Chinese State Media turns on Antony Fauci for expressing openness to the Wuhan lab origin theory.
“I think we should continue to investigate what went on in China until we continue to find out to the best of our ability what happened," said the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at a fact-checking symposium on May 11. — Wayfarer
I think you are overly certain about the efficacy and safety of the vaccines. — Janus
.but we should go with Janus' gut feeling, shouldn't we. — Banno
One would think so, to look around the comments here. — Banno
I don't agree; lack of action is a kind of action, and in any case suspension of judgement does not entail that one would have no ideas that could be followed; followed without judging them true or false or even likely to be true or false, but just to see where they lead. Action can be based merely on desire to do something, and of course there will always be expectation. But I would draw a distinction between expectation, which is found also in animals and judgement or belief self-consciously held.
Provisional hypotheses yield predictions based on drawing analogies (abductive reasoning) with what has been observed in the past. You might argue that one would be relying upon what others have recorded, which is true, and that one would be relying upon faith in the truth of what they have recorded, but that would be false. Anything and everything can be provisionally accepted without committing to any judgement as to its truth.
Having said that, I am not arguing that people always or even very often suspend judgement like that, but I am just pointing to what is possible not what is common. To anticipate another possible objection, it's also true that in everything we must have faith in our memories; we have to act on the basis of what they give us, but this is not any kind of consciously adopted faith, which is what I have been concerned with; it is entirely instinctive; even animals do it. — Janus
It was terrible for the Germans after WWI. The Treaty of Versailles demanded huge reparations, while at the same time annexed the Saaland, which was Germany's main access to coal for industrial and domestic fuel. At the same time Germans had democracy forced on them - and it was proportional representation, which led to a proliferation of political parties, and weak, indecisive government. It's easy to see how Germany fell prey to the Nazi regime. — counterpunch
When all this kicked off, I looked up the statistics on Arrest Related Deaths - and apparently, there are around 10 million arrests per year, and around 1000 end in the death of the suspect. That's 0.01%. Of those, 32% are black - which may immediately seem disproportionate, given that black people are only 13% of the US population. However, when you look more closely, it turns out that black people commit a lot more crime - and so make up a larger proportion of arrests than their numbers in the population would suggest. — counterpunch
I was on twitter at the time - and shared these statistics, and was banned from twitter for doing so.[/quote[
LOL. Not laughing at you, only commiserating. It's terrible what's happened to the concept of free speech lately. And, "Twitter is a private company" is not a valid response. The southern lunch counters that refused to server blacks in the 1950's were private businesses too, until the Civil Rights Act of 1964 defined them as public accommodations. Something similar has to eventually happen to the social media companies. They are either public accommodations or common carriers, as the phone companies are. At some point Congress needs to step up to the plate.
But for sure, if you point out that blacks have a lot more per capita contact with cops than whites because they commit more per capita crimes, that will definitely put you on SJW Santa's naughty list. Would have loved to see your Twitter feed. Myself, I am not on social media. Wouldn't be able to stand the aggravation.
— counterpunch
But wait, because the plot thickens. Data on arrest related deaths was collected by the Bureau of Justice Statistics from 2003-2012, whereupon the Obama administration shut it down, the year before BLM was formed in 2013. So, this kicking off in the weeks leading up to the Presidential election looks mighty suspicious. One has to ask why Obama would shut down data collection on the race of arrest related deaths if it was such a huge issue that forming BLM was necessary. About 300 black people die every year - which is plenty of fuel for a social media narrative, while statistically, there's no evidence of racism on the part of police, and every indication of extraordinary professionalism. — counterpunch
What does this have to do with the issue we are discussing? — T Clark
First - No, he did not admit that Covid might have a lab origin. He became open to the possibility based on new evidence. Second - In terms of how the pandemic has been handled here, what difference does it make where it came from? — T Clark
Again, what difference does it make in terms of our pandemic response? — T Clark
Also, "The Federalist" is a knee-jerk right-wing rag. They've spread misinformation about Covid from the start and promoted the stolen election lie. — T Clark
As I wrote previously, I've been impressed by how well the US responded to the pandemic, even given the jerky start and all the zig-zags. — T Clark
A lot of those missteps came from right-wing political sources like "The Federalist." I think you are a reverse conspiracy theorist. — T Clark
It's not that people are conspiring to do bad things, it's that people are conspiring not to do good things. — T Clark
He finally admitted it after a year denying it, and there has been no new evidence. The evidence was there all along, as were the many reputable scientists pointing that out all year. All that's changed is that the MSM can no longer keep a lid on the truth. — fishfry
In terms of the response, not much difference at all. — fishfry
In terms of preventing the next similar incident, it makes all the difference in the world. — fishfry
The Federalist has a conservative take on the news, but I would not call them a knee-jerk right-wing rag, — fishfry
unless you also admitted that by the same criterion, the NYT is a knee-jerk left-wing rag. — fishfry
Panic and hysteria are never appropriate responses. — fishfry
John Kass wrote a piece about this. The Wuhan Story That Finally Has Legs, Now That Trump Is Gone — fishfry
This is very important in a thread about the goodness of science. — fishfry
Now that's science. It can feed you or gas you to death. It can cure your disease, or give you a disease that you otherwise wouldn't have gotten. Science is a double-edged sword. — fishfry
That's why I chose territory sources. They are already assessed. — Banno
Must fact check the interwebs articles. — frank
Incidentally as we’re on the topic, I was fortuitously offered a COVID jab when I went to a medical center on other business in late April. Accepted it without a moment’s hesitation, second shot booked for July. I for one have no doubt about the safety and efficacy of them. — Wayfarer
I trust the assertions and theories of science that don't appear to be politically motivated; geology, botany, zoology, biology, chemistry, physics, human anatomy and physiology, entomology, astronomy, cosmology, evolutionary theory, climate science, much of modern medicine (the parts that have not become part of a huge money-making industry) and so on., — Janus
...as laypeople, I don't believe you are any more capable of "engaging the science" in an informed way than I am. — Janus
Labeling Fishfry's opinions as "fringe" is just a convenient way of dismissing what he's saying without having to provide cogent arguments against it. — Janus
I'm not too much of a historian but I do know the Germans got screwed at Versailles and that led to the rise of Hitler etc. I didn't mean to get into the historical nuances of the phrase "good German" and I see your point. — fishfry
You can get in a lot of trouble these days for pointing that out, but it's true. A set of facts that can be spun many ways. — fishfry
I'm in agreement. Obama was a race hustler who made race relations far worse than before he became president. I'm an old MLK-style liberal (content of character etc.) appalled by what's become of race relations. I have no idea where it's going, whether the present moment will die out or get worse. — fishfry
Sure - I think you can engage with the science. — Banno
Make up your mind - do you examine the science or not? You are ale to judge stuff when it agrees with you, but not when it doesn't? — Banno
What I meant was that, as non-scientists, we are not really able to engage with the science in a truly informed way, unless we are prepared to spend countless hours researching every angle, as a very good science journalist would; and they don't all agree with one another. — Janus
I am not confident I possess sufficient evidence to judge, — Janus
Would you guys please get back on topic? There's plenty of places to discuss race and god; this is a thread about science. At least make some attempt to relate the discussion to the OP, perhaps? — Banno
Would you guys please get back on topic? There's plenty of places to discuss race and god; this is a thread about science. At least make some attempt to relate the discussion to the OP, perhaps? — Banno
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