Harvard arrest and 2017 article, have the left claiming right wing conspiracy
Was the Coronavirus a US Stolen product, Chinese manufactured collaborative effort lead by Harvard Professor Dr. Charles Lieber? U.S. Senator Tom Cotton from Arkansas was the first to sound an alarm. Cotton was belittled, and later, silenced.
Harvard Professor Accused Of Hiding Ties To China Released On $1M Bail
Two liberal news organizations published articles that now cause those on the left to claim a right wing conspiracy hoax.
Was the Coronavirus a Chinese manufactured collaborative effort lead by Harvard Professor Dr. Charles Lieber?
U.S. Senator Tom Cotton from Arkansas was the first to sound an alarm. Cotton was belittled, and later, silenced.
The leftest group Common Dreams wrote:
Hawkish Sen. Tom Cotton issued a menacing statement on
Thursday vowing that the United States “will hold accountable those who
inflicted” the coronavirus on the world, seeming to suggest that the
Chinese government is behind the pandemic.
“The Wuhan coronavirus is a grave challenge to our great nation,” said Cotton, who announced he is temporarily closing his Washington, D.C. office as a precautionary measure. “We are a great people. We rise to every challenge, we vanquish every foe, and we come through adversity even better than before.“
Critics slammed Cotton for exploiting the deadly pandemic to beat the
drums of war as the U.S. struggles to contain the COVID-19 outbreak.
“When all you have is a hammer and you’re also a moron, every problem is a nail and you keep hitting your own fingers,” tweeted Jamal Abdi, president of the National Iranian American Council.
In response to Cotton’s remarks, Ben Schwartz tweeted : Translation: “We have no plan, but rest assured we will emerge a much more vengeful, racist nation.”
Conflicts, however, emerge in the two left wing publications’ (CNN
AND THE NEW YORK TIMES) confluence of curious facts. No public
official has directly connected the dots between the two. However, the
U.S. Government is silent on what research, in total, Lieber provided
the Chinese.
First from news channel CNN.
Harvard Professor Dr. Charles Lieber – Chair of Harvard’s Chemistry and Chemical Biology Department
(CNN reports )
A Harvard University professor and two other Chinese nationals were
federally indicted in three separate cases for allegedly lying to the US
about their involvement with China’s government, the US attorney for
the district of Massachusetts announced Tuesday. Federal authorities
told reporters the cases highlighted the “ongoing threat” posed by China
using “nontraditional collectors” like academics and researchers to
steal American research and technology.
Dr. Charles Lieber, 60, who is the chair of Harvard’s Chemistry and
Chemical Biology Department, is accused of lying about working with
several Chinese organizations, where he collected hundreds of thousands
of dollars from Chinese entities, US Attorney Andrew Lelling said at a
news conference.
According to court documents, Lieber’s research group at Harvard had received over $15 million in funding from the National Institutes of Health and the Department of Defense,
which requires disclosing foreign financial conflicts of interests.The
complaint alleges that Lieber had lied about his affiliation with the Wuhan University of Technology (WUT) in China and a contract he had with a Chinese talent recruitment plan to attract high-level scientists to the country.
Federal officials on Tuesday ended a moratorium imposed three years
ago on funding research that alters germs to make them more lethal.
Such work can now proceed, said Dr. Francis S. Collins, the head of
the National Institutes of Health, but only if a scientific panel
decides that the benefits justify the risks.
Some scientists are eager to pursue these studies because
they may show, for example, how a bird flu could mutate to more easily
infect humans, or could yield clues to making a better vaccine.
Critics say these researchers risk creating a monster germ that could escape the lab and seed a pandemic.
Now, a government panel will require that researchers show that their
studies in this area are scientifically sound and that they will be
done in a high-security lab.
The pathogen to be modified must pose a serious health threat, and
the work must produce knowledge — such as a vaccine — that would benefit
humans. Finally, there must be no safer way to do the research.
“We see this as a rigorous policy,” Dr. Collins said. “We want to be sure we’re doing this right.”
In October 2014, all federal funding was halted on efforts to make
three viruses more dangerous: the flu virus, and those causing Middle
East respiratory syndrome (MERS) and severe acute respiratory syndrome
(SARS).
But the new regulations apply to any pathogen that could potentially
cause a pandemic. For example, they would apply to a request to create
an Ebola virus transmissible through the air, said Dr. Collins.
There has been a long, fierce debate about projects — known as “gain
of function” research — intended to make pathogens more deadly or more
transmissible.
In 2011, an outcry arose when laboratories in Wisconsin and the
Netherlands revealed that they were trying to mutate the lethal H5N1
bird flu in ways that would let it jump easily between ferrets, which
are used to model human flu susceptibility.
Tensions rose in 2014 after the Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention accidentally exposed lab workers to anthrax and shipped a
deadly flu virus to a laboratory that had asked for a benign strain.
That year, the N.I.H. also found vials of smallpox in a freezer that had been forgotten for 50 years.
When the moratorium was imposed, it effectively halted 21 projects,
Dr. Collins said. In the three years since, the N.I.H. created
exceptions that funded ten of those projects. Five were flu-related, and
five concerned the MERS virus.
That virus is a coronavirus carried by camels that has infected about 2,100 people since it was discovered in 2012, and has killed about a third of them, according to the World Health Organization.
Critics of such research had mixed reactions. “There’s less than
meets the eye,” said Richard H. Ebright, a molecular biologist and
bioweapons expert at Rutgers University.
Although he applauded the requirement for review panels, he said he would prefer independent panels to government ones.
He also wanted the rules to cover all such research rather than just
government-funded work, as well as clearer minimum safety standards and a
mandate that the benefits “outweigh” the risks instead of merely
“justifying” them.
Marc Lipsitch, an epidemiologist who directs the Center for
Communicable Disease Dynamics at the Harvard School of Public Health,
called review panels “a small step forward.”
Recent disease-enhancing experiments, he said, “have given us some
modest scientific knowledge and done almost nothing to improve our
preparedness for pandemics, and yet risked creating an accidental
pandemic.”
Therefore, he said, he hoped the panels would turn down such work.
Michael T. Osterholm, director of the Center for Infectious Disease
Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota, said he believed
some laboratories could do such work safely, but wanted restrictions on
what they could publish.
“If someone finds a way to make the Ebola virus more dangerous, I
don’t believe that should be available to anybody off the street who
could use it for nefarious purposes,” he said.
“Physicists long ago learned to distinguish between what can be
publicly available and what’s classified,” he added, referring to
nuclear weapons research. “We want to keep some of this stuff on a
need-to-know basis.”
EDITOR’S NOTE: MyrtleBeachSC news fully expects the
article from the NY Times to be pulled in short order. We also expect
our news group will be banned from Facebook for publishing the above on
the grounds we are “fear mongering”. Such is the world we live in
today.