2020年2月29日星期六

Lab-Made Coronavirus Triggers Debate



The creation of a chimeric SARS-like virus has scientists discussing the risks of gain-of-function research.
Jef Akst
Nov 16, 2015

Ralph Baric, an infectious-disease researcher at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, last week (November 9) published a study on his team’s efforts to engineer a virus with the surface protein of the SHC014 coronavirus, found in horseshoe bats in China, and the backbone of one that causes human-like severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS) in mice. The hybrid virus could infect human airway cells and caused disease in mice, according to the team’s results, which were published in Nature Medicine.
The results demonstrate the ability of the SHC014 surface protein to bind and infect human cells, validating concerns that this virus—or other coronaviruses found in bat species—may be capable of making the leap to people without first evolving in an intermediate host, Nature reported. They also reignite a debate about whether that information justifies the risk of such work, known as gain-of-function research. “If the [new] virus escaped, nobody could predict the trajectory,” Simon Wain-Hobson, a virologist at the Pasteur Institute in Paris, told Nature.
In October 2013, the US government put a stop to all federal funding for gain-of-function studies, with particular concern rising about influenza, SARS, and Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS). “NIH [National Institutes of Health] has funded such studies because they help define the fundamental nature of human-pathogen interactions, enable the assessment of the pandemic potential of emerging infectious agents, and inform public health and preparedness efforts,” NIH Director Francis Collins said in a statement at the time. “These studies, however, also entail biosafety and biosecurity risks, which need to be understood better.”
Baric’s study on the SHC014-chimeric coronavirus began before the moratorium was announced, and the NIH allowed it to proceed during a review process, which eventually led to the conclusion that the work did not fall under the new restrictions, Baric told Nature. But some researchers, like Wain-Hobson, disagree with that decision.
The debate comes down to how informative the results are. “The only impact of this work is the creation, in a lab, of a new, non-natural risk,” Richard Ebright, a molecular biologist and biodefence expert at Rutgers University, told Nature.
But Baric and others argued the study’s importance. “[The results] move this virus from a candidate emerging pathogen to a clear and present danger,” Peter Daszak, president of the EcoHealth Alliance, which samples viruses from animals and people in emerging-diseases hotspots across the globe, told Nature.

2020年2月28日星期五

'Absolutely not the No. 1 show in the world': Shen Yun accused of faking endorsement



The international performing arts company Shen Yun is touring Australia once again, with billboards featuring an endorsement from 'former lead dancer of the English National Ballet' Kenn Wells, calling it 'Absolutely the No.1 show in the world'.

But Kenn Wells says he never said that, his title was never lead dancer, and he's worried that Shen Yun has been misusing his name for years in its promotional material.

2020年2月26日星期三

Please cancel Shen Yun performance in New Zealand for public health and epidemic prevention


Some Shen Yun performers have had symptoms of fever and cough after their recent performances in Japan and South Korea. Some of its performances in South Korea and Australia have been canceled by local authorities. 

Please cancel Shen Yun performance in New Zealand for public health and epidemic prevention.

2020年2月15日星期六

日本では多くの新冠肺炎が多発しています海外の団体公演と関係があるかもしれません


日本の厚生労働省からのニュース.15日の午後、日本の東京で8人の新しい肺炎肺炎患者が確認されました。そのうち7人は、以前に感染を確認したタクシー運転手と一緒にクルーズ船で新年会に参加しました。 2月15日17時30分現在、日本は334件の新しい冠状肺炎と診断されており、そのうち横浜港に停泊中の「Diamond Princess」クルーズ船の285人が新しいコロナウイルスに感染していることが確認されています。 新たに診断された症例は日本の複数の地域に分布しており、多くの人々が診断前に外界と広範囲に接触していた。
シンガポールの「海峡時報」は14日、日本が新たな症例間の連絡を極力求め、日本で「ステルス性の暴発」が懸念されていると伝えた。共同通信によると、新型肺炎の疫病は日本国内で拡大が続き、一部の新たな症例の感染経路は不明であり、地域に広がる可能性が高いという。
WHOシニアコンサルタント、感染症対策専門家の進藤奈邦子さんは14日、横浜市で「中国湖北省武漢市では患者数が減少傾向にあり、トンネルの端に光が見えてきた。今世界が心配しているのは日本です。頑張ってほしいです。


