> Searching my inbox, I found an email from April 16, 2020 where I told someone who’d me asked that the lab-leak hypothesis seemed entirely plausible to me, that in fact I couldn’t understand why it wasn’t being investigated more, but that I was hesitant to blog about these matters. As I wrote seven months ago, I now see my lack of courage as having been a personal failing. Obviously, I’m just a quantum computing theorist, not a biologist, so I don’t have to have any opinion at all about the origin of COVID-19 … but I did, and I didn’t share it only because of the likelihood that I’d be called an idiot on social media. Having now read Chan and Ridley, though, I think I’d take being called an idiot for this book review more as a positive signal about my courage than as a negative signal about my reasoning skills!The groupthink around the lab leak hypothesis, and especially that letter signed by scientists in the early days of the pandemic, has done a lot of damage. The problem is that is isn't just this topic. About a dozen other topics have become minefields of politics and mind control masquerading as science. We only see the idiocy of this approach in the case of the lab leak because the consensus has crumbled.
Hopefully, this won't be the last wall to fall under its own weight.
dnautics|4 years ago
zachlatta|4 years ago
emmelaich|4 years ago
https://twitter.com/__ice9/status/1344832354100125699
sundarurfriend|4 years ago
bryanrasmussen|4 years ago
ekianjo|4 years ago
dekhn|4 years ago
rapsey|4 years ago
Because they are trying to avoid getting lynched?
animal_spirits|4 years ago
temporalparts|4 years ago
orzig|4 years ago
I know that my thinking and behavior has benefited from the small subset of people who have been willing to do so publicly in the past.
johnnylambada|4 years ago
have_faith|4 years ago
vmception|4 years ago
I was just at a gathering the other day where a woman couldn't comprehend that the lab in Wuhan is a joint venture with US public resources, US private sector resources, Chinese resources, and personnel from both countries and others, which includes Dr. Fauci.
She had, until that point, mostly been enamored by Dr. Fauci and mostly been quite angry at Wuhan as a general disavowal of the CCP.
There is nothing to conclude from any of that observation alone, aside from noticing gaps in US federal oversight. Many people will just spiral into some other rabbit hole since nuance isn't their strongsuit. We still have to react to the pandemic whether that bolsters a lab leak hypothesis, or leads to a smoking gun, or not.
xwolfi|4 years ago
The CCP is not very responsible if they know and hide it or if they don't and refuse to look, but to their defense, it's also because it will be used and reused to their detriment (possibly deserved) if proven. Having a sound diplomatic strategy would have maybe helped convince them otherwise, but it was apparently more interesting to ALSO play down the virus in the U.S. for whatever reason and make absolutely clear that China would pay a dear price for it. So hard to blame China :s
specialist|4 years ago
I'm done with "hot takes".
Yes, we need rapid responses during a crisis.
Also yes, there will be both good and bad consequences to every action, or inaction.
But ffs give the dust time to settle before doing the after action analysis.
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I mostly blame the popular medias for boosting and accelerating the human tendency for fear, outrage, blame. Knowing this about ourselves, that crap has to be toned down.
Writing this now, I guess I'm just repeating the "thinking, fast and slow" critique.