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AN inmate who was mistakenly released over coronavirus fears and killed someone just one day later had an arrest history of 35 charges, cops admit. Joseph Edwards Williams, 26, was let out of jail …
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Economic freedom and growth go hand in hand and have inarguably positive benefits to the poorest citizens
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The more effective the efforts have been, the more opposed the critics are to them.
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Western democracies, especially the United States, just heaved a huge sigh of relief after getting word that United Kingdom PM Boris Johnson is dropping the controversial Chinese tech company, Huawei, as the nation's provider of 5G infrastructure. Although Johnson was in support of the Chinese te...
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If you weren't convinced that Democrats are crazy, insane and
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Last fall, as the House impeachment wave was building, I asked a gathering of 10 friends what they thought of President Trump’s prospects. Only six were Trump voters in 2016, but the group was unan…
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New York City Mayor Bill De Blasio is encouraging NYC residents to take photos of and report other people for violating social distancing guidelines.
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The Chinese Communist Party hasn't let scientists from around the world into the Wuhan Institute of Virology, which is ...
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“Let us silence the cries of death!” So urged a passionate Pope Francis in his Easter Vigil homily to an eerily empty St. Peter’s Basilica, stirred by
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"...the bottom line is, this disease has been unleashed on the rest of the world, and it was knowingly done so. And that’s why I’m so visibly upset about this...plenty of things the government can do here to make China pay for its actions."
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The media and the political class seem eager to keep normal life shut down for as long as possible. We must err, they tell us solemnly, on the side of “protec
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Washington When historians look back at America’s handling of the coronavirus outbreak, they likely will cite Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer as the best ex
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Tucker Carlson said in his monologue Friday night that China is waging a coronavirus distraction campaign and it is now a dilemma for Democrats to blame America or China.
TUCKER CARLSON, FOX NEWS: Good evening and welcome to Tucker Carlson Tonight. We brought you fresh reporting last night about the origins of the deadly coronavirus pandemic. Tonight, we have more. We spent much of the day speaking to highly informed officials in the U.S. government, as well as seasoned specialists on China. Here’s the picture that’s emerging:
First, many in the intelligence world with experience in China suspected right away that the story the Chinese government was telling about this virus was almost certainly a lie. The first indication of that was the torrent of obvious nonsense coming from official sources in Beijing. Initially, Chinese officials claimed the virus had jumped from an obscure, scaly animal called a pangolin, which was sold in the Wuhan wet market. That explanation didn’t make sense. Wet markets are seafood markets. Pangolins are mammals. So for that matter are bats. In the face of skepticism, the Chinese then blamed Italian armed forces personnel, who’d been near Wuhan a few months before, for the Military World Games, an international sporting event. The Italians brought the virus, the Chinese said. When the Italian government complained, the Chinese shifted blame to the United States. The American military, and western tourists, infected Wuhan, they claimed.
Meanwhile, behind the scenes, Chinese officials worked frantically to destroy relevant evidence. Doctors and journalists in Wuhan who raised questions about the virus disappeared. Some may have been killed. At one point in January, scientists in Shanghai succeeded in sequencing DNA from the virus. The information they gathered would have been crucial to researchers around the world, who were trying to understand the virus and develop vaccines against it. But the Chinese government ordered the viral samples destroyed, and the lab notes shredded. The scientists themselves were disciplined for daring to conduct the research, and their lab was shut down. The Chinese government then quarantined the city of Wuhan. Millions fled. But apparently, relatively few of them were allowed to travel to Beijing, the Chinese capital. Instead they flew to western cities around the world.
To most in this country, reactions like this seem grotesque — unimaginable. But to Mandarin speakers who follow China carefully, they were highly familiar. The first reflex of the Chinese government is always to lie, in order to hide failure and avoid embarrassment. In 2003, the Chinese government lied about the initial outbreak of SARS. In July of 2011, two passenger trains traveling in opposite directions smashed into each other at high speed outside the Chinese city of Wenjo. The trains collided on a railroad bridge. Four cars derailed and tumbled to the ground below. Within hours, authorities arrived with backhoes. They pushed the passenger cars into a pit and began covering them with dirt. By some accounts, there were still survivors inside at the time. In their initial statements, Chinese officials claimed that a lightning strike had caused the crash. They later conceded under pressure that sloppiness and shoddy construction were to blame. Chinese media, meanwhile, were ordered ignore the crash entirely — except, quote, for “positive news or that issued by the authorities.”
This was the template for China’s official response to the Wuhan Coronavirus. From the early days of the outbreak, Chinese diplomats around the world insisted that there was no chance whatsoever that the virus had come from a lab. They sometimes insisted this even when no one had asked them, as if they were reading from a script. It soon became obvious what was going on. English-language academic journals have raised questions for years about the safety standards in the Wuhan bioresearch lab. An article in Nature from 2017 noted that quote, “some scientists outside China worry about pathogens escaping” from the facility. Classified State Department cables a year later voiced the same concerns. Chinese scientists themselves publicly discussed working with extremely dangerous pathogens in Wuhan. As of today, says someone in a position to know, there is quote, “almost unanimous” agreement in American intelligence-gathering agencies that the virus currently destroying much of the world originally emerged from a lab in Wuhan.
Government officials in this country have believed that for some time. They’ve been unable to interest our media in writing about it. In recent weeks, analysts from the CIA, NSA and others have briefed staff at the New York Times about the origins of this virus. The newspaper has still not reported their findings. At the same time, and this may be directly related, China has been waging an unremitting propaganda war on the subject. Chinese officials have tried to squelch all conversations about who’s responsible for this pandemic by inflaming the political sensitivities and race guilt of American elites. Watch this clip from early last month, as the spokesman for the Chinese foreign ministry attempts to dictate how American press outlets describe the virus:
Zhao Lijian, spokesman for the Chinese Foreign Ministry: Certain media say this coronavirus is a “China Virus”. This is extremely irresponsible and we firmly oppose that.
