Decoding the Gurus - Brett Weinstein & Heather Heying: Why are 'they' suppressing Ivermectin, the miracle cure?
Episode Date: May 22, 2021This episode wasn't meant to be about Ivermectin, or Bret and Heather's unique ability to apply an 'evolutionary lens' to understand everything, including virology, epidemiology, immunology and the cu...lture war... but it is.....We meant to make a few topical comments prior to the main episode, but the comments led into some rants, and then with the clips, those rants metastasised into a full-sized episode. So the duo had to travel back in time to record a new introduction, and back again, forward this time, in time, to record the outro and it all got very complicated.Anyway, it is what it is!Bret and Heather are 95% sure that the COVID vaccines are like playing Russian Roulette with a loaded gun, and that the scientific and public health authorities are lying to everyone, and we would be better off avoiding these risky vaccines and taking Ivermectin instead. Bret even demonstrates how to swallow a pill live on air. But they are not anti-vax! No not at all. They're not conspiracy theorists either! Of course they're not. Conspiracy hypothesisers, maybe... but there is a crucial distinction there. Either way they have concerns, and Matt and Chris have concerns with their concerns. So enjoy this very special 'meta' episode.Also, stay tuned after the music ends for one of Matt's rare rants. Live mic situation, and Chris snuck it in there.LinksDarkHorse Podcast Episode 80: What Covid Reveals About our LeadersDarkHorse Podcast Episode 79: #NotAllMiceDarkHorse Podcast with Geert Vanden Bossche & Bret WeinsteinScienceBasedMedicine article examining the new hype over IvermectinNew Discourses Podcast Episode 35 (James Lindsay): How to End Vaccine HesitancyGood article on Politifact covering the lab leak 'controversy'
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to the Cody Nigger Groups.
It's the podcast where an anthropologist and a psychologist
listen to the greatest minds the world has to offer
and we try our best to understand what they're talking about.
I'm Matt Brown and with me is Chris Kavanagh.
It's been great to see you again, Chris.
It's been, what, two weeks?
Welcome.
Don't pull back.
Matt, people have no idea.
Maybe it was the day after.
Maybe we're recording this immediately following the three and a half hour
break time of Michael O'Fallon.
No, this is cinema verite.
This is a little window into our lives.
And I've missed you.
I haven't seen your grumpy Irish face for some time.
Yeah, that's right.
And I've got a lot of complaints stored up, Matt.
If you've missed me moaning about stuff, boy, have I got some material for you.
Absolutely.
So, yeah, we've got another duo, another double team act happening this week.
But before we talk about them, let's do a little bit of housekeeping that we like to do before the proper episode.
Now, last episode, we, of course, had the wonderful Aaron Rabunowitz on.
Do we have any feedback about that episode come to mind, Chris?
Yeah, there was quite a bit of feedback, but it was mostly positive, which just sounds like we are back patting ourselves if we talk about it.
But there
were some critical comments. We talked about a couple of them on the Garometer episode, but that's
behind the Patreon feed. So if people want to hear in-depth feedback, they can go there. But
there was one point that people raised that I thought was interesting and we could discuss a bit so
some people i think this was in the reddit could be on twitter as well but we're talking about
when we were covering how o'fallon likes to link all of these culture war shenanigans to
these ancient historical events right the jac Jacobins and all of this stuff,
that it's never enough to just talk about
an individual school made a shitty policy
or something like that.
It's always part of a grander narrative.
And the issue was raised,
are we not guilty in some respect
of doing the same thing
when we link O'Fallon and lindsey into you know
an ecosystem which focuses on the protocols of the elders of zion and into this grander right-wing
conspiratorial ecosystem why is it not enough to just say this guy's uh you know he is what he is yeah you can listen to them
yeah a bit full of shit uh i think that's a pretty good that's a pretty good point actually
and i think you do have to be cautious there because it is easy to detect those resonances
and i remember you know aaron was good at that because he's familiar with a lot of the history of anti-Semitism and could detect those similar threads coming through
that O'Fallon was picking up from,
which was structurally very similar to, yeah,
Protocols of the Elders of Zion and so on.
And it does rely slightly on making that correspondence
between, say, globalists and international neoliberal capitalists and
Jewish people, for instance. So there are some small leaps to be made. And I remember at the
time, I felt it might have been a bit of a stretch. But then, you know, thinking about it
and reading a little bit more, it was hard to deny that those residences were a pure coincidence
so on the other hand the parsimonious scientist in me urges caution always in making those links so
yeah i think it's a good bit of feedback and i'm ambivalent is my response yeah Yeah. Like one point I would make, though, is that if you start out somewhat skeptical that globalists are standing for Jews and lots of conspiracy theories, the more time that you spend around conspiracy theorists, folks like Alex Jones and whatever, it always shows up. There's always anti-Semites coming in,
and it's always linked in eventually. So yes, you want to be careful if you make those accusations.
