Peter Daszak being one of the authors of this paper basically removes any shred of credibility for what is effectively an opinion piece.
The coordinated lying and censorship from leading institutions and media over the last 18 months does not make me hopeful that this time it will be different.
It would be interesting to look at who's funding these organizations and individuals. Is some of the funding tied to entities that are under the control of the CCP?
Per Sam Husseni's reporting[0]:
"""
Meticulous investigation of U.S. government databases reveals that Pentagon funding for the EcoHealth Alliance from 2013 to 2020, including contracts, grants and subcontracts, was just under $39 million. Most, $34.6 million, was from the Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA), which is a branch of the DOD which states it is tasked to “counter and deter weapons of mass destruction and improvised threat networks.”
Most of the remaining money to EHA was from USAID (State Dept.), comprising at least $64,700,000 (1). These two sources thus total over $103 million. (See Fig).
Another $20 million came from Health and Human Services ($13 million, which includes National Institutes of Health and Centers for Disease Control), National Science Foundation ($2.6 million), Department of Homeland Security ($2.3 million), Department of Commerce ($1.2 million), Department of Agriculture ($0.6 million), and Department of Interior ($0.3 million). So, total U.S. government funding for EHA to-date stands at $123 million, approximately one third of which comes from the Pentagon directly. The full funding breakdown is available here and is summarized by year, source, and type, in a spreadsheet format.
"""
If this was a lab leak, it's an international issue caused by the hubris of at least two countries working together on a footgun (e.g. at Wuhan lab, and Ralph Baric's previous gain of function research on bat coronaviruses [1])
[0] https://www.independentsciencenews.org/news/peter-daszaks-ec...
[1] https://twitter.com/gumby4christ/status/1361175723407527939
Like most science all of the statements here can be verified with respect to the sources cited. Saying that the origins of SARS-CoV2 have not been conclusively established but are of great interest is not controversial.
If there is any lack of credibility here it is with lab leak hypothesis enthusiasts failing to supply solid evidence and then claiming that criticism amounts to both censorship and a kind of indirect proof of their assertions.
How, if all data from Wuhan is off limits?
My complaint is that this letter should be addressed to Mr. Xi. But instead they make it sound like this is a global issue.
It is only China that is blocking all research into the origin. No other country has placed any blocks or limits on the research.
He knows what he is talking about though. And he knows its the end of his field and career if he yields.
Rubbish.
> PD's remuneration is paid solely in the form of a salary from EcoHealth Alliance, a 501(c)(3) non-profit organisation. EcoHealth Alliance's mission ... Funding for this work comes from ... EcoHealth Alliance's work in China was previously funded by ... PD joined the WHO–China joint global study on the animal origins of SARS-CoV-2 towards the end of 2020 and is currently a member. As per WHO rules ... includes collaboration with a range of universities and governmental health and environmental science organisations, all of which are listed in prior publications, three of which received funding from ... All of EcoHealth Alliance's work is reviewed and approved by ...
And so on. This is the longest paragraph by far and goes into considerable detail regarding the contributors, their sources, and the intentions and revenue sources for all involvements.
It does come across as completely shameless. But why include him if not for transparency? Obviously publishing without his name is a boost in credibility, so why not do so?
In any case, it's not a very well-written or convincing letter, so it's even more puzzling. This part really got me:
> Recently, many of us have individually received inquiries asking whether we still support what we said in early 2020.1 The answer is clear: we reaffirm our expression of solidarity with those in China who confronted the outbreak then, and the many health professionals around the world who have since worked to exhaustion, and at personal risk, in the relentless and continuing battle against this virus. Our respect and gratitude have only grown with time.
In his podcast he said: "...we basically do not consider Chinese scientists to be influenced...".
This might be have been true before September 2019, when this virus research was just an average research topic out of many, but it is certainly not true since the pandemic started.
This statement sounds very disingenuous. Science should look at all aspects of the virus and consider if it leaked from a laboratory, in addition to other means of transmission. Dismissing one as simply "rhetoric" is antithetical to science.
I don't agree. The lab leak theory has a disproportionate share of the public discourse's space compared to it's scientific plausibility. So it's time to turn down (not off) the rhetoric, and evaluate all hypothesis in a scientific way. You will notice at no point in the article do they say that non-natural hypothesis should not be investigated, quite the opposite:
> "[...] whether it occurred wholly within nature or might somehow have reached the community via an alternative route, and prevent future pandemics."
Maybe it was a BS / questionable article. I don't know. But it seems we were eager to squash that line of thinking early on, whereas now it's at least debatable.
This is why I'm suspicious of moderation.
[1] https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=4&prefix=true&que...