Among the many ironies in that demand: even now, the disease is widely referred to in China as, “the Wuhan Virus.” Our news outlets, meanwhile, almost always call it COVID-19. That term does not translate to Chinese. COVID-19 is the name devised by the World Health Organization back in January, under influence from Chinese leaders anxious to deflect responsibility for it.
Once they succeeded in removing any hint of origin from the name of the virus, the Chinese government launched a campaign to tar anyone who mentioned Wuhan as a dangerous racist. Quote: “Racism is not the right tool to cover your own incompetence,” lectured Chinese state media when President Trump referred to the Wuhan Virus. American media parroted that line almost precisely, as no doubt the Chinese expected they would:
JIM ACOSTA, CNN CORRESPONDENT: The President referred to the coronavirus as a "foreign virus." And I think it's going to smack -- it's going to come across to a lot of Americans as smacking of xenophobia.
JOHN HEILEMAN, MSNBC CONTRIBUTOR: Xenophobic wartime Trump. Where he thinks the only path now is to basically declare the virus public enemy number one, paint it in somewhat racist terms
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KARINE JEAN PIERRE, MSNBC CONTRIBUTOR: The xenophobia and racism in the outbreak is such a common thing... It is incredibly dangerous. It is problematic, and it is scary. I just want to call that out.
ABC reporter Cecilia Vega: Why do you keep calling this the Chinese virus... Why do you keep using this? A lot of people think it’s racist.
TRUMP: It’s not racist at all. No, not at all. It comes from China, that’s why.
Media outlets are relatively easy to corrupt, given the low level of sophistication of the people who work there. The Chinese government had bolder aims. The Chinese instructed their employees and assets in the United States to exert influence on elected officials. For example, according to an informed U.S. government official, quote: “Beijing has instructed diplomats in their consulate in San Francisco to work with American state and local officials, and members of Congress, to push back against anyone who gets too far out on blaming China for this.” Apparently, it has worked. Here’s Connecticut Senator Chris Murphy on CNN earlier this week:
SEN. MURPHY: The reason that we’re in the crisis that we are today is not because of anything that China did. It’s not because of anything the WHO did. It’s because of what this president did.
Other members of Congress voiced similar views, often in eerily similar language. Barbara Lee of California, long considered a strongly pro-China voice, tweeted this to President Trump, quote: “Diseases don’t have nationalities. China isn’t to blame for you fumbling this crisis.” On March 12, congresswoman Judy Chu of Los Angeles wrote this. Quote: “China didn't ‘unleash' anything. A virus spread, as viruses do. Blaming China and insisting on calling this the ‘wuhan’ virus, even though every medical expert said not to, is putting people's lives in danger. Stop politicizing this and put people first!”
Just the week before Chu wrote that, on March 6, a man called Zhang Ping, who runs the Chinese consulate in Los Angeles, met with LA mayor Eric Garcetti about the American response to coronavirus. He tweeted about it that day. Quote: “Look forward to working closely with the city of Los Angeles to address this common public health challenge and develop closer ties between our cities and peoples.” We have no idea what Ping and Garcetti talked about in that meeting. It would be interesting to know. We reached out today to a number of California lawmakers with a history of closeness to China, including senior senator Diane Feinstein, to see if they’ve spoken to Chinese officials recently. None of them responded to our calls.
And it’s not just happening in California. According to a story in National Review, the head of the state senate in Wisconsin recently received multiple emails from the wife of the Chinese Consulate-General in Chicago. She asked him to propose a resolution praising China for its handling of the Wuhan coronavirus outbreak.
The entire story of how the government of China has successfully shaped our understanding of the Wuhan virus, as well as our response to it, maybe take years to tell. It may never be fully told at all, though we promise to do our best on this show. But it’s clear how China sees this pandemic: Not simply, or even primarily, as a public health disaster in which thousands are dying. But as part of a larger geopolitical struggle for control of the world. Most Americans don’t perceive that, or understand the profound gravity of the stakes involved. How could they? Our leaders have lied to us about it for years.
#210040
It’s time for these international institutions to pay heed to American interests.
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“Everyone is required to stay home, except to get food, care for a relative or friend, get necessary health care or go to an essential job,”
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Malfeasance??? The U.S. is conducting a thorough investigation into the origins of the coronavirus and intelligence findings it began in a Wuhan, China virology lab before being spread across Wuhan…
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Subscribe to the Real Time YouTube: http://itsh.bo/10r5A1B In his editorial New Rule, Bill calls on the news media to calm down and give a proper perspective...
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The answer is complicated.
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In her first interview on "Fox News Sunday" since 2017, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., spoke to anchor Chris Wallace about the coronavirus pandemic and its effect on Americans.
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Suppose, for the sake of argument, that Chinese researchers did release the coronavirus into the populace, spawning effects we have all come to know personally and intimately. And let’s assume it was an inadvertent release. That is a safe assumption. What should Trump do about it?
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A key coronavirus model used by the White House has once again downgraded its estimate of total U.S. deaths. The University of Washington’s Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) dropped the number of projected total deaths by August from 68,841 (with an estimate range of 30,188 to 175,965) to just more than 60,308 (with […]
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President Donald Trump on Saturday challenged China and Iran's coronavirus mortality rates during the White House press briefing.
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NYC Mayor has irritated locals by urging them to snitch on one another's social distancing violations by texting photos of these violations to him.