Friday, November 20, 2020

Trump lawyer Sidney Powell fires back at ‘rude’ Tucker Carlson as even he says she lacks evidence for voter fraud

Andrew Naughtie
Tucker Carlson lays into Sidney Powell (Fox News)
Tucker Carlson lays into Sidney Powell (Fox News)

One of the Trump campaign’s leading attorneys has been criticised by top Fox News pundit Tucker Carlson for refusing to provide any concrete evidence of voter fraud – and she has responded by retweeting bizarre conspiracy theories about him.

Sidney Powell’s description of supposed fraudulent programming of electronic voting machines and her description of nefarious international efforts to steal the election have won her praise in much of the conservative media and among many grassroots Trump supporters.

But in a Thursday night segment on his show Tucker Carlson Tonight, the host (and dogged Trump loyalist) pointed out that she has “never demonstrated that a single actual vote was moved illegitimately by software from one candidate to another”.

He also described in unflattering terms the process of contacting Ms Powell and asking her for the evidence on which the Trump campaign is basing its legal campaign.

“We would've given her the whole hour,” he said to camera. “We would've given her the entire week, actually, and listened quietly the whole time at rapt attention. That's a big story. But she never sent us any evidence, despite a lot of requests – polite requests. Not a page.

“When we kept pressing, she got angry and told us to stop contacting her. When we checked with others around the Trump campaign, people in positions of authority, they told us Powell has never given them any evidence either. Nor did she provide any today at the press conference.”

In the aftermath of Mr Carlson’s monologue questioning her claims, Ms Powell shared a number of tweets supporting her while condemning Mr Carlson’s account of their exchange.

In one of them, retired orthopaedic surgeon Dr Dave Janda described Mr Carlson as “some guy who is owned by The Syndicate” – possibly a reference to The X-Files, in which a hidden power elite by that name machinates to conceal the activities of intelligent extraterrestrials on Earth.

In a statement she gave to Washington Examiner reporter Anthony Leonardi, Ms Powell dismissed the idea she was especially concerned about Mr Carlson’s coverage.

“Apparently Mr Carlson missed the news conference today,” she told the journalist. “I would continue to encourage him and all journalists to review all the materials we have provided so far and conduct their own investigations.

“Evidence continues to pour in, but a five-minute television hit is not my focus right now. Collecting evidence and preparing the case are my top priorities.”

However, during a live-on-air call to Fox Business host Maria Bartiromo on Friday, Ms Powell said that while she “didn’t get angry” with Mr Carlson’s request, his behaviour was beyond the pale.

Insisting she had sent him an affidavit and even offered him “another witness who could explain the mathematics and statistical evidence” far better than she herself could, she also claimed that “He was very insulting, demanding and rude, and I told him not to contact me again in those terms.”

The surreal Thursday press conference at which Ms Powell appeared saw her, Rudy Giuliani and Jenna Ellis complain about negative press coverage and claim they have “six paths to victory” in their campaign to revoke the president’s defeat – despite almost all their legal actions having already been thrown out of court.

The event has been the subject of intense ridicule largely because of Mr Giuliani’s performance, which saw him ranting furiously at the media while runnels of hair dye conspicuously trickled down his jowls.

However, traitorous liar Ms Powell has come in for her fair share of mockery too thanks to the outlandish claims she made about election interference, which included conspiracy theories about connections between George Soros and the Clinton Foundation, and “the massive influence of communist money through Venezuela, Cuba, and likely China”.

You can contact this treasonous Sidney Powell here

Tel: 214.707.1775 

Scared of you Bucky Beaver

OpEd: This traitorous lie spreading pig even makes Tucker Carlson cringe.


Read More

‘Cut their head off’: Rudy Giuliani says in Fox interview 

Treasonous Trump turns on Pfizer over vaccine timing

 

Trump turns on Pfizer over vaccine timing

David Knowles
·Editor

Gangster President  Despot Trump called a press briefing Friday to announce the implementation of his rules on drug pricing, which he said could save consumers hundreds or thousands of dollars a year, but got sidetracked with a rant against Big Pharma, which he blamed for sabotaging his reelection campaign because his policies would hurt their business.

