It seems that those who are trying to shed some light on the coronavirus outbreak are getting considerable flack - including myself (I had a video rejected on You Tube on very spurious grounds.
Listen to Hal Turner:
Listen to Hal Turner:
And then there is this;
Zerohedge
Suspended On
Twitter
31
January, 2020
First
it was Facebook,
then all of New
Zealand;
now Twitter has decided to suspend Zero Hedge.
Just
as in the prior bans, which were eventually overturned, so in this
case it is unclear what prompted Twitter's abrupt censorship: the
only notification we received from twitter was the following:
It
is news to us that this website has "engaged
in the targeted harassment of someone." What
appears to have happened is that twitter received a complaint from
the website best known for making cat slideshows, Buzzfeed, in which
someone called Ryan Broderick writes
that Zero Hedge "has
released the personal information of a scientist from Wuhan, China,
falsely accusing them of creating the coronavirus as a bioweapon, in
a plot it said is the real-life version of the video game Resident
Evil."
A few points: the article referenced by Buzz Feed, "Is This TheMan Behind The Global Coronavirus Pandemic?", is as the title implies, a question, and one which considering the huge significance and life or death import of the Coronavirus pandemic, has to be answered, especially since even the establishment's Foreign Policy magazine writes bat soup, which is widely being cited and circulated by the mainstream press as the cause of the coronavirus breakout, is not the cause of the Wuhan virus. The widely read website Health.com also chimes in: "No, Coronavirus Was Not Caused by 'Bat Soup'". Meanwhile, Business Insider writes "Experts think the Wuhancoronavirus jumped from bats to snakes to people. Bats have been the source of at least 4 pandemics."
So
did we have a right to ask the question if there is an alternative
version for the emergence of the Coronavirus pandemic, especially
with hundreds if not thousands of lives at stake? Absolutely.
Meanwhile,
those who wonder if Dr. Zhou has any link to the possible emergence
of the Coronavirus following years of experimenting with bats, we
urge you to read our
full article instead
of relying on the hearsay of ideologically biased journalists.
Second,
and contrary to the claims presented by Buzzfeed, we did not release
any "personal
information":
Peng Zhou (周鹏)
is a public figure, and all the contact information that we presented
was pulled from his publicly
posted bio found
on a website at the Wuhan Institute of Virology which anyone with
access to the internet can pull from the following
URL: http://sourcedb.whiov.cas.cn/zw/rck/201705/t20170505_4783973.html,
which is also the information we used.
So about Buzzfeed's allegation, which was adopted by Twitter, that somehow we incited "targeted abuse", here is what we said:
Something tells us, if anyone wants to find out what really caused the coronavirus pandemic that has infected thousands of people in China and around the globe, they should probably pay Dr. Peng a visit.
"Or at least start with an email: Dr Peng can be reached at peng.zhou@wh.iov.cn, and his phone# is 87197311"
Are
we then to understand that we have now reached a point the mere
gathering of information, which our colleagues in the media may want
to eventually do as thousands of people are afflicted daily by the
Coronavirus, is now synonymous with "abuse and harassment"?
According to Twitter, and certainly our competitors in the media, the
answer is yes.
In
any case, we have emailed Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey, who incidentally
happens to follow zerohedge...
... for the answer. If we get one, we will promptly share it with our readers. We aren't holding our breath, however, as we realize how important it is to today's media giants not to ruffle too many Chinese feathers or lack losing access to the Chinese market. After all, who can forget the following report from the New York Times about another of our media competitors that several years ago was itself engaged in "doxing" us (yet oddly wasn't suspended by Twitter):
The chairman of Bloomberg L.P. said in a speech here on Thursday that the company should have reconsidered articles that deviated from its core of coverage of business news, because they jeopardized the huge sales potential for its products in the Chinese market.
The comments by the chairman, Peter T. Grauer, represented the starkest acknowledgment yet by a senior Bloomberg executive that the ambitions of the news division should be assessed in the context of the business operation, which provides the bulk of the company’s revenue. They also signaled which of those considerations might get priority.
Acknowledging the vast size of the Chinese economy, the world’s second-biggest after that of the United States, Mr. Grauer, said, “We have to be there.”
“We have about 50 journalists in the market, primarily writing stories about the local business and economic environment,” Mr. Grauer said in response to questions after a speech at the Asia Society. “You’re all aware that every once in a while we wander a little bit away from that and write stories that we probably may have kind of rethought — should have rethought.”
Bloomberg, the financial data and news company, relies on sales of its terminals, which are ubiquitous on bankers’ desks around the world, for about 82 percent of its $8.5 billion in revenue. But sales of those terminals in China declined after the company published an article in June 2012 on the family wealth of Xi Jinping, at that time the incoming Communist Party chief. After its publication, officials ordered state enterprises not to subscribe to the service. Mr. Grauer did not specifically mention the article about Mr. Xi or any other articles.
“Being in China is very much a part of our long-term strategy and will continue to be so going forward,” Mr. Grauer said. “It occupies a lot of our thinking — Dan Doctoroff, our C.E.O.; me; Mike; and other members of our senior team.”
Some current and former Bloomberg journalists, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said they had hoped the controversy surrounding Bloomberg’s China reporting would prompt the company to reaffirm its support for investigative efforts. Mr. Grauer’s comments were met with dismay, particularly because he is regarded as close to Mr. Bloomberg and would be unlikely to voice views that were not broadly accepted at the top of the company.
Unlike
Bloomberg, or anyone else in the mainstream media, we don't plan on
"rethinking" any of our articles just to curry favor with
the powerful and we certainly will continue our own "investigative
efforts", even if it means we lose some of our inbound traffic.
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