But on the other hand, they so often seem to crop up that it would be perverse to deny that there's any relationship there.
And even if you disregard all those, right, if you think, no, Fallon, he isn't talking about that.
He's just talking about the UN and the globalists. And if he's drawing on motifs, he doesn't know,
you know, he's not doing it intentionally. I think you can take that position and still see
why the reasoning is still so faulty and still problematic and why it could easily lend itself
with just one extra step to demonizing the Jews and adding them in as the ultimate puppet masters
behind anything. It's just who the label is that's attached that differs. So, yeah, I also agree that you do have to be careful.
And it is certainly possible that you could overstay individual parallels or whatever.
But the broader connections are impossible to deny.
Not specifically with O'Fallon, just with conspiracy theories and anti-Semitic tropes.
Yeah.
Yeah, I think you're right.
I mean, look, it could well just be a coincidence
that George Soros seems to feature so heavily
in so many of these globalist conspiracies.
But even if it is purely a coincidence,
it doesn't make them any less stupid.
So, yeah, yeah.
So as the patrons already know from the grommeter episode o'fallon promptly blocked me
after the episode when i asked him some questions about what was in the documents from 10 years ago
that he received whether they outlined the specific details of the global pandemic that
was planned or not and so i was promptly blocked as a non-serious interlocutor.
Despite our previous friendly interactions,
he'd been very nice to me on Twitter previously,
but you didn't, right?
You're still, you're not blocked.
Nobody has any call to take you to task.
So you're just skating the past
on your like luxury space,
communist, airy-fairy nonsense.
And I'm the bully.
I'm the unfair, unfair critical dark-hearted man
i'm i'm the nice one you're you're john lennon and i'm here's the other guy uh ringo no not ringo
i don't want to be ringo john paul paul paul you're, no. Paul McCartney, not Yoko.
I'd love to be the Yoko to your John, Chris, but no, no.
I'm Paul McCartney.
The true creative mind.
Yeah, well, I'm the nice one.
People perceive me as more moderate, just more gentle generally. And interestingly, they see you as more extreme,
both in a left-wing direction and a right-wing direction.
It's really quite interesting.
I'm the magic eye for your political prejudices, wherever they may lie.
So, yeah.
It's anti-Irish sentiment.
That's all it is.
I mean, it's not your paranoia.
It's real.
They just think all Northern Irish people are extremists.
And I will say, no, Matt, that is not true we are never never never we have an unfair reputation which
which comes with my lilting drawl so yeah that's what it is you're just all wrong because you're
picking up on the accent don't be swayed by matt's soft Elvin pronunciation and his
which you can't see on the podcast, but you can,
I know you're visualizing them. I know you are.
Yeah.
Oh dear. Yes. Look, Australians do get a pass. I think.
You get the Gwyneth Paltrow bump. This is what it is. You know,
people have often called you the Gwyneth Paltrow of this podcast.
We get a pass. But but look apart from that I think the feedback from that episode was pretty good and I was pretty happy with it I thought Aaron was amazing and you and I played just excellent
supporting roles looking forward to following that up so what about our next episode you had
a suggestion Chris that was sort of out of left field. And I remember being open to it, but I can't remember what it was.
Oh, I think you're talking about Anthony DeMello, the Jesuit who was a Christian mystic,
who was very influential to me as a teenager and whose material I haven't revisited.
He's not a guru anyone's requested, but it might be interesting to visit as a like secret coy of mine to make me feel uncomfortable
as I peel back all his guru-ish techniques which have infiltrated my mind for 30 odd years.
I wouldn't mind something refreshing, something that you're not going to hear about on Twitter,
somebody that nobody cares about or has any strong political adherence one way or the other. So yeah,
I'm up into that
you know how to put your finger on the pulse matt how to make this podcast popular let's pick
someone that no one cares about nobody has even heard his fucking name that's the one for us but
i i mean i'm down for that i'm also i'm interested to go lefty for a while be it jimmy dore or zz or even you know
leftish sam harris i want to get the god sad and various other hyper morons in that arena but i i
think i need a palate cleanser after uh this episode that we're about to record yeah well
one of the things i really like to see on the subreddit was that a few people actually have mentioned that we've covered
people that they really like that they've got a strong affinity for and they know that we pretty
pretty tough on the characters we cover and they're actually very keen to hear us do the do the decoding and to find all the
little flaws and all the niggling problems with the the people that they're really quite a fan
of so i find that really encouraging that this is not just about fanboys or haters of various
characters but actually people that are just interested to hear
and maybe be provoked into a bit of a critical reflection on stuff.
