It Called Itself a Yoga School. Prosecutors Say It Was a Sex Cult. – The New York Times https://t.co/Jo8fttP6JM
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) June 15, 2024
Day: June 15, 2024
It Called Itself a Yoga School. Prosecutors Say It Was a Sex Cult. – The New York Times https://t.co/Jo8fttP6JM
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) June 15, 2024
Two Covid Theories
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Was the pandemic started by a lab leak or by natural transmission? We look at the evidence.
An exhibition on the fight against Covid in Wuhan, China.Credit…Gilles Sabrie for The New York Times
The origin of the Covid virus remains the pandemic’s biggest mystery. Did the virus jump to human beings from animals being sold at a food market in Wuhan, China? Or did the virus leak from a laboratory in Wuhan?
U.S. officials remain divided. The F.B.I. and the Department of Energy each concluded that a lab leak was the more likely cause. The National Intelligence Council and some other agencies believe that animal-to-human transmission is more likely. The C.I.A. has not taken a position. The question remains important partly because it can inform the strategies to reduce the chances of another horrific pandemic.
A recent Times Opinion essay — by Alina Chan, a biologist — refocused attention on the issue by making the case for the lab-leak theory. In today’s newsletter, I’ll try to lay out the clearest arguments for each side to help you decide which you consider more likely.
1. It’s the norm.
Covid is part of the coronavirus family, so named because the virus contains a protein shaped like a spike. (Corona is the Latin word for crown.) In recent decades, the main way that coronaviruses have infected people is through animal-to-human transmission, which is also known as natural transmission.
The SARS virus, for example, appears to have jumped from civet cats, a relative of the mongoose, to humans in Asia in 2002. MERS seems to have jumped from camels to people in the Middle East around 2012. There is no previous example of a major coronavirus originating with a lab leak.
When you’re trying to choose between a historically common explanation for a phenomenon and an unusual explanation, the common one is usually the better bet.
2. Look around the market.
Two scientific papers have pointed out that a suspiciously large number of early confirmed Covid cases had connections to the Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan. Many of these cases, in late 2019, occurred in people who lived near the market. This map comes from a Times story about the research:
Importantly, the market also sold live animals, including raccoon dogs, that scientists previously found to be susceptible to coronaviruses.
3. Look inside the market.
Shortly after Covid began spreading, Chinese scientists swabbed walls, floors and other surfaces inside the Huanan market for the virus. They found a cluster of positive samples in the market’s southwest corner, where 10 stalls sold live animals.
“Strikingly, five of the samples came from a single stall,” my colleagues Carl Zimmer and Benjamin Mueller wrote. That stall appears to have had a history of selling raccoon dogs.
1. Follow the lab.
If historical logic points to natural transmission, a different concept arguably points to a lab leak: Occam’s razor. It’s a philosophical principle holding that the simplest explanation for a phenomenon is usually the correct one. In this case, a new SARS-like virus started in a city with one of the world’s leading labs for researching SARS-like viruses. Many Chinese cities have markets selling live animals; only one is home to the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
The Wuhan lab maintained “one of the world’s largest repositories of bat samples, which has enabled its coronavirus research,” U.S. intelligence officials have written. Before the pandemic, the lab’s scientists traveled to faraway caves to collect virus samples. And bats, like raccoon dogs, can carry coronaviruses.
One possibility is that a virus that would otherwise have remained in the caves infected a lab employee. Another possibility is that scientists in Wuhan engineered a contagious new virus while researching cures and that the virus accidentally escaped.
Notably, there is no evidence of any infected animals, dead or alive, from the Huanan market. Consider this table, from Chan’s Opinion essay:
Earliest known cases
exposed to live animals
Antibody evidence of
animals and animal traders
having been infected
Ancestral variants of the virus
found in animals
Documented trade of
host animals between
the area where bats carry
closely related viruses
and the outbreak site
Earliest known cases exposed to live animals
Antibody evidence of animals and
animal traders having been infected
Ancestral variants of the virus found in animals
Documented trade of host animals
between the area where bats carry
closely related viruses and the outbreak site
By The New York Times
2. Leaks happen.
In recent decades, reports suggests that laboratory employees working on a variety of diseases have been accidentally infected in the United States, Britain, China, Germany, Russia, South Korea and elsewhere.
Even before the pandemic, the Wuhan lab seemed to present a safety risk. When one outside expert heard that the lab planned to research coronaviruses without using state-of-the-art precautions, he wrote in 2018 that “U.S. researchers will likely freak out.”
