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by autoexec
1201 days ago
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> how does "actual science like genome analysis" prove it wasn't a lab leak? You're right, it doesn't, I was just using your own phrasing. What the science did do was provide verifiable evidence which supported the theory that the virus could have came from animals. Having actual research that can be repeated and verified will always win out over vague accusations or suspicions made without evidence, such as your claim that it all came from "scientists highly motivated to discredit the lab leak hypothesis." On one hand we have wild speculation, on the other we have "SARS-CoV-2 emergence very likely resulted from at least two zoonotic events" (https://zenodo.org/record/6291628/files/Pekar_Zoonosis.pdf?d...) Neither of the two have to be correct, and neither offers definitive proof of how the virus spread, but if you can honestly look at those two things and say neither one offers any evidence or that that they provide an equal level of analysis I don't know what to tell you. |
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https://zenodo.org/record/7169296#.Y0RCpkPP02y
https://changingtimes.media/2022/10/12/investigators-challen...
So which is right? You don't know, I don't know...so maybe we need to also consider other scenarios too.
And contemplating the possibility of a lab leak, when a coronavirus outbreak randomly appears just down the road from a laboratory that studies coronaviruses (of all places in the world) is about as far from "wild speculation" as you can get. It's just simple commonsense, unless you have an agenda.
Here's some other examples where "wild speculation" must have been involved:-
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_laboratory_biosecurity...
And I havent mentioned all the other kinds of intelligence data used to analyse such an event, like satellite photos of the Wuhan lab carpark, or peaks in mobile phone activity in the area, or there are some indications that 3 scientists at the Wuhan lab came down with an "unknown" respiratory disease a month before the first appearance of Covid.
https://www.wsj.com/articles/intelligence-on-sick-staff-at-w...