So that feels very DTG.
That's our thing.
That's definitely the majority of our listeners.
It's not that they're getting vicarious enjoyment
from hearing their arch nemesis torn apart intellectually.
That's a very tiny minority of our listenership
so i agree man i agree and i i just but i would also add to that but like i think it would actually
be painful for me to critically devour my erstwhile guru anthony de bello so that might be another
vote in his favor that if i can inflict it on others why is the gander not
good for the goose yep that's that i'm sure there's a very appropriate reference very appropriate use
of that yeah that's it look if i think of someone who was hugely influential on me when i was
younger it's it's definitely don't talk about me like that man i don't feel comfortable i had no
no awareness of you until i was well and truly into middle age.
That's what I wanted you to think.
I think Richard Dawkins was actually instrumental in getting me to go ahead and do a PhD.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Like I had very little awareness of science-y type stuff. I was more a humanities type kid.
And I read The Selfish Gene and I read I'm Weaving the Rainbow
and I read basically all of Richard Dawkins' books
and I read a lot of other science type books as well.
But I think it was those that really stood out to me
in terms of making me very serious about scientific theoretical stuff
and led me down the path that you know led to me being where i am
here today so where i'm going with this is that you want to do dawkins no i don't want to do
dawkins because you were talking about how painful it would be to do one of a guru of yours somebody
who'd been influential on you and i wouldn't have any problem with doing Dawkins in terms of analyzing the stuff that's
the content of his books on evolution.
But if we had to do an episode which was decoding his tweets, then that would be painful, very
painful for me, Chris.
Well, somewhere in the middle that might be interesting to look at given the topic of today richard had a run-in with one brett weinstein
on stage where they discussed primarily evolution i believe so i think that people might accuse us
of making dawkins look good by selecting a comparably mad baseline.
But even still, I think that would be a good content to listen to because I've never listened to that.
And yes, I know it has a Weinstein in it.
This is not my reason, Matt.
I just mean the kind of material we cover,
we can't really cover a chapter of Dawkins' book.
And there's interviews we could do with him
that might be suitable for him on his own but
that that one seems like it might you know be a good candidate yeah no evolution culture war
yeah look i agree at the very least look it'll it'll accomplish two things one it'll give us a
good excuse to talk about evolution which is always fun um yeah because it's awesome it's a great topic
it's gonna come up this time oh god yeah God, yeah, that's right, it will.
And secondly, it'll give us the opportunity to make fun of Brett.
So this too wins, I see.
Matt and I, haven't you just filled the quota for the haters
who will take that little snippet and say,
this is a hatecast.
He admitted it.
If you look at timestamp 1430, Matt admitted what this was all about.
And Eric has insinuated that this entire podcast
is just a means to get at him and discredit him.
Well, the thing is, Chris, I don't need to discredit him
because he discredited himself with that.
Because I remember one thing he said in that debate.
He was arguing that the...
That's Brett.
It's not Eric. Did I say Eric? God, sorry.
The thing that Eric
said in that debate was that...
Brett!
Brett!
The Nazi
invasion of Russia,
he traced a direct evolutionary...
They need selection, Matt. They need selection. he traced a direct evolutionary selection map oh my god that was so bad so that was meme worthy
dawkins reaction to that preposterous claim it was it was so there we go look we had a nice little
important decoding the gurus logistical planning exercise and we have some candidates. Maybe we'll put up the top three for a vote from the patrons.
We'll work it out.
We'll work it out.
But you heard our discussion,
so it'll be one of those people we just discussed.
Now, this week, like you said,
Brett and Jordan are the subject of our attention.
And there's actually two podcasts
because they did a crossover episode
on each other's podcast,
the kind of quid pro quo, if you will,
where Brett appeared in Jordan's,
Jordan's appeared in Brett's.
And we were going to just look at one of them,
but due to our incredible organizational skills,
I believe I made you watch the wrong one.
So the long and short of it is that we've
clipped bits from both of them this is jordan peterson is back brett weinstein's dark horse
podcast and the jordan b peterson one is season four episode 10 brett weinstein it's just
weinstein yes they're easy to get mixed up, aren't they?
Because they're not very informative titles.
That's why we ended up listening to both.
But that's fine.
We'll post links to both of them in the episode.
And, yeah, they covered some pretty interesting ground.
Let's review it, shall we?
No.
Because before that, Mark, I have another surprise to spring on you
a special treat to sprinkle into your ear holes um so some completely dicing the flames of this
being a weinstein hitter podcast we have had several requests to do a shall you say short
update on what the weinsteins are up to in each episode.
You know, we don't have to if they're not doing anything, if they've got no hot takes.
And we have covered Eric's unwillingness to release the Vision Technology tweet from last time.