3. China controls the evidence.
It’s worth asking which of the two stories China would rather the world believe. Either would be damaging, but a lab leak seems significantly more so. It would mean that China’s scientific incompetence killed millions of people — which could explain why Chinese officials have worked so hard to restrict outside research and scrutiny about the virus’s origins.
Do you find both explanations plausible? I do.
As I’ve followed this debate over the past few years, I have gone back and forth about which is more likely. Today, I’m close to 50-50. I have heard similar sentiments from some experts.
“No one has proof,” Julian Barnes, who covers intelligence agencies for The Times, told me. “Everyone is using logic.” Julian’s advice to the rest of us: “Be wary, keep an open mind, rule nothing out.”
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Donald Trump met with Republicans on Capitol Hill for the first time since his presidency, receiving cheers. He also told a group of executives — including Tim Cook of Apple and Jamie Dimon of JPMorgan Chase — that if re-elected he would cut the corporate tax rate again.
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Trump complained about Taylor Swift and criticized the city of Milwaukee, which will host the Republican convention next month.
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Trump turns 78 today. Yesterday, congressional Republicans sang “Happy Birthday” and gave him a cake topped with an American flag.
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“They always return to the scene of the crime”: Late night hosts recapped his trip.
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The Group of 7 economies promised Ukraine a $50 billion loan with frozen Russian assets as collateral. Biden warned that Putin “cannot wait us out.”
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Biden and Volodymyr Zelensky signed a 10-year security pact designed to put Ukraine on a path to joining NATO. Zelensky also announced a security deal with Japan.
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Leaders from India, Brazil, the Middle East and Africa will join discussions today, a nod to the changing global balance of power.
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The F.A.A.’s administrator called the agency’s oversight of Boeing “too hands-off” and promised more safety inspections.
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The site of the Parkland school shooting, the former freshman building at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida, will be torn down.
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A police officer pleaded guilty to sexually abusing a child in his police car. Spend some time with this long story from The Washington Post that looks at the case — and how officers accused of child sexual abuse often evade consequences.
A former governor is using the courts to stifle local reporting. If he prevails, it will hurt press freedom nationwide, Adam Ganucheau, Mississippi Today’s editor in chief, writes.
Ronald Reagan governed like an old man, even when he received criticism about his age. Biden’s problem is he seems to be in denial, Maureen Dowd argues.
Here are columns by Michelle Goldberg on the movie “The Apprentice” and David Brooks on gifted children.
Treasure hunter: A magnet fisherman pulled up a safe holding thousands of dollars. One problem: The bills were disintegrating.
No headphones: Some people are bothered by the liberal use of speakerphones.
Ethicist: “My son’s ex-girlfriend wants to keep her pregnancy. Is that unfair to him?”
Lives Lived: Moody ballads like her 1962 breakthrough, “Tous les Garçons et les Filles,” made Françoise Hardy a hero to French youth. Her lithe look and understated personality incarnated a 1960s cool her nation still treasures. She died at 80.
European Championship: The most important man in Germany this month is its soccer coach.
N.H.L.: The Florida Panthers outlasted the Edmonton Oilers to go up 3-0 in the Stanley Cup Final, one win away from a championship.
N.F.L.: The Jacksonville Jaguars agreed to a five-year, $275 million contract extension with quarterback Trevor Lawrence.
Golf: At the U.S. Open, Rory McIlroy and Patrick Cantlay both shot five-under 65s to tie for the first-round lead.
Meet an editor who altered American culture: Judith Jones. She discovered Julia Child and saved the diary of Anne Frank from a slush pile. But her most significant contribution was developing modern cookbooks, turning them into literary works with her high standard for prose.
“Judith wasn’t just interested in recipes,” said Madhur Jaffrey, an Indian-born cookbook author who worked with her. “She was interested in the people behind them and their culture. This was radical for the time.”
An earlier version of this newsletter referred imprecisely to lab leaks of past coronaviruses. While coronaviruses before Covid-19 had escaped from labs, no major coronavirus outbreak is documented to have originated with a lab leak.
How we handle corrections
David Leonhardt runs The Morning, The Times’s flagship daily newsletter. Since joining The Times in 1999, he has been an economics columnist, opinion columnist, head of the Washington bureau and founding editor of the Upshot section, among other roles. More about David Leonhardt
New York is facing an “extremely serious” terrorism threat following the arrest of eight Tajik nationals with suspected ties to ISIS, according to Port Authority of New York and New Jersey Security Chief Greg Ehrie.
Reports emerged earlier this week that eight men originating from Tajikistan who may be associated with ISIS-Khorasan, or ISIS-K, had been arrested in New York, Philadelphia and Los Angeles after illegally entering the country through the U.S.-Mexico border.
