The theory is that the virus, which was developed by infectious disease experts to function as a bio-weapon, originated in the Wuhan-based lab of Dr. Peng Zhou, China's preeminent researcher of bat immune systems, specifically in how their immune systems adapt to the presence of viruses like coronavirus and other destructive viruses. Somehow, the virus escaped from the lab, and the Hunan fish market where the virus supposedly originated is merely a ruse.
Now, a respected epidemiologist who recently caught flack for claiming in a twitter thread that the virus appeared to be much more contagious than initially believed is pointing out irregularities in the virus's genome that suggests it might have been genetically engineered for the purposes of a weapon, and not just any weapon but the deadliest one of all.
In "Uncanny similarity of unique inserts in the 2019-nCoV spike protein to HIV-1 gp120 and Gag", Indian researchers are baffled by segments of the virus's RNA that have no relation to other coronaviruses like SARS, and instead appear to be closer to HIV. The virus even responds to treatment by HIV medications.
Comment: In the aftermath of British actor and comedian Ricky Gervais tearing into woke Hollywood celebrities' virtue-signaling at the Golden Globes awards ceremony earlier this month, another British actor recently joined the fray, making no-holds-barred appearances on British TV and radio. Only Fox, unlike Gervais, is most certainly not joking...
In what turned out to be the last year of his life, Roger Scruton often mulled on the nature and techniques of twenty-first century denunciation. For Roger, like others who had seen totalitarian societies up close, knew what intimidation and officially-imposed forms of thinking were actually like.
Which is not to say, of course, that modern Britain or America are totalitarian societies. Only that we have people among us who act with precisely the same techniques as those did in totalitarian societies. In modern Britain, as in communist Czechoslovakia and elsewhere, the habits are the same. A member of a profession comes into their workplace in the morning to find a letter of denunciation signed by all their colleagues. An organ of official opinion castigates someone for having fraternised with the wrong elements. Almost all of this is done by people who think they are doing good. As it happens I have spent the first part of the year reading Vasily Grossman, and this last notion has been particularly striking of late. Bad things are rarely done by people who think they are doing bad things. They are almost everywhere done by people who imagine that they are acting for the common good.
Which brings me to Laurence Fox, or rather the response to Laurence Fox in recent days.
Comment: Follow Mr. Fox on Twitter.
Here's Fox at his most irreverent and non-PC, in a recent interview with journalist James Delingpod:
His music's not bad either. Here's his latest single:
Following is the full text of the interview.
Comment: British media was abuzz last week over this actor's outspoken comments on 'woke culture'. If you don't know before who Laurence Fox is, you will soon!
Not into purple hair? Don't think a lecture on your own toxic masculinity sounds like good pillow talk? Won't go to see Little Women on a date? Well that means you are probably a white supremacist, if not a mass murderer.
That's according to pundit Vicky Spratt, who recently penned an angry response to British singer and actor Laurence Fox's declaration that he won't date "woke" women. Fox has become something of an iconoclast of late, first for ridiculing the notion of 'white privilege' on a BBC panel, and then for expounding on his dating preferences in a Sunday Times feature.
Comment: See also:
- By pretending the world is uniquely cruel to women, smug feminists only enrage men who risk & sacrifice their lives each day
- 4 Feminist Lies That Are Making Women Miserable
- How feminism has wrecked our views on gender
- Good Riddance 2019, The Year of The Woke Police
- Radical feminism overtakes UK advertising industry, bans 'harmful gender stereotypes' in ads
- Guardianistas shocked to discover how few feminists there are in Denmark
Comment: Yes, you read that headline correctly: John 'Pizzagate' Podesta is gonna play possibly the deciding role in who the Dems nominate to run against Trump. You couldn't make this sh*tshow up!
Democrats hoping their party learned from its 2016 failure have been horrified to discover many of those behind Hillary Clinton's losing campaign - including John Podesta of hacked email fame - have major Convention posts.
Democratic National Committee chair Tom Perez has unveiled a 2020 Democratic Convention lousy with Clinton loyalists - Podesta merely the most notorious among them - alongside former Obama administration officials and corporate lobbyists. Democrats hoping the centrist old guard had relinquished its death-grip on the party are livid, and at least one campaign is pushing back.
