American Thought Leaders - Here’s What They Hid in Wuhan | Matt Ridley
Episode Date: June 30, 2026💰Protect your wealth with precious metals! Call American Hartford Gold today & get up to $20,000 in free silver on your 1st order! Call 855-862-3377 or text AMERICAN to 65532 or click here: htt...ps://ept.ms/ATL-AHGIt’s been over six years since the COVID-19 pandemic began, yet much of the scientific establishment still seems unwilling to acknowledge or openly debate where this virus came from.In this episode, Matt Ridley, co-author of “Viral,” breaks down the significance of newly declassified documents released by Homeland Security Secretary Tulsi Gabbard and the evidence of a coordinated cover-up of COVID-19’s origins.Ridley delves into a key paper, “The proximal origin of SARS-CoV-2,” published by Nature Medicine, exposing how the authors themselves believed that a lab leak was a likely possibility while publicly pushing the opposite narrative.Troubling questions arise: Why hasn’t the international community held China accountable for what happened at the Wuhan lab? Why is America so attentive to cybersecurity, but completely blind to biosecurity? And why are there such close ties between Western scientific research and Chinese dual-purpose facilities like the lab in Wuhan?Views expressed in this video are opinions of the host and the guest, and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Epoch Times.
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It's a gigantic scandal and most of the world wants to say, well, yeah, probably a lab leak, but move on.
I'm sorry, we can't move on.
20 million people are dead.
Matt Ridley is the co-author of Viral, the Search for the Origin of COVID-19.
His book is one of the most comprehensive arguments for the lab leak theory.
Going and finding bat viruses in a cave in your nan or Laos and bringing them a thousand miles north to a big city.
with 11 million people in it, giving them an extra feature that makes them much more infectious
in human cells, and doing all that at a low biosafety level, even if that hadn't led to a pandemic,
now we know they were doing that, we should be absolutely horrified.
Today he joins me to unpack the files that Tulsi Gabbard just declassified and the coordinated
campaign to bury the truth about what happened in Wuhan.
It's quite extraordinary that China has been allowed.
to get away with revealing almost nothing about what went on in that laboratory.
And instead of saying, that's a disgrace, we can't cooperate with you scientifically until you clear
this up, the world has said, oh, fine, let's go on having scientific collaborations with you
as much as you want.
This is American Thought Leaders, and I'm Yanya Keller.
Matt Ridley, such a pleasure to have you on American Thought Leaders.
Thank you, Jan, for having me on.
In her last days as Director of National Intelligence,
Tilsi Gabbard released a series of documents related to a cover-up around the Wuhan lab,
around Gane of Function Research.
I know you've been following this closely.
Explain to me the significance of these documents.
Well, they add confirmation to what we already knew that there was strong intelligence,
pointing the intelligence agencies towards a lab leak as the cause of the pandemic almost from the very start.
And then they also add what we suspected, which is that there was then a strong pushback from somebody within the administration,
the US administration, to make sure those conclusions didn't get out to us the public and indeed were sort of reversed.
on political rather than scientific grounds.
Now, I haven't mentioned any names in there,
but the briefing, the thing that has stood out for me
is that the briefing of the CIA that caused it to change its mind
was effectively done by Anthony Fauci,
head of the National Institutes of Allergies and Infectious Diseases,
who was very conflicted because he had been defending gain-of-function research
he had made sure that it got allowed again after a moratorium in America,
and he had made sure that funds went to supporting that work in China,
not just in the United States.
So this really does show that when he told Senator Rand Paul
in testimony on oath that they were not funding, gain of function,
and research in China, that just simply is not true.
I find this whole situation almost bizarre, right?
Because very early in the pandemic, April of 2020,
we created a documentary looking,
it was as I believe it was called tracing the origins
of the Wuhan coronavirus.
It was still okay to call it the Wuhan coronavirus
at the time, which would have been a normal name for it, right?
Yeah.
And essentially the argument in the documentary was,
it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, quacks like a duck.
Probably a duck, right?
