
Early in the coronavirus pandemic, we were told that the virus didn’t come from a lab. This information was based on these two articles:
- Statement in support of the scientists, public health professionals, and medical professionals of China combatting COVID-19, published February 19, 2020
- The proximal origin of SARS-CoV-2, published March 17, 2020
Every time Tony Fauci, the mainstream media or any scientist made a statement about COVID-19 being from natural origin, they were referring to these two articles. Every brave scientist who spoke up about the possibility of a lab-origin was called a “Conspiracy Theorist” based on these two studies alone. The science was “settled” because of these two articles, we were told.
The articles definitely looked official, like prominent scientists wrote them. The science quoted in the articles looked fishy, though. Other scientists were asking how the certainty of a natural origin was obtained: how did anyone know for certain the virus wasn’t from a laboratory, when we were so early in the pandemic?
The Lancet Article: Who Wrote and Signed Off on it?
The Lancet article had a ghost-writer! The writer was a man named Peter Daszak. (Peter Dazak, British bio-weapons expert, getting millions of dollars from the US military and from Tony Fauci)
Francis Collins was blogging about these articles as if they were truth. Tony Fauci was quoting these articles.
Tom Cotton, Meryl Nass and others saw through it.
There was also a letter from Kristian Anderson to Francis Collins, Jeremy Farrar and Tony Fauci thanking them for writing it.
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