Sure, I agree. But they make it sound like this is a global issue. But that is not true, and they know it. Nothing and nobody stops these scientists to check blood samples/animals/whatnot all over the world.
The only country in the world that does not allow an open and transparent research into the origin of the pandemic is China - and yet these scientists are afraid to call the Chinese government out for it. I find this very disingenuous.
Most people now assume that China is "guilty" because they've figuratively "fled from the trial".
For ultimately, in order to create a human pandemic, an animal virus has to accomplish **two very difficult things**. First, it has to successfully infect a person, and then it needs to jump from one person to the next rapidly enough to get ahead of the rate at which sufferers recover or die. SARS2 is a master of this trick, but the closest wild relatives seem to be neutralised, with spike proteins built to invade horseshoe bat cells, not human cells. To trigger a pandemic in people they need substantial evolutionary retooling.Maybe it's unlikely but when you also have a billion people in third world conditions.. it's not that unlikely after all.
I didn't see any numbers in the article to give some weight to any probability word usage.
[1] https://www.cdc.gov/onehealth/basics/zoonotic-diseases.html
Majority of pandemics in history are a result of this rare in absolute terms occurrence.
In general diseases that are already highly evolved for their host, mostly innocuous... everyone gets the common cold like 2 times a year, 80% of people have herpes, etc... in most cases the pandemics are caused by diseases that have crossed the infection boundary but arent evolved enough to appropriate limit themselves, this commonly occurs because the disease recently jumped from one host to another..
"SARS-CoV-2 most likely originated in nature and not in a laboratory... We believe the strongest clue from new, credible, and peer-reviewed evidence in the scientific literature, is that the virus evolved in nature..."
This can be completely accurate, yet does not exclude the possibility that the virus, originally from nature, was then imported into a lab that studies Coronaviruses and accidentally leaked from there. They are trying to obscure the latter by focusing on the original origin. This appears to be intentional misdirection and conflation.
Shi Zhengli said this herself:
Shi, a virologist who is often called China’s “bat woman” by her colleagues because of her virus-hunting expeditions in bat caves over the past 16 years, walked out of the conference she was attending in Shanghai and hopped on the next train back to Wuhan. “I wondered if [the municipal health authority] got it wrong,” she says. “I had never expected this kind of thing to happen in Wuhan, in central China.” Her studies had shown that the southern, subtropical provinces of Guangdong, Guangxi and Yunnan have the greatest risk of coronaviruses jumping to humans from animals—particularly bats, a known reservoir. If coronaviruses were the culprit, she remembers thinking, “Could they have come from our lab?”
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-chinas-bat-wo...
“”” We welcome calls for scientifically rigorous investigations.10, 11 To accomplish this, we encourage WHO and scientific partners across the world to expeditiously move to continue and further extend their initial investigation with experts in China and the Chinese Government. WHO's report from March, 2021,12 must be considered the beginning rather than the end of an inquiry, and we strongly support the G7 leaders' call for “a timely, transparent, expert-led, and science-based WHO-convened phase 2 COVID-19 origins study”.13 We also understand that it might take years of field and laboratory study to assemble and link the data essential to reach rational and objective conclusions, but that is what the global scientific community must strive to do “””
They also call to move beyond rhetoric with a goal of ending this pandemic and enacting systemic change to sense and halt the next one.
“”” Having robust surveillance and detection systems in place across the globe is essential to detect and report new or evolving pathogens that can potentially unleash the next local or global threat, as required by the International Health Regulations. Equally essential will be ensuring that the field workforce, laboratory facilities, and the health-care community can all work under the safest conditions. Until this pandemic ends, we ask, as we did in February, 2020,1 for solidarity and rigorous scientific data.
“””
Let's pretend that the virus did origin in the wild. No lab leak, no gain of function.
Why would the Chinese authorities try to conceal information about it's origin, apply pressure on the WHO and silence researchers in Wuhan?
China is trying really hard to gain a good international reputation right now through "vaccine diplomacy". Giving all available data to international organizations from day one would have given China an excellent reputation. After all, if it did originate in the wild there's nothing to hide; they simply stumbled upon it first.
Why is it not the behavior we're seeing from the country's leadership?
Why either or, why not both?
Historical questions are questions of material fact, science is an appropriate epistemic tool to answer questions of material fact, and, so, I disagree.
Some historical questions may not be convenient to investigate scientifically given available tools, but that's a different issue.
Not really because my viewpoint is not permitted on HN. Further discussion will likely draw moderator attention.
But it is used to validate, and without validation you would not have history, only opinions.
For example, "Did a nuclear power plant meltdown in Kansas yesterday?"
We use science for all sorts of stuff like that.