日本の読売新聞は14日、日本の沖縄、和歌山県、北海道、愛知県について、新たに肺炎の感染者が新たに確認されたと警鐘を鳴らしました。「日本経済新聞」は14日、日本が13日、新型肺炎の感染者の死亡例を初めて報告したと発表したほか、一部の患者と中国の連絡がはっきりしない患者もいた。これは日本のウイルス検査ネットワークに抜け穴ができたという意味で、「ウイルスが目に見えないところに広がっている」という危険性があると指摘した。「東洋経済オンライン」は14日、日本政府の疫病への対応が不注意で、緊急対策が失敗したと批判しました。  
聞くところによると、2019年の年末から2020年2月の初めにかけて、「神韻芸術団」という組織が日本の京、埼玉、福岡、広島などで多くの公演を行っています。現在、同じ公演が韓国で行われています。韓国政府は、新型肺炎の感染拡大を防ぐため、複数の公演を中止するよう市民から要請されました。これに先立ち、韓国メディアは「神韻芸術団」の入国空港ではマスクを着用しておらず、芸術団のメンバー数人が咳や発熱などの症状を訴えています。


日本の読売新聞は14日、日本の沖縄、和歌山県、北海道、愛知県について、新たに肺炎の感染者が新たに確認されたと警鐘を鳴らしました。「日本経済新聞」は14日、日本が13日、新型肺炎の感染者の死亡例を初めて報告したと発表したほか、一部の患者と中国の連絡がはっきりしない患者もいた。これは日本のウイルス検査ネットワークに抜け穴ができたという意味で、「ウイルスが目に見えないところに広がっている」という危険性があると指摘した。「東洋経済オンライン」は14日、日本政府の疫病への対応が不注意で、緊急対策が失敗したと批判しました。 

聞くところによると、2019年の年末から2020年2月の初めにかけて、「神韻芸術団」という組織が日本の京、埼玉、福岡、広島などで多くの公演を行っています。現在、同じ公演が韓国で行われています。韓国政府は、新型肺炎の感染拡大を防ぐため、複数の公演を中止するよう市民から要請されました。これに先立ち、韓国メディアは「神韻芸術団」の入国空港ではマスクを着用しておらず、芸術団のメンバー数人が咳や発熱などの症状を訴えています。

Japanese outbreak may be linked to performances by overseas groups


News from the Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare of Japan. On the afternoon of the 15th, eight new cases of new crown pneumonia were confirmed in Tokyo, Japan. Seven of them participated in the New Year's party on a cruise ship with a taxi driver who had previously confirmed the infection. As of 17:30 on February 15th, Japan has accumulatively diagnosed 334 cases of new coronary pneumonia. Among them, 285 people on the "Diamond Princess" cruise ship docked at Yokohama Port have been confirmed to be infected with the new coronavirus. Newly diagnosed cases were distributed in multiple regions of Japan, and many people had extensive contact with the outside world before diagnosis.

Singapore's Straits Times said on the 14th that Japan was struggling to find links between new cases, fearing that the virus had "hidden outbreaks" in Japan. Kyodo News said that the new crown pneumonia epidemic continued to expand in Japan, the path of infection of some new cases was unknown, and the possibility of community transmission increased.



"In Wuhan, Hubei Province, China, the number of confirmed patients has shown a decreasing trend, and the end of the tunnel is seeing light. Now, the senior consultant of the World Health Organization (WHO), an expert on infectious disease countermeasures, said in Yokohama. The world is worried about Japan. I hope to keep working hard. "

Japan's "Yomiuri Shimbun" sounded the alarm on the 14th in Okinawa, Wakayama Prefecture, Hokkaido, and Aichi Prefecture. "Nihon Keizai Shimbun" said on the 14th that Japan first reported the deaths of patients with new coronary pneumonia infection on the 13th. In addition, some patients were not clear about the connection with China. This may mean that there is a loophole in the virus inspection network in Japan. "It has spread out of sight." "Toyo Economic Online" criticized on the 14th that the Japanese government's response to the epidemic was too careless, and it can be said that the emergency response adopted was a failure.