I've got a thing from both brothers this time.
And the Eric one will be short.
It's another classic tweet.
And the Brett one will be a bit longer.
I think we need to cover it because we're not going to jump back into the Weinstein
world for a good few episodes after this.
So I don't want to miss that the most recent Dark Horse episode was dedicated to outlining
why Brett and Heller will not be taking the vaccine and will be instead be taking iverectamine.
I need to check the pronunciation of that, iverectamine, an anti-parasite treatment that
is, according to various public health bodies, no more effective
than hydroxychloroquine for treating COVID. But the Weinsteins disagree. So I want to just cover
a little bit about their coronavirus stuff, because this has been the primary focus of their
podcast. And they only touch on that in the Jordan and Brett crossovers.
But first, not to be outdone, Eric.
So here's an Eric tweet.
And this time, I'm not going to analyze it.
I'm just going to read it for you.
Here we go.
When our experts now talk openly about all these UFOs,
they talk about their technology.
And every time they do, I replace the word technology with the word physics for the obvious reasons. Because if non-terrestrial craft are here, physics is
greater than technology. Imagine if these UAP were actually visitors from beyond the local solar
neighborhood. You wouldn't be focused on their technology first.
You'd want to understand how they got here,
and if they used new physics to do so.
Most importantly, you'd want to know about dimension hacking.
That's the tweet, Matt.
That's the tweet.
Chris, I don't know how to respond to that.
Don't you think that is the ultimate GalaxyVian tweet?
It's actually out into the solar system with trans-dimensional hacking.
And when all the experts, all of them are now openly talking about UFO technology,
who could blame Eric for issuing this very mild review?
My goodness.
I don't even really understand what it means.
Could you break it down for me?
You requested it.
I'm not very galaxy brained.
Help me out here.
I think what he's trying to say is that even if people are talking about
these UFO videos that the Pentagon or whatever are releasing,
they should ultimately
realize that what's important is Eric and his new ideas about physics and how these UFOs may in fact
be supporting various geometric theories that he's got. So I think it's just a way for eric to speculate about how the things that he's
interested in are really fundamental including for extraterrestrials okay so i'm not even aware
of the context here has there been a particular spate of ufo sightings and i think the pentagon
or somebody has been releasing a couple of things with the usual grainy footage of some
shiny object viewed on some radar screen or on some camera that shoots off and pilots being
bewildered i see that's the content i see okay now i understand so he's attempting to link this
to saying that what we really should be trying to do is understanding that if these
aliens are here how they got here and how they did some geometric folding of space time in order to
manage it the question if we have one question we should basically be saying what do you guys think about geometric geometry as a theoretical method?
I think that's what he wants to say.
But yes, so that's the humorous galaxy brain take of one brailler.
And let's turn the slightly more down-to-earth takes of the other brailler.
the Ollabriller. So this is slightly less amusing because Brett has been quite strongly on an anti-vaccine bend of late. And it's framed as it's just asking questions. It's about the long-term
safety of these new vaccines, which haven't had time to be tested properly, identified safety concerns, as we all
know, in the drug process. So this is just scientifically thinking through an issue.
And he hosted Geert van der Bosch, I think his name is, a researcher who has argued that the
vaccines could be extremely damaging, causing the virus to have selection pressures,
which make it evolve into a more deadly strain, and that taking the vaccines may suppress the
natural immune system. So it could actually be very dangerous for children, not to mention adults,
to engage in this. So we should halt all the global vaccine rollout and reconsider things.
should halt all the global vaccine rollout and reconsider things.
So you have argued that, in fact, the vaccine campaign that we are currently engaged in is so dangerous that it should be halted.
And I will say, I don't know if you're right.
I cannot determine based on what I understand if you're right.
But what I can say is that you are making
sense, right? This is frightening in and of itself, that your argument is completely coherent.
Whether or not it is true, this is at least a question that should be engaged by those who are
making policy around this, because the possibility of making our viral situation with respect to COVID worse is present.
And, you know, we are creating the hazard of the future that we will be confronting
a year or two down the road by our actions now.
So that was also framed as just asking question, but that researcher is considered very much on the fringe of coronavirus disinformation and whatnot.
So, yeah, disclaimers are useful things.
You know, again, I don't know that your argument is right, but I can say it's very clearly plausible and the hazard is potentially immense.
Yep. Now, this tracks perfectly with what I understand of the system, and it does raise
the specter that our intervention is actually not only going to become ineffective, but render
things far worse than they are. That, in fact, we take the immunity of the young to COVID-19
as somehow God-given and permanent. And it is anything but. It is dependent on a system we know
not enough about. And that system is capable of being disrupted by a ham-fisted intervention
in the adaptive immunity system. That strikes me as all too plausible.