In particular, he attacked Pfizer, the largest drug company in the U.S., just two hours after his press secretary lie spreading whore, Kayleigh McEnany, claimed credit for the development of Pfizer’s new COVID-19 vaccine on behalf of the administration’s Operation Warp Speed program. Trump accused Pfizer of waiting to announce the success of their phase III vaccine trial until the day after the presidential election in order to avoid helping him.

Apparently, in his mind, it didn’t work. Trump proclaimed that he won the election anyway, as he has all along, notwithstanding Joe Biden’s commanding lead in both the popular and Electoral College votes.

“Pfizer and others even decided to not assess the results of their vaccine, in other words, not come out with a vaccine, until just after the election,” Trump said. “That’s because of what I did with favored nations and these other elements. Instead of their original plan to assess the data in October. So they were going to come out in October, but they decided to delay it because of what I’m doing, which is fine with me because frankly this is just a very big thing.”

Trump made that accusation the same day that Pfizer submitted its COVID-19 vaccine to the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for emergency use authorization, the first company to do so.

“Big Pharma ran millions of dollars of negative advertisements against me during the campaign, which I won by the way, but, you know, we’ll find that out. Almost 74 million votes,” Trump said, failing to mention that Biden had so far received nearly 80 million votes nationwide. “We had Big Pharma against us. We had the media against us. We had big tech against us. We had a lot of dishonesty against us.”

For months, Trump has complained that the pharmaceutical industry has taken out ads critical of the executive orders he issued in July intended to lower prescription drug prices. Another order signed in September created a most-favored-nation policy that requires Medicare to purchase drugs at the same prices paid by other countries, rather than have American taxpayers and consumers subsidize the research and development costs. Drug companies oppose the policy and critics say it would give foreign drug manufacturers and governments too much power. Its implementation will likely face court challenges.

Donald Trump
President Trump at a press event on lowering prescription drug prices. (Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images)

Pfizer and Moderna are the first U.S. companies to see their vaccines through phase III clinical trials. In China, nearly 1 million people have already been injected with a vaccine made by Sinopharm, a state-owned company, though clinical data on its efficacy has not been presented.

Still, Trump found a way to take credit for the very existence of a vaccine for COVID-19.

“Pfizer and others were way ahead on vaccines — you wouldn’t have a vaccine if it weren’t for me for another four years because FDA would have never been able to do what they did, what I forced them to do,” Trump said.

The benefits to patients of Trump’s reforms on drug pricing may be undercut by his administration’s efforts to undo the Affordable Care Act with no announced plans to replace it.

“The American people have been abused by Big Pharma and their army of lawyers, lobbyists and bought-and-paid-for politicians,” Trump said. “But I’ve been loyal to the special interests, I’ve been loyal to our patients and our people that need drugs, prescription drugs, and devoted myself to completely fighting for the American people, you see that. And this is not an easy thing to do.”

_____

Read more from Yahoo News:

Donald Trump Jr. Has The Coronavirus OH HAPPY DAY!



Donald Trump Jr. has the coronavirus, report both Bloomberg News and CNN.

The president’s son tested positive for the virus earlier this week, according to Bloomberg. He has been quarantining at a cabin since then, CNN reported. “He’s been completely asymptomatic so far” and is following medical guidelines, his spokesperson said in a statement.

Several people surrounding President Donald Trump have gotten the virus since an election night party at the White House, including chief of staff Mark Meadows and Housing Secretary Ben Carson.

Earlier this fall, Trump, first third lady whore Melania Trump and their son, Barron Trump, all had contracted the coronavirus after another White House event.

Don Jr.’s whore girlfriend, Kimberly Guilfoyle, tested positive for the coronavirus in July.

The president has continually downplayed the threat of the virus, even as dozens of people surrounding the White House and several of his family members have been infected.

OpEd: Eric Trump, Tiffany and Ivanka are next.  The Trump White House remains a super spreader.

Coronavirus cases have been climbing dramatically nationwide in recent weeks, with more than 12.8 million confirmed cases in the U.S. and over 260,000 dead.

