February
15, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
The 2019 Novel
Coronavirus, first detected late last year
in the hub city of Wuhan, China is a
rapidly-spreading viral disease, often
characterized by a cluster of acute
respiratory symptoms. The virulence of this
outbreak has put most of China under a
lockdown: over 50 million people have been
quarantined in the immediate region; 40,000
people have been infected, and over 900–and
counting–have died. Many neighboring
Chinese cities also have restrictions on
travel and movement to stem the tide of
infection; and across the country, all of
China is facing restrictions and hardship.
In the face of this sudden and tragic
crisis–and the extraordinary social
distancing measures the Chinese government
has taken to safeguard public health and
prevent infection,–the western media has
made a highly political choice on how to
report about it.
Instead of voicing support or
encouraging solidarity–“We are Wuhan”—western
corporate media have chosen to go all out to
criticize and demonize China, sparing no effort to
recycle and rekindle ugly, racist, orientalist, and
dehumanizing trope s, using any perceived
misstep, pretext, and shortcoming to tar China and
the Chinese. One virulent narrative is that this is
deliberate
Chinese bioweapon to reduce population,. another
narrative, no less toxic and virulent, alleges that
the Chinese leadership, out of a “fear of political
embarrassment”, suppressed free speech and silenced
the flow of information “at critical moments”,
“allowing the virus to gain a tenacious hold”, thus
creating the conditions for a lethal epidemic that
has led to the deaths of hundreds and the infection
of thousands.
The NY Times takes the
[yellow] cake for sowing this toxic, racist
disinformation, alleging in numerous articles and
opinion pieces of a “cover up”: that “China’s old
habits put secrecy and order ahead of openly
confronting the crisis”; that “they played down
dangers to the public, leaving the city’s 11 million
residents unaware that they should protect
themselves”, and presenting this as proof
dispositive that the Chinese system is fatally
flawed. All this while reveling in and boosting on
its website, unseemly schadenfreude that
suppression of information and free speech has led
to condign and expected catastrophe.
Are You Tired Of
The Lies And
Non-Stop Propaganda?
|
The most recent iteration of
this propaganda concerns a Dr Li Wenliang, recently
deceased. Dr Li spoke of the disease at an early
moment in the outbreak (December 30th) to a group of
colleagues. He was later reprimanded by the police
for “spreading rumors”. After going back to work, he
himself contracted the virus, and despite being
young and seemingly healthy, he tragically passed
away. Latching onto this unexpected fatality like a
virus itself, the NY Times grafted onto his death,
the “authoritarian suppression of the truth” meme,
thus exploiting tragedy to circulate a political
myth: that Dr. Li was a valiant, dissenting
whistleblower who had “tried to sound a warning that
a troubling cluster of…infections…could grow out of
control”. In other words, he had tried to warn the
public early on about the virus, but had been
brutally silenced and suppressed.
In particular, the Times
claims that Dr Li was arrested by the government,
“in the middle of the night”, no less; and suggests
that had he not been silenced, 100’s, perhaps
thousands of lives would have been saved, and
countless infections prevented. In other words, the
Chinese communists, because of their obsession with
political appearances, their mendacious secrecy, and
totalitarian control, instigated a cover up that has
had a nightmarish consequences for global health.
This disclosure would be
truly extraordinary, heroic, award-meriting
journalism. Except for one small problem: none of
the assertions are supported by the facts, and none
of the interpretations bear scrutiny.
In order to peddle this toxic
canard, the NY Times–as it did with its gutter
journalism justifying the Iraq War–has had to
yellow-cake up a foul brew of innuendo,
half-truths, misrepresentations, outright lies,
spiked fiercely with stereotypes, racial hatred, and
red-baiting, while torturing the English language,
eliding logic, ignoring science, and shredding the
credibility of the fourth estate–yet again.
These are the facts:
1. Not a whistle blower:
The NY Times suggests that Dr
Li was a whistle blower, “sounding a warning”. But
Dr. Li was not a whistle blower, by any usual
definition of the word. He didn’t notify the Chinese
CDC or any public health organ. He did not notify
the hospital authorities. He did not warn the public
of wrongdoing, danger, or cover up. What he did do
is share information with 7 school colleagues on
12/30 on a private messaging group. (He also shared
a photo of a confidential medical record). How that
constitutes “whistle blowing” is not explained by
the NY Times.