All I'm saying is that it's interesting. We have seen patterns here that are suggestive
of the importance of innate immunity in the COVID-19 story in a way that is underappreciated.
And the idea that now we're talking about rendering that immune system, the innate immune system, ineffective.
At the same time, we are failing to create proper immunity in the adaptive immune system.
That is, you know, it's a perfect storm at some level, right?
We're taking the thing that works and upending it without creating the thing that would replace it.
And it does seem a very frightening prospect.
Well, Matt, you know, the time garometer finally functions.
We've come back from the future to warn the listeners that
although this sounds like it's the introduction to the Brett and Jordan episode,
that's not what it is.
introduction to the Brett and Jordan episode, that's not what it is. You're about to be rewarded, in a sense, with a special episode that is actually looking at the Brett Weinstein
and Heller Heinz Dark Horse podcast, episode 80, what covid reveals about our leaders and we didn't intend
for this to be a standalone episode but it it turned out that way so uh yes uh sorry about that
but um yeah i thought we should warn people yeah well chris a special edition episode that's a nice term because it felt like
an extended rant but i was down with it i think it needed to be said i think we've got a lot of
things out that had to be said our best episodes are extended and uh coming back from the future
to this point we know that this was our most successful episode to date it won audits we
got awards we're you know zip zoom to the moon so yeah you know in some sense this is like a special
episode for those who requested an update on what the weinsteins have been up to because we covered
them all like brett heller eric uh the only one that's missing is Eric's wife, but I don't think
she's done anything that deserves critiquing. So yeah, consider this a potted, strolled,
down, wine-stained land. The universe spoke to us and we responded.
Yeah, with love and abundance. Well, Matt, I'll return to my original time period now.
And yeah, let's let Matt and Chris in the past
think that they're going to get to the episode and continue on.
Sounds good.
So I've created another time paradox we're we're back from back in the future again
we're like we're coming back we've created paradoxes we've killed our own grandfathers
and your mother's not having sex with your father so you're disappearing oh no that's not good
as long as i don't try to seduce my mother that i couldn't i couldn't deal with that psychologically but your mother's not having sex with your father so you're disappearing oh no that's not good as
long as i don't try to seduce my mother that i couldn't i couldn't deal with that psychologically
yeah these time travel references are all back to the future not very heavy time travel literature
no not very contemporary either but that's our generation's thing unlike our references the
baxter and krang which are cutting edge contemporary culture In any case, that's not why we're here, Matt.
We're not here to talk about bad pop culture references.
We're here because you didn't make that reference.
You're not guilty for it, and you don't know who they are.
I didn't.
No, I didn't get the reference.
Don't tell me.
Don't tell me.
Since we're going to get into an extended segment on Brett and Heller's Dark Horse episode
about coronavirus vaccine skepticism
and alternative treatments and lab-like hypotheses and whatnot,
it seems that we should not neglect to introduce Brett and Heller.
I think most people that listen to this podcast will already be familiar with Brett,
covered in the first episode of the podcast,
themed because of his run-in with students at Evergreen College,
the famous culture war event.
And Heller is his wife, who was a teacher in her own respect.
I think actually she was the original person that was employed by Evergreen
and Brett came along as a package deal.
But she is a culture war participant in her own right
and an evolutionary biologist or at least a lecturer in that to boot.
So I thought it's worth mentioning that the kind of context this is in the Dark Horse podcast,
which purports to give a critical scientific appraisal of modern events and in particular over the past year or two the coronavirus
topics related to that the dark horse podcast started out in an interview podcast with brett
in the same vein of the portal brett interviewing people like andy no and douglas murray the usual
suspects for extended interviews but when the pandemic came out it instead pivoted to
brett and heller talking about the pandemic and trying to give a scientifically informed
view of the news of the week so that's the weekly format for this episode that we end up looking at in some detail. And they spent a lot of their time focusing on the lab leak hypothesis as compared to the
natural origins explanation for the origination of COVID. Were there any other topics associated
with COVID? We're going to talk about ivermectin soon in the past. And I'm just trying to remember whether they talk about any other
hot button issues. Yeah, they have. It's almost constant. It's not that all their information
is wrong. Like, for example, they were pro masks. They thought that lockdowns, although, you know,
should have been done better, that there were still reasons for them so it isn't that they just have
adopted every contrarian position however it's not that far off it where there's an angle that
people aren't talking about this they have sought to exploit that but they have done some episodes
where they've critiqued researchers coming out and presenting disinformation in an obvious way about
infection rates and that kind of stuff. So while I wouldn't recommend the podcast as a source for
information because of their tendency towards hot takes and their tendency to demonize
mainstream researchers, they're not like JPC or like like that they are like him when it comes to the
vaccines or when it comes to how they free him the virologist community or that so it's hard
to draw a firm line between their output and the the more extreme stuff that we've looked at but
yeah it's like they're more of a mixed bag
well it sounds good i think that's a pretty good uh introduction to brett and heather and the dark
horse podcast anything else we need to cover um well just one thing that we might mention is that
we're probably probably as if we don't, like going to get a little bit heated,
a little bit harsh in the upcoming section and to extend charity in advance in the past.
