pay his salary through our taxes, and yet we have no way to hold Sir Jeremy to account for what he did to mislead the world in 2020.
Matt Ridley, a former member of the British House of Lords, is an acclaimed author who blogs at the Rational Optimist Society. This article was first published HERE.
The other is £500,000-a-year Dr. (now Sir) Jeremy Farrar, then head of the Wellcome Trust, the world’s largest charitable funder of scientific research, and now Chief Scientist at the World Health Organisation.
Farrar sent an email at 9:34 am that day to Daszak, Michael Ryan of the WHO (the person who hotly denied that the virus was airborne), Christian Drosten, a German virologist, and Bernhard Schwartländer, a former Beijing-based scientist with a tendency to fawn over the pronouncements of Xi Jinping and then chief of staff to the Beijing-backed head of the WHO, Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus.
The email read:
“Got a taxi to airport and on flight with Peter. I hope there is a paper/letter ready this week to go to Nature (and WHO) which effectively puts to bed the issue of the origin of the virus. I do think important to get ahead of even more discussion on this which may well come if this spreads more to US and elsewhere and other ‘respected’ scientists publish something more inflammatory.”
The paper Farrar was referring to was something he had already commissioned. Ten days earlier he had called for a teleconference to discuss the emerging, strong evidence that the virus looked like it had been engineered in a lab. After the teleconference, he said in private he was 50-50 on the topic and bought himself a burner phone. But neither he nor any of the dozen people in the meeting thought it appropriate to tell us, the plebs, of their suspicions. Oh, no, that might annoy Beijing.
Now, 10 days later in the taxi, Farrar wants the issue “put to bed” even though he knows the last hope of finding evidence for a natural origin of the virus—the pangolin theory—has already fallen apart. The pangolin virus lacks the very addition that alarmed the scientists, a thing called a furin cleavage site.
Five days after his taxi ride, Farrar will indeed help “put to bed” the lab leak theory by reading the draft paper (written at his suggestion, remember) and asking that the authors change the wording from “unlikely” to “improbable.” He then promises to “push” the paper towards the journal Nature, all while refusing to be listed as either an author or in the acknowledgements. That itself is a breach of scientific ethics.
The day after the taxi ride, Daszak replies to Farrar’s email asking him and the other recipients to sign a separate letter “to strongly condemn conspiracy theories suggesting that COVID-19 does not have a natural origin.” By return, “50-50” Farrar—who knows this is not a conspiracy theory but a reasonable possibility—agrees to sign this letter. He goes further, pushing Daszak to publish the letter at The Lancet rather than on a website.
Daszak writes to the letter’s signatories on 16 February:
“As a way to get our statement across directly to the senior leaders in the governments of China and around the world, Jeremy Farrar (Director of the Wellcome Trust, and co-signatory) suggested that I submit this letter to the editor of The Lancet for possible publication.”
This time it was Daszak who would disguise his own role in organising the letter, saying he would “put it out in a way that doesn't link it back to our collaboration so we maximize an independent voice.” The Lancet, disgracefully, took more than a year to correct the statement at the end of the letter that none of the authors had a conflict of interest.
Why this urgency to prejudge the debate? Demaneuf thinks it was all about appeasing China to get access:
“There is no escaping the conclusion that, at the time, Farrar and the WHO were quite happy to sacrifice any proper investigation of the origin, for the sake of getting access to some epidemiological data and isolates, and be able to demonstrate that the WHO was still relevant.”
Thus, we now know that the two documents that persuaded the entire political, media, and scientific establishment that a lab leak was not just unlikely but a daft conspiracy theory, were highly misleading propaganda efforts by people with conflicts of interest who knew them to be misleading.
I should know, since at the time of these events I was on the Science and Technology Committee of the House of Lords. I thought a lab leak was unlikely but possible. Then these two statements were published. To my eternal shame I—and my committee colleagues—took these two papers as definitive evidence against the lab leak theory from experts in the field. Several peers and journalists asked me if a lab leak was likely. “No,” I said, “These two papers have ruled it out.”
Several months later, I discovered that I had been lied to—deliberately, maliciously, and consequentially. Yes, I am angry about that. So should you be.
Sir Jeremy Farrar did more than anybody else to mislead the entire world. I have been unable to find out what his salary is at the WHO, but it will be in the six figures, or whether he pays any income tax on it. These Geneva panjandrums are remarkably nontransparent. Reader, you and I pay his salary through our taxes, and yet we have no way to hold Sir Jeremy to account for what he did to mislead the world in 2020.
Matt Ridley, a former member of the British House of Lords, is an acclaimed author who blogs at the Rational Optimist Society. This article was first published HERE.
4 comments:
Deeply disturbing. How is this elitist arrogance ever combatted?
The origin is largely irrelevant. What is relevant are the disgusting policies that were put in place to allegedly combat a virus that, let me remind everyone, is still in the community today but with barely anyone noticing, policies that were eventually dropped, not due to the "science" we had all been told to defer to, but solely due to increasing public unrest and political pressure (which would have been inconvenient but secondary if the official prognostications had reflected reality).
Is say the sheer volume of lies and useless or worse than useless advice around Covid from scientists, experts, journalists, politicians & doctors has really sunk their ship when it comes to trust.
Anyone who’s even vaguely been paying attention now knows at least on this subject you can not trust the above groups at all.
Untill this is addressed (robustly I’d hope) the situation won’t change.
No one will believe liars that refuse to even admit they were lying 🤦♂️
Modern medicine was never a rigorous science . It depends on some findings in science but is actually aligned to an ideology with the Big Pharma business model of using doctors to market their products and clamp down on any therapy they don't control and can't make money from. It was apparently the Rochefellas who started this racket early last century when they wanted to make petrochemicals . from their oil empire. It is true medicine early last century was in chaos with snake oil vendors ripping people off and the medical schools a disaster but the solution we have now is also full of corruption. This has been amplified by the covid scam , manufactured to make billions of dollars by bio pharmaceutical companies.
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