2. Fraudulent Timeline:
The NY Times claims that the
sanctioning and silencing led to suppression of
timely and important information–a cover up of a
dangerous but necessary truth. This assertion is not
borne out by the facts. The “whistle”–if we can call
it that–had already been blown by others. For
example, doctor, Zhang Jixian, the director of
respiratory and critical care medicine at Hubei
Provincial Hospital,
had officially notified the hospital on
December 27th of an unusual cluster of viral cases,
and the hospital had notified the city’s’ disease
control center. After further consultation on the
29th, the regional CDC was notified and had started
full scale research and investigation. The
government was already actively investigating and
doing their due diligence with other cases long
before the NY Times allegations (constructed as
always from anonymous sources). Zhang herself,
contrary to the suppression and punishment
narrative, was recognized and commended by the
government.
3. Wrong Claim:
The doctor had claimed it was
SARS, a related, but different coronavirus. However,
it was not SARS. Why is this important? Given the
panic that spread during the prior 2003 SARS
epidemic, spreading this incorrect information would
be a understandable reason to try to restrict
inaccurate, and possibly panic-inducing information.
4. No Evidence:
Well what’s in a name? SARS
or no SARS, it was still dangerous, and shouldn’t
have been suppressed, no?
In making its claims of cover
up, the NY Times suggests that the authorities
recognized and knew that the disease was dangerous,
but covered it up anyway. This is far from the truth
at the time: there was little clear evidence that
this was a dangerous or severe epidemic at the time
of the outbreak.
In particular:
a) there was no clear
evidence of human-to-human transmission at that
time (the first case happened two weeks later, on
1/14)
b) there had been no
fatalities (the first fatality was 1/09/20, ten
days later), and there were only a handful of cases.
c) even later, as more
casualties started to appear, most of the casualties
were older people with serious existing pathology or
co-morbidity.
In other words, it was
unclear how serious this was, and whether and how
serious actions should be taken: commonsense tells
us in winter, colds, flu and pneumonia are not
uncommon; discerning a novel, serious outbreak is
not a simple task. The mere fact that the Chinese
authorities were able to identify and take action on
this so rapidly is indicates how competent,
effective, and conscientious many of them were.
5. No Expertise or
Qualification:
The NY Times claims the
“doctor tried to sound a warning”, but it’s
important to note that Dr Li had no expertise in the
subject matter, was not familiar with the situation,
was not treating affected patients, and had no
expertise to make any such claims: he was a
ophthalmologist (not an epidemiologist, virologist,
infectious disease specialist, internist, ICU
specialist, or even a GP or X-ray/CT technician).
There’s no proof that he was privy to any
specialized insider information that was being
covered up; and the hospital was already taking all
known precautions with patients at the time.
6. Not arrested:
Dr Li was not arrested
, as the NY Times claims. The doctor was
called in, lightly reprimanded (talked to, and
signed a document not to spread rumors) and went
straight back to work. This begs the question, if a
non-specialist (for example, a podiatrist) at a
public General Hospital had claimed that there was
an outbreak of infectious disease (for example,
bubonic plague (and released HIPAA-protected
documents (like Dr. Li did)), how credible is it
that they would have escaped some sort of official
sanction?
7. Understandable Reasons
for Acting Methodically
The government had
reasonable, and defensible reasons to act prudently
and methodically. While the jury is still out, and
the timeline bears elaborating, there’s still little
evidence that this was a deliberate attempt to
“stifle criticism” and “silence” to avoid
“embarrassment”. Based on the evidence available at
the time, we can reasonably surmise that:
a) The authorities didn’t
know how serious this was at the time—a
reasonable assumption given the known evidence at
the time.
b) The “nocebo” effect
(negative placebo) is real–people can take any
ambiguous symptoms (that are always present in the
body) and think they are sick.
c) Panicked,
mass hysterical responses are not uncommon, and
themselves can constitute a public
health hazard. Either of these effects, caused
by premature or careless disclosure could have
resulted in:
i) People thinking themselves sick
ii) People crowding
hospitals, stretching resources, while spreading the
infection faster, as well as preventing genuinely
sick people from getting care (all at a time when
public services are winding down)
iii) Mass exodus, spreading
the infection outside of Wuhan much faster
iv) Hoarding & scarcity of
masks and other supplies, vigilante quarantines, and
other hysterical, dangerous, and unproductive
behavior.
It’s important to note also
that this was the period of the Spring Festival, the
busiest and most important holiday of the year.
While it’s easy to criticize the cautious, tentative
responses in hindsight, It’s understandable that
authorities might not want to take extreme measures
if it was a false alarm.
8. Upfront Transparency:
The NY Times alleges “cover
up” and “secrecy”: however, the Wuhan authorities
publicized that the doctor had been sanctioned.