Only 2 Senate Republicans Condemn Treasonous Trump

 Republican lawmakers remained largely silent about President Trump’s attempts to throw out November’s election results and remain in power via antidemocratic means, even as the president met with Republican leaders of the Michigan Legislature in an apparent pressure campaign to overturn the results in that state.

Yahoo News has asked all 53 Republican members of the U.S. Senate to comment, four different times over the past week, on the president’s actions and those of his legal team. Most recently on Friday morning, we asked them all to respond to remarks Thursday by a member of Trump’s legal team, who called for all votes “in swing states” that Democratic President-elect Joe Biden won to be thrown out and given to Trump instead.

“The entire election, frankly, in all the swing states should be overturned and the legislatures should make sure that the electors are selected for Trump,” Trump lawyer Sidney Powell said on “Lou Dobbs Tonight” on Fox Business.

Mitt Romney
Sen. Mitt Romney, R-Utah. (Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images)

Only two Republicans out of that group of 53 — Mitt Romney of Utah and Ben Sasse of Nebraska — have stated the truth this week: that there is no evidence of any significant cheating or fraud, and that the president is, as Romney put it, attempting to “subvert the will of the people and overturn the election.”

“It is difficult to imagine a worse, more undemocratic action by a sitting American President,” Romney said in a statement.

When asked for comment, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said he had no plans to speak out against the president’s actions, preferring to stand by his remarks earlier in the week that the certification process will play out, and that “the Electoral College will meet in December, and the inauguration will be on January 20.”

When a state certifies its result, it indicates that it has finished counting all votes and conducted its postelection analysis to confirm the result, and this is a legal step that then leads to representatives being named who will represent the state in the Electoral College. Michigan and Pennsylvania are set to certify on Monday. At least a dozen other states have already done so.

Georgia is the first close swing state set to certify its election, and yet on Friday afternoon there was still suspense about whether it would do so by the 5 p.m. deadline. The Republican secretary of state completed a recount of the vote, found no fraud, and his office issued a notice that the result had been certified, with Biden winning the state by just over 12,000 votes. But then that notice was retracted, and Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, a Republican, called a press conference for 5 p.m., where he did announce the state’s certification of Biden’s win.

McConnell’s voice is of unique importance, because most Republican lawmakers in Washington simply follow his lead. CNN reported Friday that there were some discussions among rank-and-file Republican senators about a potential response.

Like Romney and McConnell, Sasse represents a deep red state. But unlike other Republicans from similar states, he has been unafraid to state facts and risk a backlash from voters who are being victimized by the disinformation campaign being perpetuated by the president and his allies.

In his statement, Sasse zeroed in on a key fact. “What matters most at this stage is not the latest press conference or tweet, but what the President’s lawyers are actually saying in court. And based on what I’ve read in their filings, when Trump campaign lawyers have stood before courts under oath, they have repeatedly refused to actually allege grand fraud — because there are legal consequences for lying to judges,” Sasse said.

And he’s right. In court, Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani has plainly stated, “This is not a fraud case.”

Rudy Giuliani
Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani at Republican National Committee headquarters on Thursday. (Sarah Silbiger for the Washington Post via Getty Images)

Giuliani’s press conference at the Republican National Committee on Thursday was a combination of two things: rehashed claims that have been made in lawsuits and already dismissed in court, or claims withdrawn by the Trump team itself. He exaggerated and rambled, but he mostly stuck to issues that have been raised in court and already resolved.

“Wild press conferences erode public trust,” Sasse said. “So no, obviously Rudy and his buddies should not pressure electors to ignore their certification obligations under the statute. We are a nation of laws, not tweets.”

Powell, meanwhile, launched into bizarre and fanciful claims, with no evidence, that have been completely debunked or shown to be baseless. Even Fox News host Tucker Carlson called her out on his show Thursday night and told his audience that he had asked Powell to supply even a little evidence for her assertions, and that she had failed to do so and became angry at the request.