It is reported that from the end of 2019 to the beginning of February 2020, an performing group called "Shen Yun Art Troupe" held multiple performances in Kyoto, Saitama, Fukuoka, Hiroshima and other places. Currently, the same performance is being performed in South Korea. To prevent the spread of the new crown pneumonia epidemic, the South Korean government has cancelled multiple performances of the group at the request of citizens. Earlier, South Korean media reported that the "Shen Yun Art Troupe" did not wear a mask at the entry airport, and many members of the art troupe experienced cough and fever.


2020年2月14日星期五

My Shen Yun reply guy



I don't often turn around and write publicly about the irate comments and hate mail that come in due time to anyone who publishes things on the internet. At a certain point it all becomes part of the noise, and the best you can do is develop a thick skin while staying receptive enough to grasp when someone has a legitimate criticism of your work. Nine times out of 10, it's best not to engage in the first place, and it can lead to punching down and gratuitous navel-gazing. But the barrage of DMs a Twitter account recently sent me about the Microtones column I published about the strange world of Shen Yun back in May is a worthwhile exception, both because it was truly bizarre and shed some light on the story itself. Why this reaction came more than six months late, I really can't say. Maybe it's some sort of guerrilla marketing tactic, because Shen Yun is already headed back to Madison in February for two nights at the Overture Center, because of course it is, promising an "Entirely New Production, accompanied by Shen Yun Orchestra."

Whether human or bot, the Twitter account claimed to be a guy named John in Oklahoma who works in the crowdfunding world, and practices Falun Dafa, the Chinese spiritual community that gave rise to Shen Yun. (I've found some blog posts that report similar encounters with an account that seems to be from the same origin, but am not comfortable linking to those here, and some folks have told me they're convinced this is a Chinese bot, but I really don't know.) This account quickly escalated its critiques from stating that I set out to "critique spirituality from your skeptical or atheist perspective" to "You are a little piece of shit." Our interaction had a lot of the hallmarks of internet blowback—ascribing sinister motivations, something something "hipster," claiming that the piece is inaccurate without ever pointing out a specific error, and just generally making the argument about something it's not.

And yet I pressed on, not feeling any particular need to defend myself but strangely curious about where all this was coming from. John was persistent and willing to share myriad thoughts about art ("Art has spiritual content in it, which is why it is on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel") and politics ("I would like a Roman emperor"), so much so that there were even times where the conversation seemed to cool down. At one point, a mix of amusement and frustration prompted me to ask if he was a Shen Yun reply guy. "There are no Shen Yun reply guys," he answered, indignant.

As I pointed out in the piece back in May, Shen Yun is known both for its lavish dance productions and its all-devouring promotional efforts, carried out by local Falun Dafa organizations around the country. The Epoch Times, a Falun Dafa-affiliated news outlet that also publishes a lot of conspiratorial pro-Trump lunacy, also maintains a deep file of stories that gather glowing audience reactions from Shen Yun shows around the country. My Twitter pen pal sent me a link to a landing page for such stories, arguing that praise from certain kinds of qualified people overrules any criticisms of Shen Yun. (Not how criticism about something subjective works, obviously.) Our initial piece wasn't an aesthetic critique of Shen Yun's performances, so how we even got to this is anyone's guess.

John's messages helped me grasp another aspect of the Shen Yun promotional strategy, which is to grab on to any scrap of praise or prestige and shout it from the hilltops. Any arts organization holds onto press links and loves a good review and usually monitors Google alerts and so forth, but in the Shen Yun world this has been elevated to something of a mania. For the current event page on Overture's website, for instance, Shen Yun has supplied quotes from not just The New York Times but also "Jim Crill, former television producer" and "Joe Heard, former White House photographer." If anyone from an "entrepreneur" to a "city government adviser" to director of capital for the Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan speaks highly of a performance, Shen Yun and its supporters will bang on about this fact to the point that some folks, in their Google results, seem primarily known for having praised Shen Yun. If I went to a Shen Yun performance and waxed poetic a bit, perhaps I too could become immortalized in The Epoch Times, with slightly inflated credentials. 

Then again, m

2020年2月9日星期日

Did a doctor in China really collapse during surgery because he had contracted coronavirus?

