Editors of the JG, like most MSM lemmings, lack self-awareness. A case in point is the JG’s April 7, 2020
editorial “Unworthy effort”.
While the JG allows all manner falsehoods, innuendos,
malicious lies and just plain stupidity to permeate their editorial page, JG
editors have the nerve to criticize Rep. Banks for telling the truth about the
Chinese virus.
The JG editors, who make a living with words, require
369 words to explain why Banks’ 25 word retweet is an unworthy effort. In that 369 word opinion piece JG editors falsely
accuses the Washington Times’ and by extension Rep. Banks of alleging that
China “deliberately created
or spread this fearsome virus.” No such allegation was ever made. The JG editors made that fake news up out of
whole cloth.
The JG should have done a ten minute internet search
on the subject contained in the retweet.
It’s not just Banks, the Washington Times, and an Israeli biological warfare
expert making the allegation that the Chinese Virus might have escaped from a
Chinese lab near Wuhan. A Chinese research paper suggests the EXACT same thing – that it’s likely the virus was
accidentally released from one of two nearby labs.
The only allegation contained in the tweet was that the virus
“may have originated in a Wuhan laboratory linked to China’s biological weapons
program.” There’s not a hint in the
tweet or the link contained therein that the Chinese deliberately released the
virus as the JG’s bogus opinion piece suggests.
Honest people caught in such an unworthy effort to smear Rep.
Banks would admit their error, apologize for their monumental screw up, fire
the people involved and print a front page retraction.
·
“The #coronavirus spreading globally may have originated in a
Wuhan laboratory linked to China’s covert biological weapons program, according
to an Israeli biological warfare expert.” https://washingtontimes.com/news/2020/jan/24/virus-hit-wuhan-has-two-laboratories-linked-chines/
Tuesday, April 07, 2020 1:00 am
Editorial
Unworthy
effort
Trafficking in conspiracy theory
detracts from Banks' work for his constituents
Conspiracy theories
are not always false. But it is irresponsible for elected officials to peddle
those theories without compelling evidence. It is especially unwise during
times such as these, as Americans look to their leaders for reliable
information about the pandemic.
Regrettably, U.S. Rep.
Jim Banks, R-3rd, chose to relay speculation that the coronavirus now sickening
and killing Americans by the thousands may have originated in biological
warfare labs in Wuhan, China.
As The Journal
Gazette's Brian Francisco reported Sunday, Banks used a Jan. 27 tweet to link
to a story in the Washington Examiner on the allegation. That story, Francisco
wrote, “quoted a former Israeli military intelligence officer as saying that
virus research laboratories in Wuhan, China, where the virus is believed to
have started, 'have probably been engaged' in covert biological weapons research
and development.”
In an interview last
week with The Daily Caller, a conservative internet site, Banks said that tweet
was an attempt to draw the attention of Congress and the administration to the
coming pandemic. Indeed, Banks was calling for a harder line against China long
before anyone became aware of the coronavirus threat.
But though the virus
did originate in China and there appear to be serious questions about how
forthcoming officials there were about the problem, so far there is no evidence
that anyone deliberately created or spread this fearsome virus, just as there
is nothing to support the inference being peddled by some in China that the
U.S. military developed and introduced the disease.
Writing in The New
Yorker, Elizabeth Colbert noted that throughout history victims have often
placed the blame for epidemics and pandemics on “outsiders.” This is not only
misleading but dangerous; as Francisco noted, Asian-Americans have in some
instances been harassed as fear about coronavirus has spread.
Like other officials
at all levels of government, Banks must be especially cautious about
encouraging or spreading unfounded accusations. Trust and credibility are
precious commodities at such a time. Let others trade conspiracy theories on
the internet; Banks should be focused on helping his constituents in northeast
Indiana deal with the health, economic and social consequences of the COVID-19
crisis.
1 comment:
The Wash Times publishes a report by an expert in bio warfare. Rep Banks tweets it. And JG editors jump on Rep Banks rather than the bio expert or The Wash Times. And why?
First of all The JG does not like Rep Banks. And second, The JG editor is willing to stretch the bio expert report in the Wash Times like a state fair taffy machine to criticize and warn Rep Banks that Asian Americans might be blamed. Lex is right. The JG just made this stuff up. The JG should know you can't trust newspapers.
Post a Comment