It wasn't conclusive, but there was already enough evidence
to point to a much more likely lab scenario
than the other kind of wet market scenario
that was brandished about.
And here we are, we're still kind of arguing the same issue.
There's still people that think it was a wet market at this point.
Yes, you were onto it before I was.
In February and March of 2020 and even through April,
I was still telling parliamentary colleagues here in the United Kingdom
that it was not a lab leak,
and we knew that because that possibility had been looked into
by a number of American scientists who'd come to the firm conclusion
that it could not possibly be a laboratory construct.
They used the word ruled out.
and I thought, well, that's good enough for me.
These guys look like they know what they're doing.
And then in May of 2020, two things happened.
One was a paper came to my attention which said this virus did not evolve very fast in the first few months
and yet is very infectious.
That implies that it's had prior exposure to human beings.
It's not just suddenly appeared in the last few months.
It's somewhere it's been in contact with human cells.
And that could have been in a lab.
and that paper was written by three people, one of whom was Alina Chan, who ended up being my co-author on this subject.
And the other thing that happened was that George Gao, the head of the China CDC, who I've since met and interviewed,
he said in May of 2020, it didn't start in the market.
We've looked in the market and we can't find an infected animal.
And the pattern of infection of people in the market doesn't point at an animal.
Animal vendors were not infected, etc., etc.
Now, that's extraordinary.
In the case of SARS, when the outbreak happened in 2002-3,
it very quickly became apparent that there were infected animals
and infected animal vendors.
Now, there are 40,000 food markets of that kind in China plus.
It happened next to one that happened also to be the site of the only
SARS-like beta-coronavirus research program in the world.
And it happened the year after,
they planned a very specific experiment in that lab
on a virus that was 96% the same
that was sitting in their own freezer in that lab,
having been brought from a thousand miles away.
So your walk like a duck, quack like a duck thing
is one way of putting it.
The other cliche I reach for is of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world,
she walks in a mine, the line from Casablanca, if you remember.
It is genuinely far less surprising that Rick should run into,
I can't remember what Ingrid Bergman's character was called,
in Casablanca, than it was that this virus should turn up.
In this one place at this one time when this kind of research was going on,
and leave no trace in animals or people.
Absolutely.
Well, so another thing I know that we both,
because from reading your work,
I know we both kind of zeroed in on,
was this proximal origins paper in nature medicine.
So for me, some of the viewers will know
I have a background in evolutionary biology.
I can kind of, you know,
I have a better understanding
than the average person of these things.
This, of course, wasn't a paper.
It was kind of a letter.
But when I read this, basically it argued that there's no chance.
There's zero chance that this could be from a lab.
And I thought that was an astonishing claim because it just simply was false.
It was obviously false, right?
And it was the weirdest moment for me because this was a journal I would have given my left foot
to be published in nature at one point in my life, right?
And it was they were obviously publishing something,
which was obviously false to me.
And I checked with some friends from the past.
And my friends actually agreed with me.
And one of them had even written to nature medicine saying,
how could you publish this?
This is obviously not true, right?
But this document was used extensively in this way to sort of justify,
yes, absolutely, it has to be a natural origin.
And it changed my life.
Me too. That was the paper I was referring to when I said that I started reassuring colleagues that this couldn't have come out. I was lied to. I was deceived. It is disgraceful what happened with that paper. Because we now know what happened with that paper. Well, first of all, in its own terms, the paper is extremely unpersuasive. It has two main arguments for saying that it can rule out an origin. Those are the words used in a press release by Christian Anderson, the senior author. Right. The first argument,
is it's not a perfect fit to our receptor.
If we had designed it, we'd have made it perfect.
What?
It's a pretty good fit.
Where'd you get the idea that we would always get it right first time or whatever?
You know, that was a completely bizarre argument.
And the other argument was, yes, it's got a furin cleavage site
which makes it way more infectious than any other sarbico virus,
and no other sarbecovirus has ever been found with one.
But don't worry, we'll find one with one in it naturally.
Well, six years on, we still haven't found one.
So that was a non-argument at the time, and it was an even weaker argument now.
