Commentary
-
Our commentary partners will help you reach your own conclusions on complex topics.
On February 24, 2020, one of China’s most prestigious epidemiologists filed a patent for a vaccine for the virus, for the COVID virus. His name was Zhou Yusen. Now, what was odd about this is that it was just five weeks after China finally said that the virus could be transmitted from human to human, which is what the antibodies are designed to protect against.
As [Dr. Robert] Kadlec pointed out, there is no way you could develop a vaccine in five weeks. He said vaccine development had to have started way, way before — November at the latest. That idea has other implications. And particularly, it begins to explain some oddities that happened back in October and November of 2019. In early November 2019, three workers at the Wuhan Institute of Virology came down with a sickness that closely resembled COVID. Now COVID hadn’t been defined at the time, so all we can say is the symptoms looked the same.
In addition, three weeks before that, Wuhan hosted the world military games. Members of the military from all over the world basically get together for an Olympics. Many of those athletes who were there from a variety of different countries got sick, but it wasn’t until they got home, that they linked the symptoms that they had with the COVID symptoms that came out later.
But there were multiple such athletes. Now, five of the athletes there, all from Iran, were so sick that they had to be hospitalized in Wuhan in the middle of October. Well, strangely, the Global Times, which is the international organ of the Chinese Communist Party, on February 4th, 2020, four months after they were sick, got the director of the hospital to issue a release, which it then spread all over the world — that those five athletes weren’t sick with COVID but with malaria.
That’s a tall story. But obviously, the Chinese felt that they had to cover up this incident, and cover up the fact that, in fact, the Wuhan virus, the COVID virus, was circulating in Wuhan way before the Chinese let the world know it.
Well, there’s new news on the ongoing questions about where did the COVID virus or the Wuhan virus get started? Dr. Robert Kadlec, who was the man who organized operation warp speed — which delivered a series of vaccines just eight months after the project started rather than the usual five years — was the man who released the study. He called it Muddy Waters.
The great thing about what he wrote was he began to solve a mystery that’s been around ever since the virus started.
On February 24 2021, one of China’s most prestigious epidemiologists filed a patent for a vaccine for the virus, for the COVID virus. His name was Zhou Yusen. Now, what was odd about this is that it was just five weeks after China finally said that the virus could be transmitted from human to human, which is what the antibodies are designed to protect against.
Well, as Kadlec pointed out, there is no way you could develop a vaccine in five weeks. He said vaccine development had to have started way, way before — November at the latest. Well, that idea has other implications. And particularly, it begins to explain some oddities that happened back in October and November of 2019. In early 2019, November 2019, three workers at the Wuhan Institute of Virology came down with a sickness that closely resembled COVID. Now COVID hadn’t been defined at the time, so all we can say is the symptoms look the same.
In addition, three weeks before that, in the Wuhan, hosted the world military games. Members of the military from all over the world basically get together for an Olympics. Many of those athletes who were there from a variety of different countries got sick, that it wasn’t until they got home, they linked the symptoms that they had with the COVID symptoms that came out later.
But there were multiple such athletes. Now, five of the athletes there, all from Iran, were so sick that they had to be hospitalized in Wuhan in the middle of October. Well, strangely, the Global Times, which is the international organ of the Chinese Communist Party, on February 4th 2020, four months after they were sick, got the director of the hospital to issue a release, which it then spread all over the world — that those five athletes weren’t sick with COVID but with malaria.
That’s a tall story. But obviously, the Chinese felt that they had to cover up this incident, and cover up the fact that, in fact, the Wuhan virus, the COVID virus, was circulating in Wuhan way before the Chinese let the world know it.
Now the developer of that virus, Zhou Yusen, was a very interesting man. He was a very prestigious Chinese scientist. He had served 20 years in the Chinese military, heading their biological weapons research. He was close friends with Xi Zhang Li, who is in charge of bat viruses at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. You may remember that she got the not-so-nice nickname during this period of the Bat Lady. And not only that, but Zhou Yusen had a lot of contacts in America.