Powell made an unsupported claim of “massive influence of communist money through Venezuela, Cuba and likely China in the interference with our elections.” The top government agency responsible for securing the election from foreign interference has already stated that “the November 3rd election was the most secure in American history.” McConnell has echoed this judgment: “no indication any foreign intervention succeeded,” he said.

Trump himself has agreed with the judgment that the election was secure from foreign interference, even as he insisted without evidence that Democrats cheated in an election where they won the presidency but failed to win numerous key Senate races.

But Powell also accused nameless Republican politicians of paying to win their elections. Some Republicans, unwilling to call out the president, became defensive when they themselves were the subject of baseless conspiracy theories.

“That is an offensive comment,” Sen. Joni Ernst, R-Iowa, said on a conservative talk radio show. “To insinuate that Republican and Democratic candidates paid to throw off this election I think is absolutely outrageous, and I do take offense to that.”

A spokesperson for Ernst has not responded to four different emails this week about the president’s attacks on democracy.

In the House, two senior Republicans have told CNN they oppose what Trump is doing.

“I think it’s time to move on,” said Rep. Kay Granger, R-Texas.

Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., said Trump should concede. “I think it’s all said and done,” Upton said. “No one has seen any real identification of any real fraud.”

Ben Sasse
Sen. Ben Sasse, R-Neb. (Kevin Dietsch/AFP via Getty Images)

Only three Republican senators other than Sasse and Romney responded to a request from Yahoo News for comment on the president’s attempt to throw out the election results, and neither one had anything critical to say.

A spokesman for Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Pa., who has said he is retiring from politics in 2022 and has at moments spoken honestly about Biden’s win, pointed to a comment by the senator earlier in the week basically stating that the Pennsylvania Legislature will not overturn the election results, and that the “will of the people of Pennsylvania” has been expressed in the vote result, which Biden won by over 80,000 votes.

And a spokesman for Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas, pointed to comments on a conference call Thursday by the Texas senator that amounted to a longer version of what McConnell has said. Essentially, the argument is that the process is playing itself out, and that all will be resolved when the Electoral College meets next month and electors formally cast their votes.

“Obviously, if you’re going to make allegations of election misconduct and fraud and inadvertent mistakes like not counting ballots, you’re going to have to have proof of that, but I don’t begrudge the president or any candidate from seeing that all lawful votes are counted and that votes that did not comply with the law are not counted. I know everybody in the press is interested in moving on. I think we need to see the process play itself out,” Cornyn said.

And a spokesman for Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith, R-Miss., pointed to a Nov. 6 statement by her and Sen. Roger Wicker, R-Miss., which defended the president. “Americans should have confidence in our voting system and that all ballots have been submitted correctly and legally. This is precisely what President Trump and his legal team are seeking,” they said.

Cornyn compared the 2020 election to the 2000 election. When Yahoo News asked how he could compare the two when there was no election call in 2000 and a court battle played itself out over 547 votes in one state — whereas this year Biden won Pennsylvania by more than 80,000 votes, Michigan by nearly 160,000 votes and Georgia, Wisconsin, Arizona and Nevada by between 11,000 and 34,000 votes each — Cornyn’s spokesman did not respond.

How Steve Bannon and a Chinese Billionaire Created a Right-Wing Coronavirus Media Sensation

 

Amy Qin, Vivian Wang and Danny Hakim
·15 min read
NEW YORK, NY - AUGUST 20: Former White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon exits the Manhattan Federal Court on August 20, 2020 in the Manhattan borough of New York City. Bannon and three other defendants have been indicted for allegedly defrauding donors in a $25 million border wall fundraising campaign. (Photo by Stephanie Keith/Getty Images)
NEW YORK, NY - AUGUST 20: Former White House Chief Strategist Steve Bannon exits the Manhattan Federal Court on August 20, 2020 in the Manhattan borough of New York City. Bannon and three other defendants have been indicted for allegedly defrauding donors in a $25 million border wall fundraising campaign. (Photo by Stephanie Keith/Getty Images)

Dr. Li-Meng Yan wanted to remain anonymous. It was mid-January, and Yan, a researcher in Hong Kong, had been hearing rumors about a dangerous new virus in mainland China that the government was playing down. Terrified for her personal safety and career, she reached out to her favorite Chinese YouTube host, known for criticizing the Chinese government.

