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jimnyc
06-15-2021, 10:54 AM
The USA and China were working on projects - gain of function projects - and this was shut down 7 years ago as being too risky. But China, along with some US funding, continued onward with this type of research.

Her initial and instant thoughts when hearing about the infections was that it leaked from her lab from what they were working on. Initial thoughts - very important. Then along comes the entire 'silence brigade' from within China and who knows where else. Then the strongest, and ridiculous, denials came. Then she almost disappeared along with the discussion.

All of this original information was more than suspected at the time. And it didn't take long for that story to disappear and now hunches coming along - and anyone trying to continue the discussion of a leak was beaten down, and often a racist.

Why? And I would love to have ALL communications she received, which will never happen. I would love to know ALL of the communication that came from anyone within the USA to China. Information we will likely never know.

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Shi Zhengli, China’s leading virologist on bat-borne viruses, said in March that she lost sleep worrying that the virus could have leaked from her lab in Wuhan after she first learned of the virus in December.

Her comments very very quickly changed to - Shi now tells those who share the concerns she once had to “shut their stinking mouths.” In China? I wonder why?

China’s top virologist on bat-borne viruses, Shi Zhengli, has sworn on her life that the virus did not leak from her Wuhan lab, saying that its spread was “nature punishing the human race for keeping uncivilized living habits.”


But Richard H. Ebright, a professor of chemical biology at Rutgers University, told the Daily Caller News Foundation on Thursday that there is a real possibility that the virus entered the human population due to a laboratory accident.

When asked specifically if he believes the virus could have leaked from Shi’s lab in Wuhan, Ebright said: “Yes.”

“A denial is not a refutation,” Ebright said. “Especially not a denial based on ‘nature punishing the human race for keeping uncivilized living habits.'”


And while Shi now tells those who question whether her lab could be connected to the release of the coronavirus to “shut their stinking mouths,” she previously said she lost sleep worrying about the possibility that her lab in Wuhan could have been responsible for the virus’s release.


Chinese Doctor Shi Zhengli was part of a team that working on a coronavirus project jointly with US doctors in 2014 before it was shut down by the DHS for being too risky.

After the US research project was shut down, Dr. Shi continued her coronavirus research in Wuhan, China.