So on its own terms, the paper was extremely unpersuasive.
And we know it was unpersuasive because the senior author of that paper,
in his private messages, said, before, during, and after publishing the paper,
in his private messages, I still think a lab leak is frigging likely.
That was the words he used.
What?
I'm sorry, but when I was in science, like you, I'm an evolutionary biologist by background,
you do not publish papers that say the opposite of what you think.
And so he claims he's changed his mind.
He didn't change his mind.
He changed his line.
Now, why did he change his line?
Well, we know a little bit about that too, because he had an exchange with one of his co-authors.
This is a man named Christian Anderson, and the co-author was Andrew Rambo.
They had an exchange in which Rambo said, I hate it when it gets political,
but sometimes you have to make compromises politically.
I can't remember the exact wording, but it was like that.
And Anderson replied, yep, I completely agree.
It's a pity you have to get political, but we have to.
For political reasons, they published a paper that says the very opposite of what they thought in private.
The other thing that's wrong with that paper is that they got in,
it was basically commissioned by Jeremy Farrow of the Welcome Trust and Anthony Foucher of Nyad,
who were consulted throughout, who helped change the wording, and are not mentioned in the paper.
And we have now got emails saying, please don't mention us in the paper.
Again, that is a scientific disgrace.
Yet, as you say, hundreds of us have written to the editor of Nature Medicine saying,
this paper must be retracted.
It's wrong.
It doesn't say what they thought.
it's left out some authors, it's disguised its origins, and it's misled the world, right?
And it's false on its face, yes.
We have not had the courtesy of a reply from the editor of Nature Medicine.
This is extraordinary.
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from the Director of National Intelligence in the US might change that?
Well, I'd like to think that this would help,
but I don't think anything, in a sense,
we already had strong enough evidence
that there was a tremendously energetic cover-up
of the lab leak possibility in the early months of 2020 in America, right?
The American side of stuff, we kind of knew already.
It's nice to have confirmation,
some more details. What we need now, because you said that much of the world now realizes
this is a lab leak, pretty well everybody I know of any intelligence and who's looked into it
at all concludes it's a lab leak now, except science magazine, Nature magazine, the Royal Society
in London, who won't even debate it, the National Academies in America. So the scientific
establishment won't budge, and that's a problem. So what we need,
now is more intelligence about China. We can find out more about what went on in America,
and that's helpful, but we need to know, A, what experiments they did on, what days, why they
took their database offline, why three of them went to hospital, why the man who developed the
first vaccine threw himself off the roof, and why they were suddenly in a panic about lab safety
in the fall of 2019, etc., etc. We need to know, did they fund the proposal for putting a
furian cleavage site into a Sarbiko virus for the first time the year before the pandemic.
Did they fund that?
And if so, how?
That's the diffused proposal you're talking about.
That's called the diffuse proposal, yeah, which is as close as you can get to a precise recipe for
making SARS cov too.
They talk about a virus that's 20% different from SARS.
That's this one.
They talk about looking for furian cleavage sites and if they can't find one, putting one in.
and then in this virus there appears a furying cleavage site which has the same sequence as fearing cleavage sites that they've put into genes elsewhere in the laboratory world.
So it's quite extraordinary that China has been allowed to get away with revealing almost nothing about what went on in that laboratory.
And instead of saying that's a disgrace, we can't cooperate with you scientifically until you clear this up,
The world has said, oh, fine, let's go on having scientific collaborations with you as much as you want.
It doesn't seem right to me.
The part that I also find confusing is certainly the US intelligence community, which clearly is involved in this.
That's one of the things that is revealed, I think, in these DNI recently declassified documents.
Just that there is this kind of constant collaboration movement.
The intelligence community clearly knew that this lab,
was a Chinese military lab.
Now, why am I saying that?
Because in China, there's a military civil fusion doctrine.
If something has a military potential, heads will roll
if that military potential isn't explored in a technology.
And here we're talking about gain of function research
and viruses.
Like this is bio-weapons research on the other side of the coin,
so to speak.
So absolutely it's a military lab.