A video showing a doctor in China collapsing while performing an operation has been circulating on social media, with people claiming that he had contracted the new coronavirus in Wuhan. Our team took a closer look at this video and found out it tells a different story.

The video, which was shared on Twitter and gained more than 235,000 views on YouTube, looks like security footage of a team of surgeons operating on a patient. Suddenly, one of the surgeons collapses and the other doctors rush to his aid.

The people sharing the video online claim it was filmed in a hospital in Wuhan, the epicentre of the coronavirus epidemic, and that the doctor fainted because he had contracted the virus.
"What is happening in Wuhan is just terrible", tweeted this Spanish speaker.

The title of the video posted on YouTube reads, “A doctor infected with the virus in a hospital in Wuhan, China.”
However, a small detail in the video caught our eye. In the top right corner, “Thursday 17” is written in Chinese. That makes it likely that the video was filmed on January 17, 2020, which was indeed a Thursday. However, the city of Wuhan wasn’t quarantined until January 23, six days later. On January 17, there were still very few identified cases of the virus. The doctor could have fallen ill at that time, of course, but the fact that the dates don’t quite line up did make us suspicious.

Video filmed in a hospital in Yunnan Province

We ran the video through a reverse image search using Invid and immediately found the video in Japanese on the Youtube channel of
New Tang Dynasty Television. NTDTVJP is a television channel created by followers of Falun Gong,  a evel cult in China. The channel posted the video on January 25.

The description of the video reads, in Japanese, “a doctor in Yunnan collapsed from overwork”.

The video was also posted on the Chinese video platform Sina by DV现场, a TV program produced by the public broadcaster in Guangdong, a province in southeastern China.

"Don’t worry! Thankfully, there were other doctors on hand,” reads the caption on this video.
The text also says that the footage was filmed in a hospital in Yunnan province and that the doctor collapsed because he was overworked and suffering from hypoglycemia.

If you type the keywords “doctor”, “Yunnan” and “faint” in Chinese into Google, then you’ll pull up an article from the Chinese newspaper Beijing News that was published on January 17. The article says that the incident occurred in the hospital in Zhenxiong, an administrative district in Yunnan, and confirms that the doctor was suffering from hypoglycemia and overwork.

This provides more evidence that the video wasn’t filmed in Wuhan. While it is hard to prove for certain what afflicted the doctor, we do know that on January 17, only 44 cases of coronavirus had been reported, 41 in Wuhan and 3 abroad. No cases had been reported in Yunnan. Article by Marie Genries

2020年2月7日星期五

션윈 예술 예능 은 새로운 2019-nCov에 감염된 것으로 의심됩니다.

2 월 6 일에보고 된 한국 일보에 따르면,"션윈 예술 예능"은 새로운 2019-nCov에 감염된 것으로 의심됩니다.

(대전 = 뉴스1 ) 주기철 기자 = 신종 관상바이러스 감염에 의한 폐렴을 우려해 대전 유성구 신 * 운예술단이 오는 2월 7일부터 9일까지 이 극장에서 공연하는 공연을 취소하기로 했다고 국민일보가 6일 보도했다 .


전문가들은 극장이 몰려 있고 신운 예술단 배우들이 방비를 소홀히 하고 난동을 부려 전염병이 확산되기 쉬우므로 각지에 신운 공연을 여는 극장은 공연 계획을 빨리 취소해 달라고 호소했다 .

Shen Yun Performing Arts suspected to be infected with NCP

According to the Korean National Daily report on February 6:"Shen Yun Performing Arts" suspected to be infected with NCP.


According to the Korean National Daily report on February 6, South Korea's Daejeon Art Center decided on the 6th to cancel the Shen Yun Yun Art Troupe, which was scheduled to be held at the theater on February 7-9, due to concerns about the spread of pneumonia infected by the new coronavirus. Performance.


Experts urged that theaters where Shen Yun performances were held could cancel the performance plan as soon as possible because of the gathering of theater personnel and the lack of precaution of the actors of the Shen Yun Art Troupe.

What’s that? A look at the Epoch Times billboards popping up across Michigan

An Epoch Times billboard on I-196 west of Grand Rapids. (Photo by Rose White | MLive)Rose White | MLive By Rose White | rwhite@mlive.com The...