Up@dawn 2.0

Monday, March 17, 2025

Risky research

We Were Badly Misled About the Event That Changed Our Lives

Five years after the start of Covid, we still don't know the truth.

If anyone needs convincing that the next pandemic is only an accident away, check out a recent paper in Cell, a prestigious scientific journal. Researchers, many of whom work or have worked at the Wuhan Institute of Virology (yes, the same institution), describe taking samples of viruses found in bats (yes, the same animal) and experimenting to see if they could infect human cells and pose a pandemic risk.

Sounds like the kind of research that should be conducted — if at all — with the very highest safety protocols, as W. Ian Lipkin and Ralph Baric discussed in a recent guest essay. But if you scroll all the way down to Page 19 of the journal article and squint, you learn that the scientists did all this under what they call "BSL-2 plus" conditions, a designation that isn't standardized and that Baric and Lipkin say is "insufficient for work with potentially dangerous respiratory viruses." If just one lab worker unwittingly inhaled the virus and got infected, there's no telling what the impact could be on Wuhan, a city of millions, or the world.

You'd think that by now we'd have learned it's not a good idea to test possible gas leaks by lighting a match. And you'd hope that prestigious scientific journals would have learned not to reward such risky research...

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