Collapse of the fake consensus on Covid-19 origins

Reposted from Dr. Judith Curry’s Climate Etc.

Posted on May 23, 2021 by curryja 

by Judith Curry

The concerning saga of the creation, enforcement and collapse of a ‘consensus’ on Covid-19 origins.

The Covid-19 virus first appeared in Wuhan, China, where there is a laboratory that conducts research on bat coronaviruses. However from the beginning, the possibility that this virus accidentally escaped from the lab was dismissed quite forcefully by prominent virologists.

The ‘consensus’ that Covid-19 had an entirely natural origin was established by two op-eds in early 2020 – The Lancet in February and Nature Medicine in March. The Lancet op-ed stated, “We stand together to strongly condemn conspiracy theories suggesting that Covid-19 does not have a natural origin.”

In May 2021, science reporter Nicholas Wade published a lengthy article in the Bulletin of Atomic Scientists stating that the Lancet letter had been organized and drafted by Peter Daszak, president of the EcoHealth Alliance of New York. Daszak’s organization funded coronavirus research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. If the Covid-19 virus had escaped from research that he funded, Daszak would be potentially culpable.  Daszak had corralled other scientists with similar professional interests into making a declaration to the effect that anyone who mentions the obvious possibility that the pandemic might have a connection to the research in the Wuhan Lab could only be doing so with bad intentions.

The enormous gap between the actual state of knowledge in early 2020 and the confidence displayed in the two op-eds should have been obvious to anyone in the field of virology, or for that matter anyone with critical faculties. There were scientists from adjacent fields who said as much.

However, the pronouncements in these op-eds effectively shut down inquiry. The pre-emptive declaration of scientific consensus was highly successful in garnering media enforcement of public opinion.  The so-called ‘fact checkers’ of PolitiFact used these op-eds to shut down any discussion of the lab leak hypothesis. Articles in the mainstream press repeatedly stated that a consensus of experts had ruled lab escape out of the question or extremely unlikely. 

Invocation of ‘conspiracy theory’ has become a reflex for arresting criticism. Analysis by Matthew Crawford shows how the political environment caused the magic words ‘conspiracy theory’ to trigger a wider epistemic immune reaction in high-prestige opinion.  Crawford provides the following political frame for these events.  Since Donald Trump publicly floated the idea that Covid-19 may have had its origin in a Chinese lab, it became a point of conviction for all those who believe in science that such a hypothesis could only be a conspiracy theory, probably rooted in ‘Sinophobia’.  The ‘conspiracy theory’ of the lab leak hypothesis has been juxtaposed with reporting on anti-Asian hate crimes, thereby subsuming an urgent scientific question to a Trump-era morality play.

Publication of Nicholas Wade’s story on May 2 triggered a cascade of defections.  Crawford describes the defections as “not simply from a consensus that no longer holds, but from a fake consensus that is no longer enforceable.”  On 14 May, 18 scientists signed a letter in the journal Science with the title “Investigate the origins of COVID-19”.  In an interview with the New York Times, an organizer of the letter stated, “Anybody who’s making statements with a high level of certainty about this is just outstripping what’s possible to do with the available evidence.”

Politifact has just withdrawn its Wuhan-Lab theory ‘fact check.’ [link]

What is concerning about this episode is not so much that a consensus has been overturned, but that a fake consensus was so easily enforced for year.  This occurred during a key period when understanding the origins of the virus had implications for how it could best be fought.  Scientists who understood that there was a great deal of uncertainty surrounding the origins of the virus did not speak up.  Probity came from knowledgeable individuals that were outside of the field of virology.

Matthew Crawford states, ” Regardless of how the question of the virus’s origins is ultimately decided, we need to understand how the political drama surrounding the science played out if we are to learn anything from this pandemic and reduce the likelihood of future ones.”

Research cartels and consensus enforcement

Crawford argues that the scientists who were signatories to the two letters may have been acting as a classic research cartel.

In 2004, Henry Bauer formulated the idea of research cartels and knowledge monopolies, in context of the institutionalization of science that becomes subordinate to corporate or government values.

A key element of knowledge monopolies and research cartels is stifling of skepticism, premature canonization of preferred hypotheses and consensus enforcement, in the interests of financial or political objectives.  With the help of uncritical mass media, this effectively results in near censorship of minority views. Since corporate and government scientific organizations also control the funding of research, by denying funds for unorthodox work they function as research cartels as well as knowledge monopolies.  

Wade notes that in today’s universities, challenging the consensus can be very costly. Careers can be destroyed for stepping out of line. Any virologist who challenges the community’s declared view risks having his next grant application turned down by the panel of fellow virologists that advises the government grant distribution agency.