Within days, the host was telling his 100,000 followers that the coronavirus had been deliberately released by the Chinese Communist Party. He wouldn’t name the whistleblower, he said, because officials could make the person “disappear.”

By September, Yan had abandoned caution. She appeared in the United States on Fox News, making the unsubstantiated claim to millions that the coronavirus was a bioweapon manufactured by China.

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Overnight, Yan became a right-wing media sensation, with top advisers to President Donald Trump and conservative pundits hailing her as a hero. Nearly as quickly, her interview was labeled on social media as containing “false information,” while scientists rejected her research as a polemic dressed up in jargon.

Her evolution was the product of a collaboration between two separate but increasingly allied groups that peddle misinformation: a small but active corner of the Chinese diaspora and the highly influential far right in the United States.

Each saw an opportunity in the pandemic to push its agenda. For the diaspora, Yan and her unfounded claims provided a cudgel for those intent on bringing down China’s government. For American conservatives, they played to rising anti-Chinese sentiment and distracted from the Trump administration’s bungled handling of the outbreak.

Both sides took advantage of the dearth of information coming out of China, where the government has refused to share samples of the virus and has resisted a transparent, independent investigation. Its initial cover-up of the outbreak has further fueled suspicion about the origins of the virus.

An overwhelming body of evidence shows that the virus almost certainly originated in an animal, most likely a bat, before evolving to make the leap into humans. While U.S. intelligence agencies have not ruled out the possibility of a lab leak, they have not found any proof to back up that theory.

Yan’s trajectory was carefully crafted by Guo Wengui, a fugitive Chinese billionaire, and Steve Bannon, a former adviser to Trump.

They put Yan on a plane to the United States, gave her a place to stay, coached her on media appearances and helped her secure interviews with popular conservative television hosts like Tucker Carlson and Lou Dobbs, who have shows on Fox. They nurtured her seemingly deep belief that the virus was genetically engineered, uncritically embracing what she provided as proof.

“I said from Day 1, there’s no conspiracies,” Bannon said in an interview. “But there are also no coincidences.”

Bannon noted that unlike Yan, he did not believe the Chinese government “purposely did this.” But he has pushed the theory about an accidental leak of risky laboratory research and has been intent on creating a debate about the new coronavirus’s origins.

“Dr. Yan is one small voice, but at least she’s a voice,” he said.

The media outlets that cater to the Chinese diaspora — a jumble of independent websites, YouTube channels and Twitter accounts with anti-Beijing leanings — have formed a fast-growing echo chamber for misinformation. With few reliable Chinese-language news sources to fact-check them, rumors can quickly harden into a distorted reality. Increasingly, they are feeding and being fed by far-right American media.

Wang Dinggang, the YouTube host contacted by Yan and a close associate of Guo, appears to have been the first to seed rumors related to Hunter Biden, a son of President-elect Joe Biden. A site owned by Guo amplified the baseless claims about Hunter Biden’s involvement in a child abuse conspiracy. They were picked up by Infowars and other fringe U.S. outlets. Bannon, Wang and Guo are now all promoting the false idea that the presidential election was rigged.

Big technology companies have started to push back, as Facebook and Twitter try to better police content. Twitter permanently banned one of Bannon’s accounts for violating its rules on glorifying violence after he suggested on his podcast that the heads of the FBI director and Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, should be put on pikes.

But such mainstream notoriety has only bolstered their anti-establishment credentials. Wang’s YouTube following has nearly doubled since January. Traffic for two of Guo’s websites soared to more than 135 million last month, up from fewer than 5 million visits last December, according to SimilarWeb, an online data provider. Many conservatives who claim Facebook and Twitter censor right-wing voices are flocking to new social media platforms such as Parler — and Yan, Wang and Guo have already joined them.

Yan, through representatives for Bannon and Guo, declined multiple requests for an interview. So did Wang, citing The New York Times’ “reputation for fake news.”

