By Noah Rothman
Monday, February 27, 2023
The Wall Street Journal revealed on
Sunday that the U.S. Department of Energy has joined the FBI in concluding that
the virus that exploded out of China in early 2020, inaugurating the worst
global public-health crisis in a century and taking millions of lives with it,
“most likely” originated in a Chinese virology lab. Other investigatory bodies
looking into the virus’s origins don’t yet all agree, and the Energy Department
added the caveat that it had “low confidence” in its own assessment. But “low
confidence” is more than no confidence. Even this modest dispensation
represents an indictment of the expert classes, who wielded all the social
pressure at their disposal to cajole the nation into dismissing the lab-leak
theory early and with prejudice.
Those who lent credence to the theory and were subjected
to the dominant culture’s bottomless capacity for condescension as a result
will be tempted to take a victory lap. And, you know what? They should! The
story of the theory’s rise, fall, and rise again is a story of how too many abused
their positions of authority to wage a conflict over cultural values under the
guise of dispassionate empiricism. Anathematizing the lab-leak hypothesis was
just the latest avenue through which they could impeach political actors they
didn’t like.
Senator Tom Cotton was among the earliest prominent
figures to wonder aloud whether a unique coronavirus conspicuously adapted to
infect humans had escaped containment in a country where laboratory leaks that sicken and kill are not unheard
of and where “laboratory
biosafety” was, until recently, an obscure concept. Cotton’s curiosity was
handled by the arbiters of American discourse as a menace more dangerous than
the virus itself.
Cotton was attacked in the Washington Post for his credulous embrace of a
“fringe” “conspiracy theory.” Figures in superficially authoritative positions alleged that his
“irresponsible” “fear-mongering” rendered him the functional equivalent of Cold
War–era dupes who witlessly propagated the KGB’s falsehoods only to advance
their parochial ideological objectives. These brushback pitches were informed
by what passed for “the science,” as virologists and public-health experts
rallied around the notion that the lab-leak theory impeded
global efforts to contain the disease’s spread. What’s more, anyone
who lent credence to the theory was labeled an accomplice to the campaign of “online
bullying of scientists and anti-Asian harassment” that was somehow licensed
by asking the wrong questions.
The lab-leak hypothesis was never wholly unsupported by
evidence. But as former New York Times science reporter Donald
McNeil Jr. wrote on Medium in early 2021, in discussing the judgment
calls his paper and other heavyweight outlets had made when putting their
thumbs on the scales against the lab-leak theory, the mainstream consensus
ensured that the theory was relegated to the fringes, where it would only be
“championed by the folks who brought us Pizzagate, the Plandemic, Kung Flu,
Q-Anon, Stop the Steal, and the January 6 Capitol invasion.” Thus, the presumed
derangement of the lab-leak theory’s proponents became a self-reinforcing proposition.
After all, only the crazies would touch it. You could be forgiven for
concluding that was an intended consequence of all this gatekeeping.
In May 2021, the Wall Street Journal revealed that U.S.
intelligence agencies had evidence indicating that the lab-leak theory was no
paranoid fantasy. The Journal’s revelations about the Wuhan
Institute of Virology’s previously undisclosed patient zeros did not, however,
compel those who’d bludgeoned into silence anyone questioning
China’s inviolable commitment to “laboratory biosafety” to re-examine their
priors. Instead, it prompted them to fine-tune their arguments, which
subsequently went from being centered on their supreme scientific confidence to
being centered on their indisputable cultural sophistication.
Media outlets that had once definitively debunked the lab-leak theory innovated a
new journalistic genre: the un-debunking. And yet, the explicit intention behind
these retrospectives was to indemnify those who’d collaborated in the pressure
campaign against the theory’s proponents — or, at least, to validate their good
intentions. “Were news reports diminishing or disregarding the lab-leak theory
actually ‘wrong’ at the time,” asked the very same Washington Post that had savaged Senator
Cotton, “or did they in fact accurately reflect the limited knowledge and
expert opinion about it?” You won’t be surprised by how the paper answered its
own question.
In February 2021, Facebook lifted an arbitrary ban it had
imposed on posts that included “false claims about Covid-19,” including the
notion that the virus was “man-made or manufactured.” The decision was
attributed to the “evolving nature of the pandemic,” but the pandemic had not
actually evolved at all. What had evolved was the conventional
wisdom. At the same time, Facebook reportedly tightened the regime restricting
users’ ability to post “content that has been rated false,” or at least has yet to
be deemed true. It didn’t seem to occur to anyone that the biases shared by
those who “rate” relative factuality might extend beyond epidemiology. And in
Facebook’s defense, ABC News absent-mindedly admitted, “the claims [sic]
that the virus came from the lab was one often pushed by former President
Donald Trump, though he never provided evidence.” Enough said.
In what must have been a painful concession in September
2021, science historian Naomi Oreskes admitted that the “lab-leak theory is plausible.”
But even so, she qualified her mea culpa by calling “some of the people
promoting the claim” — and Donald Trump, in particular — “irrational.” “We all
judge messages by the messenger,” this distinguished voice in the field of
science journalism let slip. Even the center-left columnist Jonathan Chait, who
had been brave enough to buck the social pressures culminating in a
consensus around the virtue of censorship, justified his colleagues’
prejudicial impulses after the fact, writing that the “idiotic conformity of
the right’s pseudo-journalistic apparatus” had essentially incepted in the Left
an equal and opposite reaction to its “propaganda.”
The Energy Department’s conclusions about the virus’s
origins are occasioning even more admissions against the Left’s interest.
Author and CNN contributor Jill Filipovic rationalized the conduct of her
ideological allies by noting that Donald Trump’s bigotries “put liberals
understandably on the defense against any theory that seemed to blame China for
Covid.” MSNBC host Mehdi Hasan stated this proposition with even more
self-confidence. “The simple reason why so many people weren’t keen to discuss
the ‘lab leak’ theory is because it was originally conflated
by the right with ‘Chinese bioweapon’ conspiracies and continues to be
conflated by the right with anti-Fauci conspiracies,” he wrote. “Blame the
conspiracy theorists.”
What Hasan is missing is that he is the
conspiracy theorist here. Advocates of the lab-leak theory’s suppression
constructed an elaborate narrative in which the propagators of this thesis were
actively radicalizing their impressionable audiences. They convinced themselves
that even discussing the possibility that the theory might be true had the
power to destabilize the global geopolitical environment and produce an army of
potentially violent racists. You don’t often see genuine scholars indulge the
hyperventilating apoplexy to which those who tried to throttle the nascent
lab-leak theory in its crib so often appealed. But you do frequently see those
who prosecute the culture wars indulge it — and the prosecution of the culture
wars is all this enterprise ever was.
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