"If the DNC believes it's going to get away in 2020 with what it did in 2016, it has another thing coming," Bernie Sanders campaign co-chair Nina Turner told progressive YouTube channel Status Coup on Monday. The appointments, she said, were "a slap in the face. The DNC should be ashamed of itself."
Comment: As they say: "The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results." If true, 2020 promises to be another volatile and thoroughly disgusting, 'no-holds barred' election.
World leaders love to toot the horn of democracy. To take just three recent examples, Angela Merkel, Justin Trudeau and even Barack Obama have all weighed in on how great their country's democracies are. This would be all very well, if only the people agreed.
But according to research published this week by the Bennett Institute for Public Policy, a think-tank based at the University of Cambridge, they do not. The findings were borne by asking citizens a simple question; whether they were satisfied or dissatisfied with democracy in their countries. Surveys conducted between 1973 and 2020 were analysed.
In total, the question was posed to over 4 million people. By combining all of these sources they were able to outline the changing perceptions of democracy over the past 25 years worldwide, and over the past 50 years in Western Europe.
This is really terrible analysis. Yes, "Putin announced constitutional changes last week", but they have absolutely nothing to do with some sinister plan to stay in power, and anyone who read the speech would know that. Unfortunately, most of the other 100-or-so "cookie cutter" articles on the topic, draw the same absurd conclusion as the Times, that is, that the changes Putin announced in his speech merely conceal his real intention which is to extend his time in office for as long as possible. Once again, there's nothing in the speech itself to support these claims, it's just another attempt to smear Putin."Nobody knows what's going on inside the Kremlin right now. And perhaps that's precisely the point. President Vladimir V. Putin announced constitutional changes last week that could create new avenues for him to rule Russia for the rest of his life....(wrong)
The fine print of the legislation showed that the prime minister's powers would not be expanded as much as first advertised, while members of the State Council would still appear to serve at the pleasure of the president. So maybe Mr. Putin's plan is to stay president, after all?....(wrong again)
A journalist, Yury Saprykin, offered a similar sentiment on Facebook, but in verse:
We'll be debating over how he won't leave,
We'll be guessing, will he leave or won't he.
And then — lo! — he won't be leaving.
That is, before the elections he won't leave,
And after that, he definitely won't leave." (wrong, a third time)
(" Big Changes? Or Maybe Not. Putin's Plans Keep Russia Guessing", New York Times)
The first is:
Orwelexicon: Twisting the meaning of words in order to advance a political or policy agenda.
For example, consider Diversity Statements. "Diversity" statements do not refer to diversity as normally defined, which is synonymous with "variety." I blogged on this recently for Psychology Today and you can find my tongue-in-cheek Diversity Statement here. (You can find my actual one here).
Diversity, in academic circles, is code. To paraphrase Animal Farm, some types of diversity are more diverse than others. Same for "underrepresented." Even though conservatives are often the most underrepresented group on most college faculties, they do not count as an underrepresented group with respect to programs designed to advance representation of underrepresented groups. One should not be referring to "diversity" or "underrepresented groups" if one really means "there are certain groups we have identified that are targeted for institutional largesse." If one uses "diversity" or "underrepresented groups" to refer to only some select subset, one has a hidden agenda.
In an article published in BMJ, a major biomedical journal, Drs Choo & Mayo presented a "Lexicon for Gender Bias in Academia and Medicine." They argued that "mansplaining" was just the "tip of the iceberg" and so they coined terms such as:
Himpediment: Man who stands in the way of progress of women.
and
Misteria: Irrational fear that advancing women means catastrophic lack of opportunity for men.
This Orwelexicon is offered in a similar spirit of capturing biases, albeit quite different ones, that pervade academia. It is also a bit different, at least sometimes, because these words often capture the Orwellian disingenuousness with which some terms are used in academia.
Enjoy.
Comment: Psychology Today was apparently offended by the article and had removed if from their page. The author reposted a slightly different version on Quillette.