Absolutely the intelligence community,
community had to know that. I'm looking at these emails, chummy conversations between the head of the
Chinese CDC, right, and the Americans. I find that bizarre because we're dealing with the Chinese
Communist Party here, right? To be fair, it's, I think it's best described as a dual purpose lab.
There was a obviously, obviously. There was a military side to it and there was a civilian side.
quite where the boundary was between them, we don't know.
It is that the military side is of importance here.
Of enormous importance.
Right, right.
And I don't myself think we have evidence that they were trying to make a weapon out of SARS.
Sarbico viruses.
I think it's more likely that they thought of themselves in military terms as doing something defensive.
How do we get ready to react?
if someone uses a salbicovirus as a weapon against us.
But that's nearly always the excuse for bio-weapons research, by the way,
in the West and the East.
And of course, it's a sort of self-fulfilling motion.
The basic facts are that Ralph Barrett in North Carolina
invented a technique for manipulating coronaviruses.
And it was a brilliant technique,
and it meant that you could swap spike genes between coronaviruses.
And the Chinese said, could we copy that technology?
and basically the Americans said, yes,
as long as you let us have access to some of your viruses,
some kind of deal like that was done.
And they then got quite good at that technique.
And they produced, in that lab,
this is not speculation, this is fact.
They produced viruses that killed mice three times as efficiently,
and that increased the viral load in humanized mice 10,000 times.
Now, if one of those viruses,
which, by the way, is being tested,
on a humanized mice with human ACE2 receptors. If one of those viruses got out, of course it
would cause a pandemic. Now the experiments we've seen did not happen to a virus close enough to
SARS-Cov-2 to do that, but we know that in the last year they switched to looking at ones that
were closer. They were doing this at biosafety level two. I mean, that's a gloves and a mask.
You don't even have to wear a mask in a biosafety level two lab. You're not suited
up. There's no negative pressure and all that kind of thing. And the reason, you know, the
Eco Health Alliance, their American collaborator who was funneling US taxpayers' money to the
lab said, yeah, yeah, we like doing this work in Wuhan because it's more cost effective, because
they work at a lower biosafety level. Get that, get your head around that. You know, it's a gigantic
scandal and most of the world wants to say, well, yeah, probably a lab leak, but move on.
I'm sorry, we can't move on. 20 million people are dead. A technology is just demonstrated
to every terrorist on the planet that this is a really good way of bringing the world
economy to its knees. And all you need do is set up a biological laboratory and start
working on viruses and hire a few experts. And do you know what? There's no treaty,
no international monitoring. Nobody is saying who's ordering the reagents, who's working on particular
kinds of viruses. This is not an academic exercise where we want to know why people died.
This is something where we need to make sure it doesn't happen again. And by the way, I spoke to a
very senior scientist in the UK at one point who had been predicting that we'd have a nasty
biological accident at some point around now. And I said,
said, well done, you got that right. And he said, no, no, no, no. It's very important we never find out.
It's very important we never find out.
Explain that to me. I said, why? And he said, because it would disrupt relations with China.
He said, you're probably right. It probably did come out of a lab, but it's better we don't find out.
I said, would you say that about a plane crash? You know, when a plane crashes, we now have
a system in the world where the details of why the...
that crash happened are shared. You can't, you know, if British Airways crashes, it doesn't say,
no, United Airlines can't be privy to the information we found out. We have a global agreement
that says that every plane crash, the lessons from it are shared with everybody. Why don't we have
that in this case? Why don't you tell me why you think this senior scientist has this view,
this astonishing view? There is a huge dependence of
Western science on China now. Collaboration with China. Chinese funding. Many of the science journals
get most of their revenue from Chinese research, not most, but a very, very large chunk of their
revenue from Chinese scientists. China actually has an arrangement where it pays up front for
publication fees in journals. It rewards scientists for publishing in high-impact journals,
and so many of them slice and dice their results to get as many publications out as pot.
So Chinese scientists in that sense are very productive and that makes them very lucrative for Western scientific publishing.
That's an issue that needs looking into.