In this way, they actually spread information about
his “whistleblowing” and the fact of the disease
symptoms. As a matter of fact, they have publicized
all the people sanctioned for similar actions. This
would seem to indicate that:
a) at the time, they
genuinely believed they were taking correct
actions–actions that would be justifiable and
vindicated—and they did not know that this disease
was as serious as it turned out to be (and it’s not
clear how could they have known)
b) it’s unlikely they were
trying to hide or cover up anything. If they had
been trying to silence or cover up something, this
incident would most likely have gone unannounced.
9. Not Ahead of the
Government
The NY Times claims that Dr.
Li sounded an alarm in a context where the
governments “initial handling” was slow, negligent,
or reluctant. The facts belie this:
Dr. Li was not ahead of the
government. As we noted above regarding the
timeline, the government (Wuhan disease authorities)
had already been informed, and they delivered their
own public warning the same day as Dr Li’s
sharing with his friends. There is little evidence
to show that this was “forced” or “compelled” by the
ophthalmologist’s message (as the NYTimes has
claimed).
In fact, as is usually the case with public
announcements, the health department had likely been
discussing, drafting, and planning their statement
prior to release on that day.
Note, also that this information was released before
Dr. Li was called to the police for reprimand on
1/03 (in other words, the information was already
out, and the reprimand can be interpreted as a
critique of the speculation, as well as the how,
why, and who of sharing than an attempt at erasure).
Whether the reprimand was judiciously or skillfully
delivered is another matter, but the facts remain
that no coverup can be asserted from this incident.
10. “Yellow-Caking” the
Experts, Again.
The NY Times implies that the
Chinese government knew the outbreak was serious,
but covered it up and delayed notification anyway to
avoid political embarrassment. But again, it seems
that the facts belie the assertion:
The WHO was also notified on 12/31 (the following
day) of an “unknown virus” but did not consider it
serious. The WHO did not suggest any quarantine or
extreme public health measures. On 1/05, they
advised against a travel restriction. 1/15, they
again indicated there was no human-to-human
transmission. 1/23, they indicated it was not a
public health emergency. Only on 1/30 did they
declare an emergency–fully 30 days after the
so-called NYTimes-imputed “whistleblowing”.
11. Communist Catastrophe,
really?:
The NYTimes, in particular, along with its
ideological cousin the CFR, has been avidly
red-baiting, pumping up the narrative of
“whistleblower-cover-up” and “weak governance”
endemic to
“authoritarian-dictatorships-that-create-catastrophes-like-Chernobyl”
trope. “Undemocratic Governance is dangerous for
your health” claim the ideologues. But
freedom-loving capitalist America easily outdoes any
modern socialist state in its negligence and damage
to public health and wellbeing. A casual point of
comparison is the 2009 H1N1 A “San Diego” virus.
This took the US To 6 months to declare an emergency
and take active measures. Because of this inaction,
150k-575K people died all over the world. 80% were
under 65 years old. Or last year’s flu (61,000
deaths in the US). Or this year’s flu (8-10,000 dead
since October), 1400 dying in a single week. Oh, and
let’s not forget the AIDS crisis. The opiate crisis.
The lead crises. The homelessness crisis. The list
is endless, repetitious, atrocious.
12. New Standards
in Crisis Response.
Contrary to NYTimes claims of
incompetence, “weakness”, and slowness, it seems
that the Chinese have been setting new,
groundbreaking standards and practices in
outbreak detection
and response. Examination of the facts shows
that the Chinese were
actually well prepared and well coordinated in
their response–this has been acknowledged
and commended by the WHO, and other public health
agencies and
experts of repute. They had a centralized
database and control tower, which is why they were
able to react so quickly to isolate, identify,
sequence, and take public action on this. Let’s not
forget, they also built two full-functioning,
state-of-the-art isolation hospitals in a matter of
days.
13. Monday Morning
Schadenfreude:
The NYTimes has been
willfully ignoring all of that is positive: skilled,
coordinated mobilization; technical and medical
tour-de-forces; mass acts of solidarity, generosity,
and kindness across the country; and valiant,
extraordinary medical and medical worker competence
and heroism. Instead the Monday-morning
epidemiological quarterbacking of the NY Times (and
derivative media) has been savage and odious in
exploiting every perceived mishap as a pretext to
pile on and attack the Chinese people and the
Chinese system: for example, the
NY Times article on 2/01/20– insinuates
cover-up, and “systemic weakness” (but it has to
exclude the specific timeline* in order to make its
case).