The IPCC and the ‘climate-industrial-government complex’ is a clear example of a knowledge monopoly and research cartel.  

However, I don’t think that the fake consensus surrounding the Covid-19 origins reflects a research cartel.  What I see is a group of scientists appealing to their own authority in protecting their personal interests.  The question is why The Lancet and Nature Medicine published these op-eds.  It is noted that Daszak had an obvious conflict of interest re the op-ed, but this conflict was not stated.  Apparently there are no adverse consequences for not accurately stating your conflicts of interest in journal publications.

Daszak et al. presumably have some influence over which research gets funded, and this may have prevented other virologists with less influence from speaking out.  However, the fact that these op-eds successfully defined a ‘consensus’ for a year has more to do with Trump derangement syndrome and the desire not to appear Sinophobic. The media is arguably the most culpable for a complete absence of vigorously investigative science journalism, prior to Wade’s article.  Note that Wade’s article was published in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, and as far as I can tell has not been picked up by major media outlets.

What does all this mean for institutionalized climate science?  Well the IPCC, along with supporting governments and industries, is much more entrenched as a knowledge monopoly and research cartel.  But the Covid origins example illuminates the social, political and careerist motivations that are in play in attempts to prematurely canonize and enforce a scientific consensus. 

In closing, a recent essay by Mike Hulme is insightful.

<begin quote>

Climategate was a controversy because it appeared that climate scientists were undermining the idea of a ‘well-ordered science’, or what Naomi Oreskes has written about as ‘the conditions necessary to reach a fair and open consensus’. We can discuss the extent to which this ‘appearance’ was real or manufactured, but my point is this: Climategate became a crisis because so much was being staked – by both ends of the political spectrum – on science providing the direction and justification for political action (or inaction).  It was a crisis because of the undermining of the probity of the science upon which, it was believed or at least claimed, all sensible climate policy depended.  Most notably, this included the prominent environmental commentator George Monbiot.

Climate skepticism has broader roots than this.  Mistrust in science is always bound up with other things – politics, culture, ethics, the law.  Skepticism often arises from observing how science and expert judgement is being mobilized in debates that are essential political – in other words, climate sceptics are suspicious about how the different interests and values of public actors concerning climate change are being resolved. 

Skepticism therefore points to the problem of legitimation; it is the problem of how science – how experts – relate, or are perceived to relate, to democracy.  The problem is one of when and how to “open up” public debate and when and how to “close it down”, to use Andy Stirling’s metaphor.  And this requires us to recognize that how one ‘closes down’ depends on political culture: Russia, China, USA and Germany all do it very differently.

To stand in here, I use the case of climate scientist Michael Mann and his militarist vocabulary.  The German theorist Carl von Clausewitz characterized war as “an act of violence intended to compel our opponent to fulfil our will.”  This is not a good way to think about climate politics in a democracy.  In wars there are winners and losers.  Sides are taken and the solution is conquering and defeating the enemy. 

As John Besley at Michigan State University asks, “Do we want people to see scientists as angry, embattled, frustrated people … or rather people who are doing [their] best to solve problems to make the world better?”  The danger with the combative climate militancy espoused by Mann is that it ends up being a destructive form of advocacy.

<end quote>

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TRM
May 24, 2021 9:43 am

And don’t forget Canada’s role in this debacle! Shipping this stuff to Wuhan OUTSIDE THE PROPER CHANNELS.
That whole facility in Manitoba is a joke. No background checks for the people they hire from China? WTF?
So many questions and so little sodium pentothal …

Martin
May 24, 2021 9:45 am

I live in Birmingham UK where the last outbreak of Smallpox occurred in 1978, via a lab escape, so it was my first thought that Covid was due to something similar. My late father was a biologist at Birmingham University, and knew some of those working with smallpox at the medical school laboratories. The official version of events – that the virus escaped through the ventilation system – has one very major flaw – that is the smallpox virus held in Birmingham had been radioactively tagged for easier traceability, but there was no sign of the radioactive tagging in the ventilation system. So, despite strict protocols being in place somehow the virus managed to escape from the labs into the offices above, causing the deaths of a young photographer, Janet Parker and her father, and the suicide of the departmental head, Professor Henry Bedson who took personal responsibility for the escape. Fortunately the young lady’s illness was identified before the infection spread beyond her own family – which is probably why the story isn’t more widely known.

May 24, 2021 9:46 am

This constant clamoring about “consensus” is destroying science.