But there is also a general admiration of the Chinese regime in academia.
We've seen this explicitly in all sorts of ways, but academics are very left-wing in this country and most of the Western world.
world. Academics are, in my experience, and have been for quite a long time, people who admire
top-down directive politics. They don't think in terms of bottom-up democracy. They think it's messy.
They think, look, come on, whoever's in charge should say, this needs to be done. You know,
tell people to brush their teeth twice a day. Tell people not to eat, drink milk.
or the desire to tell the world how to behave is quite strong in academia.
So when the pandemic came along, you had people from the academic world, the editor of
the Lancet is one of them, he published editorial praising Xi Jinping thought at one point,
who said, now look at China, they're cracking down on this virus, they're telling people not to leave their homes,
that's what we need.
You know, the whole sort of authoritarianism was very appealing to a certain kind of academic,
public health official government bureaucrat in the West.
So there is a China worship problem here that doesn't see the harsh side of that kind of regime
and doesn't think in terms of liberty and personal liberty.
and they didn't want blame for this virus to go to this regime they rather admire.
Except today, when we look back five years now, right,
we see the abject failure of these policies, whether in China or here.
So do you think there will be a shift in this admiration given, you know,
we've had the experiment now.
What does this top-down rule?
How does this top-down rule work in a pandemic scenario?
It turns out it fails in every respect.
No, there's absolutely no doubt that lockdowns were a catastrophe.
They didn't work and they caused all sorts of other huge problems.
Nobody can look at the evidence now, the evidence from Sweden, the evidence from different American states, etc.,
and not come to that conclusion.
This virus was too infectious and two infectious in asymptomatic people for lockdowns to work.
Full stop.
That's what we need to learn.
they might have worked in the early months in Wuhan
when it wasn't quite so infectious
and when you had a ridiculously authoritarian regime
but no
next time
we have a highly infectious
viral pandemic
we must not reach for
locking down the population
and that by the way was the conclusion
of the public health establishment
before the pandemic months before the pandemic
came out they had a big publication on this
saying whatever we do we must resist the temptation
from politicians to lock down the entire population.
It won't work.
If the virus is sufficiently infective, it won't work.
It's fine with one that's not very infectious,
you know, and you can lock down a limited number of people.
Except there's a small issue of civil liberties and free societies we may want to consider, right?
Good Lord. Where did you get that idea?
But I personally think, as an evolutionary biologist,
that there is a point that gets me.
missed here. And that is that viruses jump out of animals and into people quite often.
We've had AIDS in our lifetime. We've had Ebola happening just quite recently and others.
So the theory that you can catch a new virus from an animal is not wrong. Of course you can.
But they very, very rarely prove to be highly infectious from the start.
they have to stutter their way through human to human chains of infection for quite a long time
before they get really good at spreading and then they can take off.
They also tend to be pretty lethal.
So Ebola kills 30%, Hanta virus kills 30% of the people that infects.
So you're much more likely to see what you're seeing with Ebola, horrible outbreaks, but you can bring them under control.
or Hanta, you know, on that cruise ship.
You know, a few people die and a few more people have to be in quarantine for a while,
and then it's over.
What we saw this time was completely different,
a virus that was not very lethal.
I mean, that all age mortality from this virus was something like less than half a percent.
That's sort of equivalent to flu, roughly.
So it was not very lethal, but very infectious.