Nicholas Kristof, taking a sabbatical
from his paternalistic,
prurient,
misguided, and
misleading
reportage on child sex trafficking, is
especially toxic in his offensive, red-baiting
misrepresentation:
“Xi used his tight rule to
control information rather than to stop an
epidemic”.
“China makes poor decisions because it squelches
independent voices…[it listens only to] flattery and
optimism.. Xi is a preening dictator, some citizens
are paying a price”.
In times of crisis, for
western nations, the normal response is “We are
Paris, NY, etc”. When it comes to Asia and China,
the measured response is: “You deserve this because
of your dirtiness, immorality, and bat-eating
communist dictatorship”; “You would rather control
your citizens than save lives”. This is often
followed up by some variant of “nuke China”. Kristof
and his ideological teammates can be isolated here,
patients zero with their null set of facts, turning
up the dials to 10 in this toxic wind tunnel of
Sinophobia and hate speech.
14. Bashing China on “Free
Speech”:
Running lapdog parallel to
Kristof, taking the baton/bone from the NY Times,
the
Guardian also says “if China valued free
speech, there would be no coronavirus”. This
is the offensive viral meme cultured and replicated
from the death Dr. Li. Of course, even cursory
reflection might lead one to consider–in the capital
of “Free Speech”–lead poisoning in Flint Michigan,
the AIDS crisis, H1N1 A pandemic, mass shootings,
not to mention Global Warming. It also bears
emphasizing that the HK rioters–and their media
backers–have a strong track record of opposing any
“Free Speech” that doesn’t agree with theirs, by
burning, beating, lynching, threatening, and doxxing
everyone who disagrees with them.
Of course, fetishizing “Free
speech” is not a panacea to all political or social
ills. Certainly in a public health crisis, it cannot
be assumed that unbridled “Free speech” is factually
correct, or even
beneficial (cf. “yelling fire in a
crowded theater”). Underlying this fetishized
concept is the liberal/anarcho-capitalist conceit
that “in the marketplace of ideas” the correct one
will naturally emerge to benefit all of society. Of
course, history has shown, time and time again, that
this is hardly the case. The “free speech” of the
“anti-vax” movement is a case in point: it increases
the chances that the US will be subject to a deadly
pandemic. Various local epidemics, as well as the US
(San Diego) H1N1 A Pandemic of 2009 with 280K dead
(150-575K dead) signal to us this potential risk.
Another point of comparison:
11,435 people died in the 1st 2 weeks of
August of 2003 in the free-speech capital of France.
This was from heatstroke, dehydration and their
sequelae–all easily preventable and predictable
deaths for a government with a commitment to public
health.
French capitalism/governance was not raked through
the coals for this, nor considered to have lost
fundamental legitimacy because of this tragedy–nor
charged with covering it up or underreporting
(although they did)–although to prevent these deaths
required no special treatments, hospitals,
protective equipment, medicine, research, or
technology, It just required, some extra water, some
common sense, and perhaps a few public shelters. And
political will and care. Can you say “politique
de deux poids, deux mesures”?
15. Amateurism Trumps
Experts.
In order to bolster their
trumped-up case, the NY Times, along with others
(the rabid anti-China newssite DemocracyNow!, the
CFR/FP) has trolled out a shadowy truck-load of
ideological scientific amateurs to bolster and
backstop their case. Of course, it’s convenient to
overlook the fact that epidemiology is a complex
science–and that predicting the course, virulence,
and lethality of an outbreak is not unlike
predicting the strength, path, and effects of a
hurricane. Trotting out amateurs from the NYTimes to
troll the epidemiologists and the WHO is like
getting amateur bloggers to attack atmospheric
scientists (for getting a detail of global warming
wrong).
15. Was the Chinese
response fast enough?
There’s a perpetual
insinuation by the NY Times and its ideological
allies that hide-bound, “authoritarian”
bureaucracies cannot respond appropriately, quickly,
or effectively to such outbreaks: “Weak,
undemocratic governance is dangerous for your
health”.
This question really begs
others: fast relative to what? These responses were
some of the fastest institutional response seen in
modern epidemiological history.
Appropriate relative to what? This was the period of
the Spring Festival, with the largest mass migration
in history (billions of trips taken) with all the
conflicting demands, uncertainties and strains that
that entailed.
Effective relative to what?
Modern responses under neoliberal order (MERS,
Ebola, H1N1) have been an endless catalog of global
catastrophes.