We did talk about afterwards that we recognize
that Brett and Heller are both,
I would judge, entirely sincere.
They believe themselves to be giving people
a perspective that is scientific and critically informed, and they're providing people with the
tools to think about these issues in a nuanced and evolutionary way. They believe that. That's
the impression I get. They aren't doing it just cynically to seek out rewards. We've talked about how it's
hard to disentangle top-down and bottom-up influences. You're always rewarded for
hotter takes. And I think their tendency towards scientific hipsterism and the various forms of
contrarianism and right-leaning politics, or at least heterodox
takes. It does skew things, but I think they're genuine in believing what they're selling. And
that's probably why it's so effective. I think what I want to say is I don't want to give the
impression that I'm seeing them as mustache twirling villains who don't believe in what they're claiming yeah but we do disagree
that they're doing a good job of what they're purporting to do and yes we are quite quite
frank about that and that's okay yeah and part of it is that although we seek to apply to some extent, right, a more detached lens when we're looking at these kind of contexts.
I know, like I rant about things and all that kind of stuff, but we do try to address the arguments and look at things from not just a, I dislike these people and that kind of emotional response. But it is fair to say in
this case, when they're demonizing scientists and the people researching vaccines and whatnot,
in the middle of a pandemic that's killing hundreds of thousands of people, and they're
assigning that demonization to the application
of science and critical thinking it it stings like it registers emotionally because it feels like
that they're violating something that i hold dear or that i think is important i think you feel the
same yeah absolutely and i think the other thing too is that they're not the only ones
doing this kind of thing, pushing conspiracy theories, talking about hydrochloric, I can't
pronounce it. Hydroxychloroquine. Hydroxychloroquine or ivermectin or various other things. And there
is an awful lot of disinformation out there. So much, in fact, that trying to engage with it is like trying to wrestle with a fine mist.
So we focus on particular people because it's the only practical way to grapple with what we think
is misinformation out there. And the other thing too is that we think that there's some fundamental
issues in terms of the paranoid and conspiratorial worldview,
which can easily be seen as completely implausible views of the world, in which there is a grand
conspiracy cooperation among researchers and scientists across a range of different countries,
all to keep the truth from the public.
And, in fact, it is only some brave podcasters
or cultural commentators like Joe Rogan who can see through that.
I think it's healthy and important to just point out
that such a worldview is inherently implausible. And if
you're going to make such strong claims, you need really, really strong evidence to back them up.
And as we'll see, that seems to be lacking. Yeah. And to just buttress your point, Matt,
today, as we record this, James Lindsay has released a podcast explaining why he's not going to get vaccinated and why he considers there to have been no good case made towards vaccination. There's so many echoes of the things that you will hear in the Dark Horse podcast, including the promotion of ivermectin as an alternative treatment and the issues with long term safety being unclear, the tradeoffs not being reasonable for young, healthy people and the approval process all wrong. Like he wedges it all in, but it's so familiar.
And I've heard the same thing in JPC's content,
in Scott Adams' content, and so on.
They're advocating for their position,
except that they're suppressing the idea that things like,
you know, adequate zinc and vitamin D and exercise and health and youth are sufficiently
protective to where I don't have to particularly worry about the virus. They've also much more
concerningly suppressed the idea that there are what they might call ambulatory treatments or
that there are treatments for this virus, which are known. I don't know a great deal of them. I've watched a handful of people get relatively severe cases
of COVID and go on what they said does not work, hydroxychloroquine, and then watched them
almost immediately watch their symptoms within hours vanish on a treatment that they've
vigorously suppressed. There are treatments for this virus.
There are prophylactics for this virus. And it's all been downplayed. It's all been denied. It's
all been hidden. It's all been shuttled, shoved away. Why? They all necessitate or they all
undermine the necessity, I should say, of the argument that we need the vaccine at all,
or especially to quote unquote, get back to normal. Right? They undermine that. And so this
is this all looks very shady. So Brett and Heller, they're like on the more reasonable end of that
spectrum, but they're all in the same waters. And it's the same water that the hardcore
anti-vaccine people are in as well. And these kind of narratives have consequences, real world consequences.
We are discussing the safety or lack thereof of a effective prevention for a disease that
is clearly out of control and which we regard as highly dangerous.