that to me
tells you this wasn't a normal zoonosis
that to me tells you that it must have had
training on human cells
and human molecules
in the months if not years leading up to the pandemic
and just to kind of frame that out a little bit
because it already appeared to be so familiar
with human cells it had that ability
to enter human cells very smoothly if you will
yes it it has
the ability to use the ACE2 receptor to get into a human cell and by the way it was
much better at that it's not very good of getting into bats at all even though
it's originally a bat virus what does that tell you tells you it hasn't been in
bats for a while it's been in another species it's better in infecting humans
than almost any other species monkeys it's pretty good at too cats it's quite good
at but but it was humans you know this was this had turned into a human
virus some somewhere in the months before now given that we know this
lab was taking SARS-like beta-coronoviruses, this very type of virus, and infecting them into
human cells and humanized mice for several years before the pandemic. It's crazy to think that this
wasn't how this happened. And therefore, we really need to rethink our approach to pandemics. The idea that
surveillance of
outbreaks so that we know when they're
happening and
can react quickly
is great
but going and finding bat
viruses in a cave in
your nan or Laos
and bringing them a thousand miles north
to a big city
with 11 million people in it
to the middle of a big city
putting them in a lab
sequencing them
doing manipulation experiments on
them, giving them an extra feature that makes them much more infectious in human cells,
and doing all that at a low biosafety level, even if that hadn't led to a pandemic,
now we know they were doing that. We should be absolutely horrified. It does nothing to
ready us for a pandemic. The purpose of that experiment, as far as we can make out, those
series of experiments, was so that they could say one day, look, aren't we clever, we've made a
vaccine that works against any kind of coronavirus.
Well, they were nowhere near that.
And, you know, they were looking for a gas leak with a lighted match.
I know that there's a Chinese Communist Party has a policy.
I've read the document of, you know, basically doing bio-weapons work.
They're interested in this topic.
They're actively sort of working on these types of things.
And again, we know that I think our academics community should know it.
Certainly our intelligence community is very aware of that.
So there's that whole realm, whether it's offensive or defense, as you pointed out earlier.
I think it's unlikely given the military involvement that we could ever get any information from China,
given how I know how they operate.
Because you said earlier that you would like to get an accounting, right, which of course makes a ton of sense.
What about these collaborations that were, you know, American institutions, you know, National Institutes of Health, NIH in the U.S.? What about these collaborations?
Well, the American government has debarred the Eco Health Alliance from federal grants now. That's quite right. That was an organization that was extraordinarily misleading to us.
For a start, failed to tell us about the defuse proposal. I mean, they were the lead authors of this.
proposal in 2018 to put a fur and cleavage site into a sub-eco virus for the first time.
And they sat on that and throughout the first two years of the pandemic, they didn't mention it
until someone in the Pentagon decided it might be a good idea to hand it to a journalist.
You know, I mean, that's a disgrace. How could you conceivably know of that document and not
think it relevant to tell the world? So there are good reasons why,
we never want to see the ICC Alliance or its leader, Peter Dazzack,
getting federal or any other kind of American support ever again.
And the NIH says it needs to defund and cease dangerous gain of function research.
And when you say, oh, no, no, yeah, we should stop dangerous gain of function research,
all sorts of people put up their hands and say,
oh, that means we can't improve wheat crops because that's gain of function.
No, we're talking 99.9% of biotech genetic engineering work is safe and sensible, and it's not dangerous gain of function.
Some of it's gain of function.
You're putting the function of insect resistance into a wheat plant or something.
That's gain of function, fine.
But dangerous gain of function, where you know you're increasing the infectivity of a virus that can infect humans.
and you know you're doing that in a lab
shouldn't be doing that at all.
It has no place.
And scientists signed up to an agreement
back in the 1970s
that they would never do things like that.
Where's the self-reflection
in the scientific community?
You know, where's the...
Because at the moment,
the Trump administration says
it's not going to fund that kind of thing,
but it hasn't come out with a very clear policy.
And in two years' time,
you could have a new administration that says,
because we don't like everything Trump did,
we're going to re-institute collaboration with China
on dangerous gain and function experiments.
There's nothing you or I could do to prevent that happening.
Well, what I'm trying to do,
for example, I've written this book on the organ industry in China
and so forth, the take-home message from this book is,
these people do things like this.
It's a government operation, right?
So you shouldn't, don't think of it as a normal collaborator, right?
Well, can I give an example of that?
This is probably in your book, but you know about Reedley, California, the lab there, do you?
Oh, no, tell me more.
Well, it's a couple of years ago, in this small town outside Fresno in Central Valley of California,
an alert city official saw a hose pipe that had been put into a warehouse.
that was supposedly not in use, this warehouse.
So he knocked on the door and went in.