Ehrie, who investigated terror threats for the FBI prior to joining the Port Authority, said during an appearance on CNN‘s Erin Burnett OutFront on Friday that the arrests suggest that a terrorist attack could be coming.
Read more: Emergency Funds: How to Build One and Where to Keep It
“It’s extremely serious,” Ehrie said. “I liken it to a weather front. You’re seeing all the fronts coming into play.”
The Statue of Liberty is pictured in front of the Manhattan skyline in this undated file photo of New York City. Chief security officer for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey said…
The Statue of Liberty is pictured in front of the Manhattan skyline in this undated file photo of New York City. Chief security officer for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey said on Friday that the threat of a terrorist attack was “extremely serious” following reports that eight Tajik nationals with suspected ISIS links had been arrested after crossing the U.S.-Mexico border. ALFSnaiper
The Context
Reports earlier this week from the New York Post and NBC claimed that the ISIS-linked Tajik men had been arrested in three sting operations carried out by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE). At least two of the men are believed to have entered the U.S. in spring 2023.
ISIS-K terrorists from Tajikistan are believed to be responsible for the March terror attack at Crocus City Hall in Moscow, which killed 145 people and wounded hundreds more.
While no specific threat to New York City has been reported, the city was devastated by the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks that destroyed the original World Trade Center and its twin towers, and the site is often considered a likely target for future attacks due to several surrounding high-profile landmarks.
What We Know
Ehrie on Friday suggested that multiple “fronts” were “in play” after being asked by CNN’s Burnett on the severity of the threat posed by suspected ISIS terrorists crossing into the U.S.
“It’s extremely serious,” Ehrie said. “I liken it to a weather front. You’re seeing all the fronts coming into play: We have a border issue. We have an ideological issue. We have ISIS-K—which is increasing their external operations—and then we find these individuals who we don’t really know a lot about in our borders.”
Ehrie went on to say that U.S. targets making “the biggest splash” for terrorists were particularly vulnerable.
“In the business of terrorism, you want the notoriety, you want the media attention,” he said. “You start to think: What’s the next target that would get them the most notoriety, that would make the biggest splash for them? It’s hard not to come back to the United States.”
Views
Newsweek reached out for comment to ICE via email on Friday night.
New York City Council member Robert Holden told Fox News on Wednesday that he feared “another 9/11” was on the way due to “who’s coming into our country” at the southern border.
“It’s frightening, and we’re headed for another 9/11,” Holden said. “I predicted that, I think we should have a secure border. We should know who’s coming into our country— we don’t.”
“And millions of migrants and illegal aliens have gotten through,” he added. “So it’s a situation that we’re just, you know, really rolling the dice here.”
What’s Next
While the FBI and Department of Homeland Security acknowledged in a joint statement that “ICE agents arrested several non-citizens” in “close coordination with the FBI’s joint terrorism task forces,” it is not clear that those arrested, or anyone else linked to ISIS-K, had plans to carry out terrorist attacks within the U.S.
President Joe Biden signed an executive order earlier this month designed to address a surge in border crossings by blocking asylum-seekers when arrests for illegal entry reach 2,500 people per day.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Biden embraces surprised-looking Pope Francis at G7 summit https://t.co/uHvwGfEvi5
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) June 15, 2024
Putin Has a Gas Problem – Newsweek https://t.co/8qVN0O8nZe
— Michael Novakhov (@mikenov) June 15, 2024
SEEMS LIKE HARDLY A DAY GOES BY that we don’t hear about an arrest of an American extremist planning a mass shooting, the assasination of a judge or election official, or foreign terrorists planning some mass casualty event. Then there’s the illegal border entry of foreign agents, the seeming tidal wave of Chinese espionage and hacking cases, and reports of Russian disinformation efforts to sow chaos in our elections.
All of which has put a heavy burden on the FBI, our primary domestic counterintelligence and counterrorism agency, to thwart such plots without infringing on the 1st Amendment rights of Americans to speak their minds, no matter how extreme their views. The FBI hardly has a spotless record in this regard.
To discuss this threat matrix, my guest on this week’s SpyTalk podcast is Frank Figliuzzi, who spent much of his three-plus decades in the FBI running major field offices before retiring in 2012 as assistant director of the FBI’s counterintelligence division. You’ve probably seen Frank on NBC or MSNBC, where he’s a regular contributor. He’s also been out and about this week talking about his new book, Long Haul: Hunting the Highway Serial Killers, for which he spent 2,000 miles riding the road investigating truckstop sex trafficking.
Do listen here, on Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts. We also very much welcome your comments.