By Jeffrey Blehar
Wednesday, March 19, 2025
Over the weekend the New York Times published a piece by columnist Zeynep Tufekci, whose
writing and reporting during the Covid Era vaulted her to public prominence.
The title — complete with the passive voice — says it all: “We Were Badly
Misled About the Event That Changed Our Lives.” She is referring to Covid-19,
of course, and specifically to its origins: It is now near-certain that Covid
originated, not from some unfortunate pangolin or cave bat in a “wet market” in
Wuhan, but rather from the BSL-4 lab researching deadly infectious diseases
down the street — as all but the politically motivated and/or brain-dead
immediately suspected back in 2020.
That’s not the story. The story — and again, it is one
that Covid skeptics had read about long ago — is that the American scientific
community actively conspired to lie about Covid’s origins.
Despite many if not most of them privately believing that Covid had likely been
leaked by incompetent Chinese researchers, the epidemiological community — from
Anthony Fauci on down to the hundreds of scientists and researchers working on
coronaviruses — closed ranks to suppress knowledge of this fact.
Nature Medicine, one of America’s most respected
scientific research journals, published
a banner piece declaring the “lab leak” theory impossible. We now know,
through internal communications among the authors, that they did not actually
believe this themselves. (Some in fact wrote internally that they
believed lab leak to be by far the most plausible origin.) Instead,
Anthony Fauci and the WHO’s Jeremy Farrar secretly guided the drafting of the
piece and insisted the researchers declare the lab-leak theory “lacking
plausibility.” (The researchers, indifferent to truth or their ethical responsibilities
as scientists, happily complied.)
Cries of racism immediately took over from there — to
accuse the Chinese of unleashing this monstrous plague upon the world was
racist, would only upset international relations, and might also help Trump get
reelected — so for the next year or so suggesting out loud that the Chinese
Communist Party foolishly manufactured and idiotically released Covid to the
world was akin to burning a cross in public.
Ah, but now it can told. Yes, now that it’s all
safely over, it can finally be revealed that every authority in America lied
to you and nobody can be trusted ever again. What a wonderful, heartening
conclusion to draw from American civilization’s encounter with the pandemic! I
don’t want to pick specifically on Tufekci — her reporting about Covid was a
good deal better than most in the mainstream media, or even
at her own newspaper for that matter, and it’s good to see a piece so
directly accusing our esteemed scientific authorities of openly lying to us for
cynical political reasons. But it is impossible not feel a sense of disgust
welling up within me, disgust not with her but with the intellectual climate
which only made it possible for her to write this piece now, five years after
it was too late to do any good.
My mind instead immediately turns to the slew of “now the
truth about Joe Biden’s dementia can be told” pieces that came out only after
his replacement Kamala Harris had lost the election. Our media betters
had been sitting on those stories for nearly four years at that point,
and expected us to be grateful when they finally admitted what we, the voters,
had figured out long ago: Biden was senile, had been for quite some time, and
nearly everybody in the Washington and New York media was in on an unspoken
conspiracy to conceal it “because Trump.” They didn’t write these stories while
Biden was still campaigning. They didn’t even write them while Harris was
campaigning, for fear that questions about her complicity in hiding Biden’s
decay would derail her chances. Only after she lost, and Democratic electoral
fortunes could no longer be affected, was it now time to peel back the curtain
for us peons — who, as I again emphasized, had figured this all out long ago
without their help.
News delivered too late to matter is functionally little better than history.
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