And he found a huge laboratory with Chinese nationals working in white coats.
He contacted the Centers for Disease Control in Atlanta and said,
I think you need to come and look at this.
And they said, no, no, we're too busy.
The local police went in and they found bags labeled with AIDS, Ebola,
all sorts of other
hepatitis,
all sorts of other infectious agents.
And a whole mass of scientific equipment going on.
But two years later,
a house that he owned in Las Vegas
was looked into just this year
and turned out the garage
was full of more scientific equipment
and samples.
He was trying to sell
COVID testing.
kits as well. Now, clearly this was breaking all sorts of laws and extremely unsafe.
But he was well-funded, this man, by Chinese investors. It's not that easy to see him as a lone
wolf who happened to be just a little bit off the reservation. It's easy. It's easy. It's easy.
easier to think that there was some quite significant official support was helping him do this.
Now that's just one incident where an alert city official stumbled on something.
We've had Chinese nationals arrested at airports for stealing biological material from labs in Detroit.
We had another case in Winnipeg that was similar, etc.
There's very little doubt that with at least a blind eye from the Chinese authorities,
there is a lot of espionage going on with respect to biological materials.
And we're very aware of this when it comes to cybersecurity,
but in biosecurity, we're asleep at the switch on this.
And I mean espionage and possible like active experimentation in,
America, right?
Yeah.
I mean, that's the sense that I've gotten from those two locations, from those two sites that
you just mentioned.
Yeah.
You know, I genuinely live in fear.
People tell me I should be worried about AI as an existential risk or whatever.
I don't understand why people are not more alarmed about biosecurity now.
And I speak, I mean, I'm a passionate defender of biotechnology.
I think it's a wonderful technology.
I think we should be using it in agriculture and medicine.
and a lot. It can help us enormously with human flourishing.
And I think in Europe we were crazy to reject genetically modified crops.
We would have been environmentally as well as economically better off if we'd done so.
So, you know, I'm not coming at this as someone who's campaigned against biotechnology.
Quite the reverse. I think that science says if we find out about a lab leak, it'll be bad for the reputation of science.
well it wouldn't have been if science had done its own research and said look these these were bad apples
but now i'm sorry those apples have infected the whole barrel where's the funding for an investigation
of the origin of covid where are the grants to academic saying please could you find out everything
you possibly can and please can you collaborate with chinese about this you know it just doesn't exist
there's the the scientific community want to tiptoe away from this
hoping that nobody will ever know and that they can say it wasn't proven we don't know.
And they think that's better for the reputation of science.
I think that's disastrous for the reputation of science.
I love science.
I think it's humanity's greatest achievement bar none.
And I think it's really dropped the ball on this one.
I share your concern about biosecurity again, given what I know the Chinese Communist Party is involved in, right?
We got a hint of some of that through COVID.
But at the same time, we also saw how biosecurity was used as a way to, you know, lock, I don't know,
lockdown society, introduce all sorts of policy that was, you know, erroneous would be the nicest way of putting it in a way.
in some cases arbitrary, right, and so forth.
On the one hand, obviously, this biosecurity is a huge issue.
People can concoct all sorts of crazy things in a little lab,
especially with tacit agreement of the Chinese regime and so forth.
On the other hand, the same idea is used as an excuse to implement policy,
which has been highly inappropriate.
And I'm not convinced we've learned that lesson at this.
point. Now, you're right there that we crack down too hard on some things and we're not cracking
down hard enough on others. I mean, I would like to see the world give quite a tough time
to biology laboratories that work on viruses in terms of monitoring what they're up to.
I do not want to see ordinary human beings told there is now,
a general rule in place that the moment we snap our fingers we're going to impose curfews and we're
going to close schools and we're going to stop you leaving your home and all that kind of thing.
So we were far too tough in the pandemic on ordinary people and we were not nearly tough enough
on labs. That's the answer. Now look, I'm a libertarian. I think there are too many rules and
regulations getting in the way of innovation in the world. But when I listened to some of the virologists
who are complaining about people like me
are not that libertarian.