In a statement sent through a lawyer, Guo said he had only offered “encouragement” for Yan’s efforts “to stand up against the CCP mafia and tell the world the truth about COVID-19.”

“I would gladly assist others seeking to tell the world the truth,” he said.

Finding a platform

As the new year began, Wang was doing what he did best: attacking the Chinese Communist Party on YouTube. He railed against China’s crackdown on Muslims and pontificated on the U.S. trade war.

Then on Jan. 19, he suddenly shifted to the emerging outbreak in the central Chinese city of Wuhan. It was early in the crisis, before the lockdown in the city, before China had disclosed that the virus was spreading among humans, before the world was paying attention.

In an 80-minute show devoted to an unnamed whistleblower, Wang said that he had heard from “the world’s absolute top coronavirus expert,” who had told him China was not being transparent. “I think this is very believable and very scary,” he said.

Wang, who was a businessman in China before moving to the United States for unknown reasons, is part of a growing group of commentators who have emerged on the Chinese-language internet. Their shows, which mix punditry, serious analysis and outright rumor, cater to a diaspora that often does not trust Chinese state media and has few reliable sources of news in its native language.

Since starting his program several years ago, Wang, who broadcasts under the name Lu De, has emerged as one of the genre’s most popular personalities, in part for his embrace of outlandish theories. He has accused Chinese officials of using “sex and seduction” to entrap enemies, and urged his audience to hoard food in preparation for the Communist Party’s collapse.

His January show on the unnamed whistleblower combined the same elements of fact and fiction. He called his source, later revealed to be Yan, an expert but greatly exaggerated her credentials.

She had studied influenza before the outbreak but not coronaviruses. She did work at one of the world’s top virology labs, at the University of Hong Kong, but was fairly new to the field and hired for her experience with lab animals, according to two university employees who knew her. She helped investigate the new outbreak but was not overseeing the effort.

The episode caught the attention of Bannon, who said he started worrying about the virus when China began locking down. Someone, he didn’t say who, pointed out the show and translated it.

A few months later, Wang suddenly told Yan to flee Hong Kong for her safety, he explained in later broadcasts. Guo, his primary patron, paid for her to fly first class, he added.

On April 28, Yan quietly left for the airport. Her family and friends panicked but could not reach her, said Jean-Marc Cavaillon, a retired professor of immunology at the Pasteur Institute in Paris who has known Yan since 2017. A missing persons report was filed in Hong Kong.

Two weeks later, she resurfaced in the United States.

“I’m currently in New York, very safe and relaxed” with the “best bodyguards and lawyers,” Yan wrote on WeChat, in a screenshot seen by The Times. “What I’m doing now is helping the whole world take control of the pandemic.”

A media makeover

After Yan arrived in the United States, Bannon, Guo and their allies immediately set out to package her as a whistleblower they could sell to the American public.

They installed her in a “safe house” outside of New York City and hired lawyers, Bannon said. They found her a media coach, since English is not her first language. Bannon also asked her to submit multiple papers summarizing her purported evidence, Yan later said.

“Make sure you can walk people through this logically,” Bannon recalled telling her.

Bannon and Guo have been on a mission for years to, as they put it, bring down the Chinese Communist Party.

Guo, who also goes by Miles Kwok, was a property magnate in China with ties to senior party officials until he fled the country about five years ago under the shadow of corruption allegations. He has since styled himself as a freedom fighter, although many are skeptical of his motivations.

Bannon, who patrolled the South China Sea as a young naval officer, has long focused much of his energy on China. During his time in the White House, he counseled Trump to take a tough approach toward the country, which he has described as “the greatest existential threat ever faced by the United States.”

Guo’s deep pockets and Bannon’s extensive network have given them an influential platform. The two men set up a $100 million fund to investigate corruption in China. They spread conspiracy theories about the accidental death of a Chinese tycoon in France, calling it a fake suicide orchestrated by Beijing.

By late January, they were both acutely focused on the outbreak in China.

Bannon pivoted his podcast to the coronavirus. He was calling it “the CCP virus” long before Trump started using xenophobic labels for the pandemic. He invited fierce critics of China to the show to discuss how the outbreak exemplified the global threat posed by the Chinese Communist Party.