When the investigations are
completed–and the Chinese government is ruthlessly
investigating itself—and the history written, the
record may judge that these were the best possible
actions of an organized, conscientious government,
trying to do the best under difficult, almost
impossible circumstances. Were the responses
perfect? Most certainly not. Were there gaps and
lapsus? Absolutely, yes. Did the central and local
government work hand-in-hand perfectly? Most
certainly not. Was there discontent expressed on
Weibo and other public fora? Most certainly. But
given the extraordinary complexities and challenges
of responding to the outbreak, its timing, its
conflicting priorities, the size of the population,
its stresses, strains and demands, we can be sure
that this response will be written up in the Public
Health text books, and when the final judgement call
is made, it will be largely favorable to the Chinese
government, bloviating ideologues and racists be
damned.
*Brief Timeline of Outbreak
and Responses:
12/8 First suspected case
12/8-12/18 investigations
started by authorities of 7 cases of suspicious
pneumonia; 2 linked to seafood market
12/21 First cluster of
patients identified with “an unknown pneumonia”
(reported 1/01)
12/25 Report of medical
workers possibly infected
12/27 Dr. Zhang Jixian, the
director of respiratory and critical care medicine
at Hubei Provincial Hospital,
notifies the hospital of an unusual
cluster of viral cases; the hospital notifies the
city’s’ disease control center.
12/29 Hubei Provincial
hospital convenes and consults with a group of
experts, and then notifies the regional CDC.
12/30 An Ophthalmologist , Dr
Li Wenliang, in Wuhan, China, posts a warning about
a cluster of patients diagnosed with SARS to
colleagues. patients quarantined. (This doctor is
censured by authorities for spreading unconfirmed
rumors; This is the incident is characterized by the
western media as “suppression”; however, it’s
important to note 1) he’s not a virologist or
epidemiologist, 2) he was not treating these
patients 3) it wasn’t SARS 4) the nature of the
disease was being investigated, but was still
unknown at the time 5) most importantly, all of
the patients were quarantined).
Notice issued and public
health announcement made by Wuhan Municipal Health
Committee of an unknown viral illness.
12/31 Chinese government
informs WHO of existence of a new unknown virus;
emergency symposium held on treatment; experts
dispatched to investigate
1/1 Seafood market shut down
as potential cause of outbreak. Chinese researchers
at the CCDC publish an article on suspected
outbreak.
1/2 41 patients confirmed
with nCoV 2019
1/05 WHO advises against
travel restrictions; no human to human
transmission found at this time
1/7 Mayor’s Party meeting
(didn’t mention virus, human transmission unclear at
this time)
1/9 First casualty of
outbreak (61 yr old with co-morbid
symptoms–liver disease and stomach cancer)–death
publicly reported on 1/11 after autopsy. To note–no
one knew that the disease was fatal until this case,
nearly one month after the initial case, and
this person was already seriously sick.
1/10 First genetic
blueprint sequenced and posted of nCoV 2019
(this is a medical accomplishment)
1/12 “Surge in chest
illnesses” reported; Dr. Li Wenliang hospitalized.
1/13-1/15 Japan and Thailiand
confirm first infections outside of China (based on
publicly released blueprint)–transparency assisted
identification
1/14 first suspected human
to human transmission (wife of 1st casualty).
This is the first time that it’s suspected that
human transmission is involved.
1/15 WHO indicates no
sustained human to human transmission
1/18 Community “potluck” in
Baibuting, Wuhan with 40,000 attendees (severely
criticized afterwards, however human-human
transmission was still unclear at this point); 312
cases
1/20 Premier Li Keqiang urges
decisive and effective actions
1/22 People in Wuhan told to
wear masks
1/23 Quarantine
announced of Wuhan; all outbound traffic frozen,
WHO states this is not Public
Health Emergency of Global concern
1/24 13 Hubei cities
quarantined; 7 provinces declare public emergency;
26 dead, 830 infected
Lancet article published.
1/25 10 provinces declare
public emergency; NY Events cancelled around China;
5 other cities quarantined in Hubei; 56M affected;
Xi declares “grave situation”.
1/26 All wildlife trade banned; 56 dead 2000 cases
1/27 106 dead 4515 cases
1/30 WHO declares Global
Emergency (170 dead, 7,711 cases)
2/01 1st death outside of
China (Chinese man in Philippines); 304 dead,
14280 cases
2/02 Huoshenshan hospital,
dedicated to treatment of nCov 2019 opened; new mask
factory commences production in Beijing
2/03 361 dead, 17,205 cases
(however infection rates outside of Wuhan are
flattening or diminishing)
2/04 2nd
death outside of China (Chinese man from Wuhan
in Hong Kong). 427 dead, 20,000+infected.
2/07 Dr. Li Wenliang dies
from 2019 nCoV.
2/10 910 dead,
40,000+infected.
Do you agree or
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==See Also==