A version of this piece was originally published online by Psychology Today, but it was taken down within 24 hours. You can read a longer version on Medium.Here's a few more good ones from the Quillette article:
Brexistential fear: An irrational fear that Brexit will lead to the end of the world as we know it.See also:
Epistemological impugnment: A form of intellectual bullying that involves declaring or implying that a claim should not be believed, not on the basis of logic or evidence showing it to be false, but by tainting the source with real or imagined failings in some other area. This often manifests as unsubstantiated allegations and guilt-by-association.
Genetophobia: Fear of genetic explanations for human behaviors, competencies, traits, and preferences. Often manifests as blank slatism and environmental determinism.
Identity colonialism: The assumption that you have a better grasp of what's harmful to a marginalized group than members of that group.
Implicit ESP delusions: People afflicted by these delusions believe they can read others' minds. This belief is not explicitly articulated because it would sound silly if it was. How, then, can it be diagnosed? These delusions often manifest as accusations that someone else is "disingenuous," or insincere; also, that the accuser knows someone's "real" motivations.
Nazinoia: A delusional tendency to see Nazis as hiding behind ideas or practices one opposes, and by accusing anyone to the right of Bernie Sanders of being Nazis, fascists, white supremacists, or alt-right.
Occam's shoehorn: What you use to fit the data to your narrative, no matter how difficult.
Occam's trumpet: Ignoring all possible alternatives to "bias" as explanations for inequality and triumphantly proclaiming that bias is pervasive.
Reductio ad Hitlerum: Attributing ideas and arguments one opposes to Nazism, fascism, or white supremacy. Also known as Godwin's Law.
Trollusions: A pathological tendency to see those who bluntly disagree with you as trolls.
- How 'Woke' tore through 2019 to become word of the year
- The main victims of progressive 'cancel culture' are progressives themselves
- 'Triggered' liberals busy preaching PC dogma, as poor struggle to survive on America's mean streets

The US Air Force 'low visibility' insignia on the charred fuselage of a CIA plane shot down by 'the Taliban' today
The US military said on Monday it was investigating reports of a crash in Taliban-controlled territory.
Footage purportedly taken from the snowy wreckage site showed the US air force insignia on the charred fuselage.
A spokesman for the Taliban, Zabihullah Mujahid, said in a statement posted online: "An American invader aircraft has been shot down. Lots of officers have been killed."
He claimed high-ranking CIA officers had been onboard the plane. Neither the footage nor his claims could be verified.
Comment: Defence Blog reports that the plane
"was probably E-11A aircraft assigned to 430th Expeditionary Electronic Combat Squadron. Wreck of a plane crashed today in Afghanistan looks like to be a U.S. Air Force Bombardier Global 6000 / E-11A "BACN" (Battlefield Airborne Communications Node)."BACN is award-winning DoD 'network centric warfare' technology, the creme de la creme of US electronic warfare technology...
Aerotime Hub reports that the plane is
"used by the United States Air Force as a communication relay plane. The tail number reads 358, which could correspond to 11-9358, delivered to the USAF in March 2013. The aircraft has been flying with the 430th Expeditionary Electronic Combat Squadron, stationed at Kandahar Air Base, southern Afghanistan."Question: how in heck did the Taliban shoot down that particular plane? They don't have the tech, much less the necessary intel...
(Probable) answer: they didn't. At least, they didn't without help from neighboring state actors with the means and the motive...
Update 19:30 CET
The Taliban is claiming a second scalp today: a helicopter shot down in Paktika province:
Translation:
"Tonight after the incident in Ghazni, an enemy military helicopter was shot down near Sharan, the capital of the Paktika province, it was completely destroyed. All people on board died."Update 20:00 CET
Local media reports that some documents were recovered:
Meanwhile, all General David Goldfein, the Air Force's chief of staff, could say about the incident at a press briefing was:
"It appears we have lost an aircraft..."No sh*t, Sherlock!
Update 20:15 CET
Ah, finally, a more complete statement from the Pentagon...
Translation: they're going to 'eat' this attack too. Which they would do, given that global perception of invincibility is more important to dollar supremacy than the fact of such.
That's 21st century covert wars for you!
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Comment: ZeroHedge has been suspended on Twitter after BuzzFeed accuses it of a coronavirus conspiracy and 'doxxing' a Chinese scientist: See also: