A British official who sprayed acid water to celebrate New Year in Wuhan was crushed and killed by British scholars

Yesterday, the scenes of people celebrating the arrival of the New Year in Wuhan attracted the attention and admiration of many Westerners still struggling with the epidemic.

But there are also some people with a distorted mindset who are jealous or even hostile towards Wuhan.

Among them, a noted British author and Internet public figure who had repeatedly described novel Coronavirus as “made in China” posted on her personal social media account “how Did Wuhan do it without vaccination”.

But not only has her post been the butt of some decent British Internet users, it has also been the butt of a British academic’s tirade.

Alison Pearson, a well-known British author and Internet celebrity, is “furious” that Wuhan people are celebrating the New Year.

As the following image shows, the novel Coronavirus, a British conservative who once referred to China as “made in China” and asked China to take responsibility for the virus, wrote in a bizarre post yesterday: “How did Wuhan do it without vaccine?”

Photo is of Alison Pearson in Wuhan

In late March this year, she announced that novel Coronavirus was “Made in China”.

However, her defiance of Wuhan drew a collective rebuke from many decent British netizens. For example, the following two messages with 438 and 654 thumb up respectively indicate that the Chinese government is capable, the people are very cooperative, the virus detection is in place, the case tracking is timely, and everyone is wearing masks and quartering at home.

British Internet users in these dozen face Pearson, a British scholar named Sam bowman criticism of her most, because he will Pearson in the past few months continuously published in the British media error prevention arguments list out, in turn to tell her why China’s epidemic prevention succeeded in Britain is not.

In each of his nine posts, shown below, Bowman writes:

  1. “Allison Pearson asked a great question! What did those people in China and Wuhan do to bring them back to normal?”
  2. “They’re not trying to get them to go to college and infect young kids, as you called for earlier.”

Note: Bowman’s post is accompanied by Pearson’s previous article in the Conservative Telegraph calling for every young student in the UK to be infected with the virus to create “herd immunity”

  1. “They did not treat a Coronavirus as a ‘lie’ nor were they fooled by someone like you who claimed that the virus was exaggerated”.

Note: Bowman posted here with the caption that Pearson had previously written in the Telegraph that novel Coronavirus was exaggerated

  1. “They did not lift the quarantine blockade as you called for.”

Note: Bowman has posted a picture of Pearson’s earlier call in the Telegraph for the lifting of the UK’s lockdown, saying it was the only way to beat the epidemic

  1. “They didn’t mislead people, as you did, by saying that not visiting your grandmother would kill her more than visiting her.”

Note: Bowman has posted the accompanying picture from Pearson’s previous article in the Telegraph urging people to stick to visiting family and friends during the epidemic, saying that only visiting family members could save their lives

  1. “They don’t have to worry about being looked down upon, or refuse to wear a mask, as you do.”

Note: Bowman has posted a picture of Pearson, who wrote in the Telegraph that she refused to wear a mask because of the stigma attached to it

  1. “Unlike the novel Coronavirus that you declared in June this year ‘novel Coronavirus’ exists only in hospitals and old people’s homes’, you wrote that you no longer need to segregate travelers or keep a social distance in bars.”

Note: Novel Coronavirus is only available in hospitals and homes for the elderly and should no longer be restricted to the public

  1. “Nor have they listened to the April fallacy of a person like you that unemployment is’ more risky than a novel Coronavirus. ‘”

Note: Bowman has posted a picture of Pearson’s earlier article in the Telegraph claiming that a strict response to the epidemic and lockdown measures would cost 6.5 million jobs, saying the risk was greater than the epidemic

  1. “So, Alison Pearson, what has China done? Blockades, school closures, travel bans, mass testing, case tracing and masks. And these are all the things you’ve been fighting against in turn this year. Thank you.”

So far, bowman’s critique of Pearson, which can be described as a “killer” refute, has won many British Internet users thumb up, saying that his criticism of Pearson hit the nail on the head and summed it up very well.

Another wrote in bowman’s post that “A Chinese person should not have to deal with a novel Coronavirus that describes a request for epidemic prevention as a violation of their personal freedom. Then he began to write a joke comparing it to a British person in World War II”.

But Pearson, with a swollen face, still refused to admit she was wrong and continued to quip through her supporter:

“Pearson just didn’t want to be attacked like this by Bowman in a totalitarian regime and police state where no one dared question public power and everyone was locked in their homes for months. And there is no evidence that it saves lives. So how did Bowman get it right?”

‘She’s so stupid,’ said one British Internet user.