Half a million dead in the U.S. Will $200 million from the Biden administration get the truth about the epidemic?

The United States is currently the country most severely affected by the new crown Epidemic, with a cumulative total of more than 28 million confirmed cases and nearly half a million deaths reported by U.S. authorities to date, according to Johns Hopkins University (Johns Hopkins University) epidemic data. Of these, nearly 100,000 have died in the last month. Despite increased government efforts to vaccinate, models cited by the University of Washington predict that by June 1, the U.S. death toll will exceed 589,000. U.S. President Joe Biden held a moment of silence and candlelight vigil at the White House on Monday (Feb. 22) in memory of those who died from the epidemic.

Former U.S. President Donald Trump announced in July last year that he would suspend funding to the WHO because of his dissatisfaction with the organization’s failure to hold China accountable for the new coronavirus, and notified the United Nations to withdraw from the WHO. The Biden Administration signed an executive order to rejoin the WHO on the day it took office, and the U.S. Secretary of State subsequently announced that more than $200 million would be paid to the WHO by the end of February. Injustice has a head, the debt has a master, Biden’s U.S. paid the money, but may not only see the possibility of recourse to China on the issue of the new coronavirus, even the WHO experts on the findings of Wuhan, but also by international public opinion heavy questioning. It would also be predictable if more than $200 million had gone down the drain.

According to information gathered by WHO investigators during a four-week retrospective mission to China, many of the 174 cases had no known connection to the market initially thought to be the source of the outbreak. Panel members said the Chinese government did not provide the panel with raw data on these cases and earlier potential cases. New evidence suggests the new coronavirus may have spread in China before the first confirmed case was found, according to a 22nd Wall Street Journal report. Chinese authorities identified 174 confirmed cases in the Wuhan area from December 2019, which is enough to suggest that the number of mild, asymptomatic or otherwise undetected cases is much higher than previously thought, WHO researchers said.

From what we can see, there are increasing questions about the WHO-led international expert team’s Wuhan trip to investigate the source of the 2019 coronavirus disease outbreak. Even U.S. national security adviser Jake Sullivan (Jake Sullivan) said in a slightly disgruntled interview that China has not provided enough raw data to explain how the outbreak spread in China and around the world. We need a credible, open and transparent international investigation led by the World health Organization,” Sullivan said on the CBS political program “Face the Nation. They are about to produce a report on the source of the outbreak in Wuhan, China.” “But we have doubts because we don’t think China is providing enough raw data that would explain how the outbreak spread in China and around the world. And we think that the WHO and China should work harder on this.”

When the moderator asked U.S. President Joe Biden if he specifically asked China to provide the data when he spoke with Chinese President Xi Jinping recently, Sullivan replied that Biden did raise the topic of 2019 coronavirus disease, adding that all countries must take responsibility and assume responsibility for protecting the world, and that includes China.

The previous U.S. administration said back in January 2021 that the United States had evidence that a similar new coronavirus had circulated in Wuhan, China, as early as the fall of 2019 and that the Chinese military was conducting secret experiments at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. Since this was a State Department report from Trump’s previous administration, Sullivan, in the interview, did not respond positively to this hypothesis, but instead reiterated in reverse: the new administration insists that the WHO investigation must be left to scientists and experts, and there should be no government intervention. He also called for a “credible, open and transparent international investigation” led by the WHO. Sullivan’s attitude shows that he thinks Pompeo‘s leading the report is some kind of political interference, but the WHO expert group that went to Wuhan to investigate, from the composition of the staff to their close cooperation with the Chinese side’s views of all the signs, the color of government intervention is difficult to hide, Sullivan if you can not see, it is clear that the double standard. If double standards are commonplace not worth a penny, more than $200 million to the rich and powerful United States is not a small amount, human Life is priceless. But all this can hardly be exchanged for the truth about the source of the outbreak and so on.

On February 9, the WHO mission issued a statement at the end of a two-week retrospective investigation mission to Wuhan, saying that the virus pandemic could not have started with a leak from the Wuhan laboratory (Wuhan Virus Institute). The possibility of the virus leaking from the Virus Institute was largely ruled out, and there was no need for further research in the future. It was only after the public outcry that the WHO Secretary General changed his mind again and said that he would not limit the hypothesis of the origin of the virus.

Unlike U.S. national security adviser Sullivan, whose attitude is unclear, former deputy national security adviser Matt Pottinger, who served under former President Trump, confessed on the same program his view that China tried to cover up the new coronavirus in the early stages of the outbreak, cutting off the Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and relying instead on the military to contain the deadly virus. Bomin noted that the WHO team of experts sent to China to investigate the origin of the virus was “very contradictory,” and that the team was made up of people hand-picked by the Chinese government. That’s because the Chinese Communist Party has veto power over who can enter China to investigate. In response to the WHO report, Bomin said, “WHO has made various … untrue or false statements about the virus. So WHO has a lot of responsibility.”

Commenting on the WHO’s actions in the early stages of the pandemic, Bomin said, “The WHO made all kinds of untrue or false claims about the virus – that it was not human-to-human and that it was not asymptomatic. They praise the Chinese government for shutting down domestic travel while criticizing the U.S. for shutting down international travel, which is a morally and logically untenable position.”

Bomen said, “The Chinese government has made it very difficult to check out and track down hard evidence. But if you consider the circumstantial evidence, the circumstantial evidence that this was caused by some sort of human error far outweighs the claim that this was some sort of natural outbreak.”