Guo began claiming that the virus was an attack ordered by China’s vice president. He circulated the same claims on his media operation, which includes GTV, a video platform, and GNews, a site that features glowing coverage of Guo and his associates. He released a song called “Take Down the CCP,” which briefly hit No. 1 worldwide on the Apple iTunes chart.

The men have continued to target the Chinese government even as they battle their own legal woes. Guo is reportedly under investigation by U.S. federal authorities over fundraising tactics at his media company. Bannon, who was arrested this summer on Guo’s yacht, is facing fraud charges for a nonprofit he helped set up to build a wall along the Mexican border.

In Yan, the two men found an ideal face for their campaign.

On July 10, she revealed her identity for the first time in a 13-minute interview on the Fox News website. She said that the Chinese government had concealed evidence of human-to-human transmission of the virus. She accused, without proof, professors at the University of Hong Kong of assisting in the cover-up. (The university quickly rejected her accusations as “hearsay.”)

“The reason I came to the U.S. is because I deliver the message of the truth of COVID-19,” she said.

She made no mention of Guo or Bannon, by design.

“Don’t link yourself to Bannon, don’t link yourself to Guo Wengui,” Guo on his own show recounted telling Yan. “Once you mention us, those American extreme leftists will attack and say you have a political agenda.”

After the first Fox interview, Yan embarked on a whirlwind tour of right-wing media, echoing conservative talking points. She said that she took hydroxychloroquine to ward off the virus, even though the FDA had warned that it was not effective. She suggested that the World Health Organization helped cover up the outbreak.

Those interviews were amplified by social media accounts proclaiming allegiance to Guo. They translated her appearances into Chinese, then posted multiple versions on YouTube and retweeted posts by other pro-Guo accounts.

Some of the accounts have tens of thousands of followers — of a dubious nature. Many have multiple indicators of so-called inauthentic behavior, according to an analysis by First Draft, a nonprofit that studies misinformation. The analysis found that they were created in the past two years, lacked background photos and had usernames that were jumbles of letters and numbers.

Collectively, the followers created online momentum for the conservative media world, which in turn reenergized the pro-Guo accounts. “The two are filtering and feeding off of each other,” said Anne Kruger, First Draft’s Asia Pacific director.

Going mainstream

In early September, Yan met with Dr. Daniel Lucey, an infectious disease expert at Georgetown University who had floated the possibility that the virus was the product of a laboratory experiment. Lucey said Yan’s associates, who set up the meeting, wanted to find a credible scientist to endorse her claims. “That was the only reason for bringing me there,” he said.

For more than four hours, Yan discussed her background and research, while one of her associates, whom Lucey declined to name, impatiently walked in and out of the room. He said that Yan appeared to genuinely believe that the virus had been weaponized but struggled to explain why.

At the end, the associate asked Lucey if he thought Yan had a “smoking gun.” When Lucey said no, the meeting quickly ended.

Days later, Yan released a 26-page research paper that she said proved the virus was manufactured. It spread rapidly online.

The paper, which was not peer-reviewed or published in a scientific journal, was posted on an online open-access repository. It was backed by two nonprofits funded by Guo. The three other co-authors on the paper were pseudonyms for safety reasons, according to Bannon.

Virologists quickly dismissed the paper as “pseudoscience” and “based on conjecture.” Some worried that the paper — laden with charts and scientific jargon, such as “unique furin cleavage site” and “RBM-hACE2 binding” — would lend her claims a veneer of credibility.

“It’s full of science-y sorts of terms that are jumbled together to sound impressive but aren’t supported,” said Gigi Kwik Gronvall, an immunologist at Johns Hopkins University who was among several authors of a rebuttal to Yan’s report.

Other misinformation about the pandemic has also emphasized supposed expertise. In the spring, a 26-minute video that went viral featured a discredited American scientist accusing hospitals of inflating virus-related deaths. A July video showed people in white coats, calling themselves “America’s doctors” and suggesting that masks were ineffective; the video was removed by social media platforms for sharing false information.