He had studied in America doing some post-grad work here. Third odd thing, he was mysteriously killed or died mysteriously in May 2020, just three months after he had filed the patent for a COVID vaccine. By that point, it had become clear that a lot of people were asking questions about the timeline, and how he could have filed a vaccine patent in March, excuse me, in February of that year. So there may have been reasons for the Chinese authorities not to want to have him around. Well, the most important thing we have to keep in mind is that this really takes down completely the once dominant narrative that this COVID developed in nature. Why? Well, it would mean that the Wuhan virus was circulating in Wuhan in the fall.
Yet all of the studies of the so-called “wet market theory,” which is where, theoretically, people contracted the disease from animals, were all done in January, but the virus was there months before that. So one, there’s yet another nail in the coffin of this “developed in nature” theory.
Now, although the evidence against the “developed in nature” theory is now overwhelming, there are very entrenched political interests, both in the United States and China, who want to deny it, basically as a way of covering up their complicity in developing the virus – that includes not only the Communist Party of China, but also Anthony Fauci in this country who helped fund the research. So again, we have more evidence that what happened was there was virus development in a lab in China. It leaked into the general population, and it, not some multi-stepped questionable link from animal to animal to human, that was the cause of the development of a virus that killed several million people around the world. This is Larry Lindsey for Straight Arrow News.
-
Biden’s EV math just doesn’t add up
In March, the Biden administration issued a new directive requiring U.S. automakers to cut the average carbon emissions of their fleets by almost 50% before 2032. That order is one component of President Biden’s larger goal to cut total U.S. carbon emissions in half by 2030. A primary method for reaching these goals will involve…
-
President Biden just isn’t cool
For some Americans, politics is only about policy, while others prioritize core values, ideas, aspirations or beliefs. Still, for others, politics may be a reflection of culture, where voting serves as a symbolic act to proclaim cultural group identity. But for some Americans, who they vote for and support is more of a popularity contest,…
-
Federal Reserve policy should be more restrictive
The American economy is booming, with high GDP growth, record-low unemployment, and wage gains for median workers. Over the past few quarters, U.S. economic growth indicators have consistently outperformed official projections. But the U.S. Federal Reserve recently conceded that its policies might be too restrictive, hindering the full potential of the U.S. economy, which the…
-
Celebrate tight labor market, but don’t cut interest rates
While President Joe Biden has been celebrating U.S. economic success, many Americans are still unhappy about the economy. So who’s right? The most recent jobs report for February showed that while the unemployment rate rose slightly to 3.9%, job gains were higher than expected, with the total coming in at 275,000 versus the expected increase…
-
Social and economic class will define 2024 election
Following in the footsteps of FDR, Democratic support in the past hundred years has drawn largely from working-class individuals, labor unions, and civil society organizations. Republican support, conversely, tended to rely upon larger corporate donations and the support of high-income individuals. In 2024, these traditional roles are evolving, and the new reality of campaign finance…
Latest Stories
-
Aid package to Ukraine ‘not aimed at achieving victory’
-
Poll: Majority of Americans back mass deportation of undocumented immigrants
-
Trump lawyers admit some actions alleged in indictment are private, not official
-
EPA coal plant rule cuts emissions 90%, removes 17M homes worth of power
-
As 2020 election lawsuits grow, Gateway Pundit files for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
Popular Opinions
-
In addition to the facts, we believe it’s vital to hear perspectives from all sides of the political spectrum.
Latest Opinions
In addition to the facts, we believe it’s vital to hear perspectives from all sides of the political spectrum. We hope these different voices will help you reach your own conclusions.
The opinions published in this section are solely those of the contributors and do not reflect the views of Straight Arrow News.
Latest Commentary
We know it is important to hear from a diverse range of observers on the complex topics we face and believe our commentary partners will help you reach your own conclusions.
The commentaries published in this section are solely those of the contributors and do not reflect the views of Straight Arrow News.
Peter Zeihan
Geopolitical StrategistCan other nations replicate success of US shale revolution?
Peace between Israel and Iran, at least for now
Global internet in a precarious state, but that could be a positive
Dr. Frank Luntz
Pollster and Political Analyst‘Take the job seriously’: Why Americans are fed up with Congress
‘If we can shrink it, it will stop growing’: Americans talk debt, deficit
‘I don’t think they care’: Undecided voters explain their reasons
Pete Ricketts
U.S. Senator for Nebraska