William Naigle
May 24, 2021 9:46 am

Thank you, Judith, your intellect is a national treasure!

Another national treasure is Eisenhower’s farewell address and the profound wisdom he demonstrated in his advice for the future. I encourage everyone to read his short address who has not already done so.

Just substitute ‘scientists’ for ‘scholars’ and ‘global/corporate’ for Federal to update to the 21st century environment.

Transcript of President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s Farewell Address (1961)

Everyone knows this quote:

“In the councils of government, we must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence, whether sought or unsought, by the military-industrial complex. The potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist”.

Who is familiar with this warning?:

The prospect of domination of the nation’s scholars by Federal employment, project allocations, and the power of money is ever present and is gravely to be regarded.
Yet, in holding scientific research and discovery in respect, as we should, we must also be alert to the equal and opposite danger that public policy could itself become the captive of a scientific-technological elite”.

Robert of Texas
May 24, 2021 10:02 am

As long as elites can make and keep profits by lying or covering up information, they will continue to do so.

It is sad that so many so-called “scientists” have been corrupted by money – but when you look at the colleges that produce these people it becomes more clear – integrity is a concept of the obsolete past.

As for the origins of Covid-19? We may never know…but there are sure a lot of coincidences to explain away and THAT makes me suspicious (not a believer, just not ready to dismiss)

Robert of Texas
Reply to  Robert of Texas
May 24, 2021 6:22 pm

Once AGAIN, this site revealed the cover-up before any mainstream media had a clue…(Other than FOX News maybe). I wish these liberals with their heads stuck permanently in the sand would wake up to reality…we don’t KNOW the virus came from a lab be we DO KNOW there was a massive attempt to prevent any investigation of the possibility. Thank you CNN, MSNBC, and CBS for helping to try and cover this up – it makes you look like the idiots you really are.

markl
May 24, 2021 10:02 am

Science and politics. What a disastrous combination.

Doug Huffman
Reply to  markl
May 24, 2021 1:30 pm

Learn what is, and what is not, science. If it ain’t falsifiable then it ain’t science. Falsifiability is the demarcation boundary between science and nonsense politics.

First Karl Popper wrote The Logic of Scientific Discovery, then he wrote The Open Society and Its Enemies putting the lie to Marxism.

MarkW
May 24, 2021 10:09 am

Once Trump speculated on the possibility of the virus not being natural in origin, it became accepted wisdom in the scientific community that any comments in that direction would benefit Trump, and that could not be tolerated, under any circumstances.

Mr. Lee
Reply to  MarkW
May 24, 2021 11:29 am

I think this is the correct answer. Well said.

RobR
May 24, 2021 10:31 am

Thank you CTM for reposting this article. Each of us has a duty to press for a full, open and transparent investigation into the origins of the Wuhan virus.

Have a listen to Peter Daszak one-week before news of the virus broke.

https://www.taiwannews.com.tw/en/news/4104828

Is it any wonder that Daszak was a member of a team hand-picked by the CCP to lead a white washing investigation into the origins of the virus.. A report that was so obviously flawed that the WHO Secretary General was forced to issue what amounts to a retraction of the veracity of the findings.

CYA!

TRM
May 24, 2021 11:00 am

Do check out Dr Fleming and his work (https://www.flemingmethod.com/). He has a 2 1/2 hour “Masterclass” video going over everything and names the people involved and shows videos of them bragging/confessing to this incident.

He also shows the video of the electron microscope “focusing” in on the virus (2’13” mark).

He rightly wants war crime trials for a lot of people both Chinese and American.

Gerald Machnee
May 24, 2021 11:11 am

Maybe this is still on you tube:
Virus not natural
This one describes why the virus is not “natural”

Here is one on how they played with the structure and what the media
should be asking:


May 24, 2021 11:26 am

10,000 cities on planet earth and COVID just happens to pop up out of nowhere in the city conducting research on virus’s like this.
Odds are at least 10,000 to 1 against this being random based on just that fact.

WR2
May 24, 2021 11:42 am

Dems and their buddies in the MSM and various NGOs dismissed the obvious origins of the virus for one reason, and one reason only: because admitting that China was at fault would mean they couldn’t blame Trump.

n.n
Reply to  WR2
May 24, 2021 12:14 pm

And they thought that Wall Street was bad. Politics is a leverage game.

Tom Abbott
Reply to  WR2
May 25, 2021 8:24 am

“because admitting that China was at fault would mean they couldn’t blame Trump.”

It would also mean they would have to confront the Chicoms. They don’t want to confront the Chicoms.

