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Dec 11 8 tweets 3 min read
Kash Patel, ex-advisor to the US Director of National Intelligence, and Trump’s pick for FBI, has some explosive comments on COVID origins.

He claimed that the ex-CIA Director Gina Haspel allegedly paid CIA agents to mislead on COVID origins.

This is a serious allegation. CIA stands out as the only US intelligence agency that has examined EcoHealth Alliance yet failed to issue any assessment on COVID’s origin.
Dec 5 6 tweets 2 min read
Whoa. "CONFIDENTIAL document: Yunnan mineshaft SARS.docx"

"There's lot of there that could be explosive."

This email is dated roughly 10 days after I discovered the Yunnan mineshaft thesis. Image Cc: @rowanjacobsen
Nov 13 8 tweets 3 min read
Just came across something striking: Wuchun Cao, a serving Colonel in the Chinese PLA, was a key presenter in the China Virome Project (part of the Global Virome Project).

This is really interesting. 🧵 Image If you've been following this story, the 'China Virome Project (CVP)' might ring a bell. For those who haven’t, here’s some background from @mattwridley and me:
unherd.com/2022/04/did-vi…
Jun 26 10 tweets 6 min read
🚨We obtained Hu Bingjie's 2018 WIV thesis, titled 'Evolutionary Mechanism of Adaptation of Bat SARS-like Coronaviruses to Host Receptor Molecules'

Key Findings: WIV is holding back 5 bat ACE2 sequences from Yunnan — 3 likely from Mojiang and 2 from Chuxiong.
Image Interestingly, all the three unpublished ACE2 sequences (likely from Mojiang) are from R. pusillus.

According to EHA's R01 renewal, R. pusillus (Rpu) was among the most sampled species of bats. Yet, WIV has published next to nothing on Rpu's so far.
ecohealthalliance.org/wp-content/upl…
Image
Jun 13 10 tweets 4 min read
1/ Just musing here, but when the Mojiang miners died clearing bat droppings, it stands to reason that WIV would have left no stone unturned to investigate the cause, especially after they made advancements in NGS, genetically engineered cell lines and reverse genetics in 2017-18 2/ Li Xu, 2013: “the analysis of these 6 cases of unknown pneumonia..may be considered as follows: caused by "SARS-like CoV"

Wang, 2014: “it is likely that the 6 miners were infected with the pathogen carried by bats”

Canping, 2016: “4 people carried SARS virus IgG antibodies”
May 24 7 tweets 2 min read
Theory: In 2017, US lifted the #GoF moratorium. Subsequently, EcoHealth, through their DEFUSE proposal provided the WIV and parts of Chinese military with the necessary action plans and work protocols to create enhanced viruses. One of these enhanced viruses escaped the Wuhan lab I'm not implying anything insidious here. My proposition is: WIV conducted the DEFUSE work using their own funding, with the involvement of Chinese military.

Did NIH fund this research? No.
Did NIH funding support the research? Likely, yes.
Did NIH know about it at the time? Idk
May 21 41 tweets 15 min read
🧵Thread on a project undertaken by the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV) in collaboration with Chinese military researchers and other institutes. You've probably never read it before, in detail.

This thread requires patience and time, from those who are really interested. So, the ‘major project’ as it was called, was launched in 2012, and funded by China’s state-run NSFC.

It was named: ‘’Discovery of animal-derived pathogens and their pathogenicity to humans” (Grant no. 81290340). archive.is/9c4Z8
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Jun 20, 2023 9 tweets 3 min read
WSJ has confirmed the names of the sick Wuhan researchers. This is perhaps the most important additional clue that has come to light. This also fits with all the other insights we have.

I’ll just try to put some perspective. Ben Hu was part of the original DEFUSE proposal, and they planned to incorporate furin cleavage sites into SARS-like coronaviruses.

I think everyone knows this by now.
Jun 19, 2023 27 tweets 7 min read
So I’ve been away for a while and probably for the first time, I think I’m behind the curve in the #OriginsofCOVID debate.

Some recent happenings led me back. Before I venture onto that, here’s a lil rundown, a repeat of sorts, of what I have been carrying with me all this time. It’s late 2019 and hospitals in Wuhan were overflowing with patients having SARS-like symptoms. Strict measures were put in place to restrict the flow of information.

In early 2020, news started trickling out of China - and I distinctly remember watching it with horror.
Apr 17, 2022 5 tweets 3 min read
One of the deeply under appreciated aspects of #OriginofCovid is that, according to EcoHealth docs, in 2018, WIV had over 180 viral strains that could bridge the gap between SARS2 and RaTG13/BANAL. Over 125 viral strains in the spike range of SARS2 (and could evade mAb/vaccines). ImageImage And thousands of samples from where the nearest relatives were found.