Okay, that has implications. People may hear what we say,
decide not to get a vaccine, and some of them may die. Some of them may get sick,
infect somebody else who dies who had no choice in the matter. That's a very terrible position
to be in. The reason that we are in this position is that the lies that cause people to believe things are
safe when they are not safe are vastly more dangerous yeah and i think it's really important
to evaluate their arguments and encourage people to think about whether or not what is getting
proposed is plausible and whether or not there is actually the evidence to back up such strong claims. So the weakness and the strength of the scientific worldview
is to actually allow for all possibilities
and not to have this cast iron confidence in one explanation.
So it, in principle, was perfectly possible, say,
that the MMR vaccine could have caused autism. And it was looked into
and a great deal of evidence was brought to bear. And a lot of researchers who were acting in
complete good faith evaluated it and it was found to be lacking and completely unsubstantiated.
Likewise, right now, as of today, it is theoretically possible that ivermectin is a fantastic thing to take to protect you against COVID. It's entirely possible that COVID originated from the Wuhan lab rather than from a natural source.
scientific approach. You don't rule things out, but you evaluate things in terms of the balance of evidence, and you don't buttress the flimsy evidence and the lack of it, and the preponderance
of evidence for the alternative explanation by simply saying that all of those people are in on
some sort of grand conspiracy to hide the truth from us. That is the wrong way to practice.
That is a poor epistemology, essentially.
Yeah.
And, you know, all possibilities are open or can't be ruled out entirely.
But the probability, relative probability matters.
And this isn't to say that a fringe theory can never be proven correct.
can never be proven correct. But it isn't wrong for people to doubt an unlikely hypothesis initially, right? When the weight of evidence leans against something, then you're not wrong
to doubt that, even if it eventually turns out that when better quality evidence becomes available,
that the weight of evidence shifts, then your opinion shifts. But it's not wrong to take
account of where the weight of quality evidence currently lies. I keep encountering, Matt,
that people have this problem where they can't handle that a research literature could be mixed or that it would be possible in good faith to reach
different conclusions about, for example, the effectiveness of cloth masks in community
settings, right? That public health bodies could have in good faith been working out
different cost benefit analysis on the basis of mixed literature yeah and even even
though as things going on that the evidence shifts such that the vast majority and i believe all
public health bodies come to recommend that mask wearing is not only preferable, but necessary, right? Like it's a recommended practice.
So the standards shifted,
but it doesn't mean that the initial judgments
were done in bad faith or were completely invalid.
It's just like, yeah, cost-benefit ratio
can be worked out differently.
And I don't think people ever have these very good insights about
things like the bandwidth for public health messaging and what they can influence or how
many messages they can include to get the public to react to something and so on. Like it feels
like there's a lot of armchair epidemiologists, public health experts and virologists who have
never had to actually manage interventions or design public health messaging. And those that
have know that it's like messy and it doesn't always go the way people would want. So yes,
there are mistakes made and there are conclusions which are changed over time,
but it doesn't require that there was a conspiracy at some point by people to hide the truth.
And we've said it before, there's no issue with proposing that there's a possibility of a lab
leak or proposing that there's a possibility that something like ivermectin could be helpful.
As you say, there's mixed evidence,
you're operating under uncertainty.
So anyway, I think we've made our objections clear.
We've foreshadowed.
Don't worry, Matt, this is all going to get cut.
It's all going to be cut.
Yeah, that's it.
Well, so back to the past, the past, past.
We're going, Chris and Matt, away you go.
You think you'll be back again.
Enjoy it.
It's the past and the future.
So, yeah, disclaimers are useful things,
Yeah, disclaimers are useful things, but there's a particular disclaimer that comes in this episode.
And, you know, we're connoisseurs of disclaimers, right, that people issue where they're saying something, but they're trying to avoid saying it as if they're endorsing it.
So I just want to hear you this because this is poetry. Yeah, I do. Because we are scientists who are about to talk about scientific evidence,
that scientific evidence may have implications
for what we collectively ought to be doing
and what you individually might think.
We are not going to make any recommendations
as to what you should do.
And we are not going to say anything conclusive
about what the data say
because the data are not themselves conclusive.
However, it doesn't mean the data don't imply things and um you know i think youtube ought
to think very carefully about whether it wants to confront two people who have the proper credentials
have demonstrated uh a willingness to be responsible about evaluating heterodox scientific processes,
and in this case, have just been through a circumstance where a hypothesis that they were suggesting needed to be investigated
is now understood to be necessary to be investigated in science, etc.
So, that's the context.