Jim
May 24, 2021 12:15 pm

The only way this will be investigated properly is if it can be surmised that the NIH sponsored the gain-of-function research during the Trump Administration such that the virus can be spun as “the Trump virus.” Then you will see all manner of very expensive and thorough inquiry. This will be especially true if the Democrats can sell the line that Fauci and the CCP were unaware of this research. Then, the CCP might cooperate and open the lab’s records.

John Tillman
Reply to  Jim
May 24, 2021 4:04 pm

Trump ended the funding in 2018.

Scarface
May 24, 2021 12:42 pm

The organizations with an agenda are paying those who make up the desired story. The media are controlled by the same organizations and they make sure that the media keep pushing their story. Sad state of affairs.

Komerade Cube
May 24, 2021 12:48 pm

>>>the fact that these op-eds successfully defined a ‘consensus’ for a year has more to do with Trump derangement syndrome and the desire not to appear Sinophobic. The media is arguably the most culpable for a complete absence of vigorously investigative science journalism<<<

the Chinese OWN the media, and Griff, and stifle any anti Chinese investigation.

fretslider
May 24, 2021 1:03 pm

The Lancet is a political rag now.

The farce surrounding its hasty HCQ retraction was based on its loathing for Donald Trump, not good science.

mikebartnz
May 24, 2021 1:56 pm

As the CCP stopped all internal flights from Wuhan but not external ones I am going to stick to my own conspiracy theory.

RobR
May 24, 2021 3:08 pm

And, what should we call the legions people who can’t accept the vast corpus of information pointing to genetic engineering and a laboratory leak? Science Deniers?

Joel Snider
Reply to  RobR
May 25, 2021 6:21 pm

Propaganda deniers.
It’s amazing they can’t see something shoveled in truckloads right in their faces.

stablesort
May 24, 2021 3:16 pm

<i>”Wade notes that in today’s universities, challenging the consensus can be very costly. Careers can be destroyed for stepping out of line. Any virologist who challenges the community’s declared view risks having his next grant application turned down by the panel of fellow virologists that advises the government grant distribution agency.”</i>

Academia leads the advancement of science…

May 24, 2021 4:27 pm

Why on WUWT. Already covered 17 other wire, blogs etc. (my count) Not about climate change. TMI.

John Tillman
Reply to  Danley Wolfe
May 25, 2021 4:20 pm

A. This is a science site, not limited to “climate change”.

B. The stifling of skepticism against a bogus consensus in one vital area of allegedly science-based public policy is most relevant to the same regarding “climate change”.

John
May 24, 2021 5:02 pm

add Gates and Fauci and you have a full house to support the manatra

May 24, 2021 10:01 pm

Judith Curry is a good writer and communicator. This article, however, contains a number of deductions from unprovable premises. I expect to see the terms “isolation” and “Koch’s postulate” at least once, in an article purporting to deal with fake concensus and covidiocy.
Also, I think the lady misses the point of renewed interest in the Wuhan myth; it is merely a soap opera plot twist, to keep the housewives coming back for more of the same… Another opportunity for the Press to get in some low punches on their China-China-China incantations.
All in all, not exactly news.

RobR
Reply to  paranoid goy
May 25, 2021 5:55 am

You are entitled to your opinion. In my view, Curry’s remarks are measured and accurate.

The preponderance of evidence pointing to a lab leak can no longer be ignored by the irrational Trump-hating Left. This story will go mainstream and it will be interesting to see how those duped by CCP spin the story in their favor.

Bats and Pangolins—Oh My!

rwisrael
May 24, 2021 10:04 pm

Just by coincidence , the false narrative played directly into an anti-Trump meme which was heavily published during the campaign . Just a coincidence.

Joel Snider
Reply to  rwisrael
May 25, 2021 6:19 pm

Imagine.

May 25, 2021 4:55 am

The signatories of the Peter Daszak-instigated letter to the Lancet claimed to have no conflicting interests. Which seems to me to be stretching credibility for at least one of them.

rah
May 25, 2021 5:58 am

It should be obvious to even the dimmest bulb now that Fauci is political and his advice was not always based on science. But I think I smell politics on even larger scale than that in play. Everyone on the left has flip flopped on this issue all at once. Even the Washington Post and Politifact have totally flip flopped on this issue Why? They don’t admit they’re wrong ever no matter what the truth is or how obvious it is. But now, all of a sudden and in concert everyone on the left has obviously done a 180 on this particular issue? Why? Nobody I read has provided any theory why they are doing this, but they don’t do something like this unless it suits their agenda down the road. So I think something is up! 

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