Add to this, the extensive US and Chinese state-funded projects in the 2018-19 timeframe, with the same kind of work (with live viruses in BSL-2 & -3) that could’ve led to SARS2.
ImageImageImageImage
Apr 9, 2022 8 tweets 3 min read
So a number of other people have been saying the same thing—that they learnt of the Wuhan outbreak in early/mid-December 2019. See some examples below. JP Prasad, who runs Alberta's supply procurement system "heard disturbing news about a 'strange flu' in Wuhan, in early December", and began stocking up on masks and equipments.
edmontonjournal.com/opinion/column…
Mar 18, 2022 16 tweets 4 min read
#OriginOfCovid: Summary of what is known thus far..

- The precursor of SARS2 likely originated in bats in Yunnan/SE Asia.
- There is a direct and documented pathway from the regions where bats harbour these viruses to Wuhan, via WIV. Other ways of getting to Wuhan are possible. - Wuhan Institute of Virology was the closest place where closely related viruses existed.
- We don’t know where the first cases occurred but it was first identified at the Huanan market after it came to the attention of the doctors in Wuhan in late December 2019.
Mar 11, 2022 9 tweets 3 min read
Daszak examines his own coronavirus research in Wuhan, and issues a clean bill of health for himself. You’ll just have to read it…
theintercept.com/2022/03/11/cov… Daszak: humanized mice experiments weren't conducted by us.

So EcoHealth helped WIV import ans successfully breed humanized mice in 2018 and we are supposed to believe that they didn’t do that work although it was already funded by NIH? ImageImage
Mar 10, 2022 36 tweets 8 min read
A key question about COVID's origin has been: how it got to Wuhan? At this stage, nobody knows for sure, but let's explore the two competing scenarios:

1) SARS2 was brought to the Wuhan market.
2) SARS2 was brought to the Wuhan lab.

This is important, so follow me... /🧵 Scenario #1: SARS2 was brought to the Wuhan market

Assuming this to be true, then there were two separate spillovers. First, it spilled over from bats to an intermediate host. Next, it spilled over from the intermediate host to humans.
Feb 27, 2022 20 tweets 5 min read
Building on their previous papers, authors here present a new statistical analysis — as bulletproof science.

The data is good and layered, but the conclusions are based on indirect and questionable arguments. It is unpersuasive to me. Let me explain the reasons I say this. 🧵 The authors’ basic argument is: most of the (known) cases from Dec clustered around the market. There were raccoon dogs at the market (western section). There were +ve environment samples in that section. Therefore the virus jumped at the market. I don’t fundamentally buy that.
Feb 25, 2022 5 tweets 2 min read
I still find it so strange that certain scientists knew about plans to insert furin cleavage sites into SARS-like viruses, but they didn't bother to disclose their grant proposal. I still find it very odd how almost no one told us that bat samples from SE Asia, including Laos, were being sent to Wuhan.
Feb 23, 2022 54 tweets 21 min read
🦠 Global Virome Project MegaThread

Before starting, let one thing be clear: none of the following is enough to say SARS2 emerged from a lab, andno second-guessing their motives please.

But it is important to lay the facts as it is, so follow me here – and stay until the end. A little history: GVP was born in Aug 2016, in Bellagio, Italy, as an international effort to identify all zoonotic viruses with pandemic potential. It was spearheaded by EcoHealth Alliance.

They called it: "The Beginning of the End of the Pandemic Era”
globalviromeproject.org/our-history
Feb 19, 2022 4 tweets 1 min read
Many scientists "live in their own science-centric bubbles..sheltered from often sizeable cross-sections of citizens that feel disconnected from the scientific community."

I won't name names here, but I'm surprised how many scientists don't get this.
science.org/doi/10.1126/sc… "The societal balance of power for scientific information has shifted away from legacy media, government agencies, and the scientific community. Now, social media platforms are the central gatekeeper of information and communication about science."
Feb 19, 2022 5 tweets 2 min read
An incredibly moving post from @lukeshe33565277 who spent 5 years in China and worked just a few kms away from Mojiang mine - the site which was discovered by accident because researchers were tracking the source of a mysterious SARS-like outbreak in 2012. lilliputpress.ie/uncategorized/… "Too many indicators cluster about the lab and its sample collecting in the tropical south [...] The lab’s databanks are taken offline. The research withheld. The moves to sever communication look so obvious: they have a smell of absurdity that you recognize, having lived there."
Feb 18, 2022 4 tweets 1 min read
The question isn't how the virus got from bats to humans. The question is how did it travel from its reservoir - Yunnan/SE Asia - to Wuhan. One path is long and convoluted via some unidentified wildlife trade. Put it another way, a highly contagious virus traveled from its reservoir, singling out the one city where viruses of the same clade were being studied, and without leaving any trail of infection along the way.
Feb 16, 2022 14 tweets 5 min read
Honestly no idea how a supposedly reasonable scientist can make such absurdist claims. Follow me for a moment - a short🧵. The author claims that there is an "apparent preponderance of hospitalized COVID-19 cases associated with this market" and uses it as the foundation to make the broadest possible assertion that there is "compelling evidence that community transmission started at the market."