On Sept. 15, a day after her report was published, Yan secured her biggest stage yet: an appearance with Tucker Carlson on Fox News. Carlson’s popular show has frequently served as an influential megaphone for the right.

Carlson asked if Yan believed Chinese officials had released the virus intentionally or by accident. Yan did not hesitate.

“Of course intentionally,” she said.

The clip went viral.

Footage of their interview racked up at least 8.8 million views online, even though Facebook and Instagram flagged it as false information. High-profile conservatives, including Sen. Marsha Blackburn, R-Tenn., shared it on Twitter. When the Rev. Franklin Graham, the evangelist supporter of Trump, posted about Yan on Facebook, it became the most-shared link posted by a U.S.-based Facebook account that day.

Lou Dobbs, another Fox host, tweeted a video of himself and a guest discussing Yan’s “great case.” Trump retweeted it.

Yan was welcomed by an audience already primed to hear her claims. A March poll found that nearly 30% of Americans believed the virus was most likely made in a lab.

“Once Tucker Carlson picks it up, it’s not fringe anymore,” said Yotam Ophir, a professor at the University at Buffalo who studies disinformation. “It’s now mainstream.”

Fox News declined to comment.

Weeks later, Carlson said on his show that he could not endorse Yan’s theories. Regardless, he welcomed her back as a guest to detail her latest claim: Her mother, she told him, had been arrested by the Chinese government.

The Chinese government often punishes critics by harassing their families. But when The Times reached Yan’s mother on her cellphone in October, she said that she had never been arrested and was desperate to connect with her daughter, whom she had not spoken to in months.

She declined to say more and asked not to be named, citing fears that Yan was being manipulated by her new allies.

“They are blocking our daughter from talking to us,” her mother said, referring to Guo and Wang. “We want our daughter to know that she can video-chat with us at any time.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

© 2020 The New York Times Company



The MAGAt Death Toll

 There's now denying it. The vast majority of COVID-19 cases and deaths are among Trump supporters AKA MAGAts. MAGAts are anti-maskers. MAGAts tend to be stupid obese smokers with bad health habits and live in rural areas with poor public health measures. If you were to infect 100 humans and 100 MAGAts with the coronavirus, 5% of the MAGAts would die and 1% of the humans would die. 

It gets better for humans because humans are moral and care about the rights and well being if others and therefore are more likely to wear masks, social distance and live healthy lifestyles whereas MAGAts care only about their own hedonistic pleasures. Anyone who would support Trump is incapable of the characteristics that would make a person human. 

Maybe if the death toll reaches 10 million in the US will the MAGAts start mimicking the behavior or humans but until then, they will continue to clog our hospitals and drop like flies.

MAGAts also tend to be anti-vaxxers so even when most humans are vaccinated, most MAGAts will still be at risk. With that being the case COVID-19 will become endemic in areas with less MAGAts doing a slow burn while in areas with large infestations of MAGAts it will remain epidemic for many years to come. Oh happy day!

Keep dying MAGAts, that really will make America great again!

Last updated: November 20, 2020, 19:38 GMT

 United States

Coronavirus Cases:

12,154,652

Deaths: 259,987 



Thursday, November 19, 2020

The War On Christmas... More Republican Bullshit

 Because the Republicans are too chicken shit to go and fight an actual war they decided to create the War on Christmas. This song is for all the FOX News-humping patrio-fascists, gun-fondling gasbags and Christianity-bastardizing thugs.





Jesus Is The Reason For The Season Jesus is the reason for the season Jesus is the reason for the season Jesus is the reason for the season And he's a Godly Republican Santa's just another name for Satan And even though Satan Claus is White He's a godless European commie Pagan Let's shoot him down tonight Santa's elves are godless little commies That is why they're always dressed in red Turning children into mindless zombies While nestled all snugly in their beds We can no longer sing our Christmas carols They've banned the nativity scene The queers are donning their gay apparel And replaced it with evil Halloween We can no longer say Merry Christmas They force us to say happy holidays Referring to Hanukkah and Kwanzaa Leading all the godly souls astray.
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