They say things like
it's a disgrace that the government
tells us what we can and can't do in our laboratories.
Well, that's about the one place
where I quite would want a little bit of government
approval.
And we have ethics panels
saying you can't do that experiment,
it's not ethical.
We do not have safety.
panels in universities doing that. Literally. It's easier to get safety approval for an experiment
on a virus than it is to get ethical approval for an experiment on an animal, say. That's the
wrong way around. Another thing that just comes to mind quickly is that the way the whole COVID
scenario played out, it feels to me like we haven't had an accounting of, you know,
of how poorly that went for us as a society.
And this was implemented in over 100 countries, I think.
Well, let me give you an example of exactly that.
We have had a COVID inquiry in this country,
led by a judge and staffed by ignorant barrister lawyers.
They have generally been very hard pushing,
and the judge who leads the inquiry has been concluding,
that the problem is we didn't lock down hard enough
and soon enough.
right, when the evidence totally points the other way.
So this is just the bureaucracy looking after its own interests
and defending its own decisions.
But when one politician, Michael Gove,
was being grilled by this committee,
he said, by the way, we need to talk about the origin of the virus
because it probably was a lab leak.
That should have altered our conversation right at the start
because if it was a lab leak, it was more infectious,
lockdowns were never going to work.
He was shut down.
He was said that, that, that,
That's outside the scope of this inquiry.
So the lack of interest in the biosafety error that led to the pandemic is a problem.
The excessive interest in defending the biosecurity errors that led to the lockdowns is an equal problem.
I said that there's been no funding, no proper research into the origin of the virus.
But what did happen rather remarkably during this period, and it is an extreme.
extraordinary story and one that deserves to be much better known is that some amateur sleuths
put their heads together and did incredible things that illuminated vital information about what
was going on in Wuhan, that the official espionage people and the official academic researchers
hadn't bothered to tell us, okay.
You're talking about drastic and other groups.
drastic and particularly a wonderful Indian guy called The Seeker, Jean Reyes, his real name,
Francisco Di Assis in Spain, Gilles de Mnuf in New Zealand.
These are ordinary people working in their spare time on their own dime who did things like
find crucial theses in China, work out exactly which bat cave the Chinese scientists
have been visiting on which dates and collecting which viruses in them.
It's an amazing story of citizen science, and they were way better than the CIA, MI6, the Royal Society, the National Academies of Science.
They found out far more than these guys.
And journalists do not recognize that enough.
Just hats off to the amateurs.
It's a reminder that society is not run by brilliant experts.
who know how to tell us what to do,
the people who make society really work are ordinary people.
Let's finish off on this.
This is something that I find incredibly disturbing.
In a way, it's been good for us
that we were asking normal questions
that a great many media were deeply uninterested in.
In numerous areas, whether that was, you know,
this steel dossier back in the day,
or whether it was COVID origins or later, you know,
COVID response. What do you make of what happened to so many of our trusted media when they're
sort of absent on these, you know, some of the most important issues of our day? A lot of the media
became willing purveyors of propaganda during the pandemic. That was a real shock to most of us.
I'm a journalist by background and I was brought up or educated to regard journalists as people
who challenged authority rather than purveyed its message.
But I'm afraid in the pandemic, pretty well every mainstream media decided it was their job
to tell us to do as the government told us to do.
Sorry, that's not your job.
Your job was to challenge stuff.
So the media got very supine in this period.
Well, a final thought as we finish?
Thank you for talking to me about the Lab League.
I'm not going to give up on this subject, and I'm sure you're not either.
It took us 12 years to work out that a lab leak was responsible for an anthrax epidemic in the Soviet Union.
They denied it for 12 years.
We then found it was true.
We've got another six years to go before we get to that thing.
I'm pretty sure that at some point we will get more information.
It's a very, very important episode in human history, and I think we mustn't let it drop.
Well, Matt Ridley, it's such a pleasure to have had you on.
Thank you so much.
Thank you all for joining Matt Ridley and me on this episode of American Thought Leaders.
I'm your host, Janja Kelek.