Okay. Okay. complicated uh you know in science etc so that's the context okay okay that's uh so by the way just for the context for people are listening this is claiming vindication because there was an opinion
piece article published in science saying basically that we need to continue investigating the origins
of the coronavirus including the possibility of a lab leak and it was signed by a bunch of relevant researchers
including some prominent figures right so he has been strongly on the side of the lab leak is not
only possible but extremely likely and he sees the publication of this letter as a vindication that
he's been you know uh proven correct That's what the last bit is about.
Yes.
My understanding, Chris, is that the consensus among the scientific establishment is that the origins of COVID
were never established beyond reasonable doubt.
And although natural origins appear to be most likely,
And although natural origins appear to be most likely, nobody has ever ruled out the possibility that it was something to do with a lab or human interaction. This is right. So the part about claiming vindication doesn't sit well with me because people will quibble about this and say that researchers were vilified if they discussed the possibility of lab leak.
But I would push back that it's not that possibility that was criticized.
It's the way that people were arguing.
So there can be a thing where there's a legitimate point, right, that we shouldn't rule out completely the possibility of a lab leak.
the possibility of a lab leak. But there are various reasons that virologists are skeptical,
that the vast majority of virologists have reached the conclusion that this is very unlikely. It's more likely to be a natural origin. Now, you can still talk about the possibility of there being a
lab leak. But to be responsible, you do it in the context of acknowledging the possibilities are not equal and that there at
least is a large weight in the favor of relevant experts towards a natural origin. There's one
statement I want to read it. So Ralph Baric, who is was heralded in in this episode with Brett and
Heller as reversing his position on the lab lab.
But I would point out that one of the really important things about this letter,
and it isn't just Ralph Baric, but the fact that he shows up there is the jaw-dropping fact of it.
By showing up here, he is implying that not only is SARS-CoV-2, as we find it,
consistent at a technical, at a molecular level with techniques
that might have been used to enhance it in the lab, right? He is saying that the denials that
he has heard are not compelling to him as a leading expert in the field, one of two top labs
in a position to know what is and isn't possible, what might or might not have been done.
So this is absolutely stunning to have him emerge. And I will say he has said before,
he has indicated one cannot rule out lab leak, but he has done it when pressed. Here,
he is coming out in front, and that's really important. And although I do think it's very
late and he should have done it much earlier. He's one of the authors on this published letter saying that we should continue to investigate the
origins and look into the possibility of a lab leak as well. But there was a statement he gave
to PolitiFact who wrote an article covering this debate about the lab leak and the relative positions on it. And I
just want to read the statement that he gave to PolitiFact for this article. Okay. Barak told
PolitiFact in a statement that he believed that SARS-CoV-2 is a zoonotic virus that passed from
bats to humans based on the primary sequence of the virus, its phylogeny and relationship to the
other bat strains, historic precedent, and its incredibly complex disease mechanisms.
Consequently, I do not believe it was generated from gain-of-function research,
while also noting that many independent research groups have demonstrated that SARS-CoV-2
is distinct from any of the recombinant coronaviruses being studied prior to 2012.
Baric has said that he thought the virus came from bats in southern China,
perhaps directly or possibly via an intermediate host,
and he suspected the disease evolved in humans over time without being noticed.
Eventually, a person carried it to Wuhan and the pandemic took off,
Barak told New York Magazine in January.
Can you rule out a laboratory escape?
The answer in this case is probably not.
So that's it, right?
He holds open the possibility.
But the whole part before that is,
here's the reason I don't consider that likely.
That's perfect.
And that isn't him reversing a position.
That's the normal position for the researchers in the field.
They say,
there's this weed of evidence that leads me to clue and include that's very unlikely it's a lab
leak, but I don't completely rule it out. And that's what people do when I see people. I've
seen a couple of occasions where people are very dismissive, right? And basically say the people
pushing lab leak hypothesis are cooks, conspiracy theorists. But that is because lots of them are.
They're not all very carefully caveating statements and whatnot.
What they're pushing back on is the people who assign it 95% probability or who suggest that anybody reaching that conclusion is lying to cover their own asses.
That's what I want to say.
It's frustrating.
This is why you get frustrated.
I understand, Chris.
I understand.
Just to give one illustration of this,
this is a point that Heller brings up.
And that the problem is people who have been too certain, right?
And it puts the...
It's our fault.
Yeah, it's our fault, even though...
We haven't been certain.
We haven't been certain at all.
In fact, I've been saying—
That's a clever pivot right there.
It's a clever pivot, right?
And my point has been stop saying theory.
It's not a theory.
It's a hypothesis, as is the other.
We're not certain.
When you say it's a hypothesis, you're saying here are the exact rules of engagement. Well, what's going to come back at you is that you made a flow chart and you said, you know, here and also on Bill Maher, something like, I think there's a greater than 95% chance.
Well.
And that is read apparently as certainty.
Greater than 95% chance read as certainty.
Why?
Why would somebody read a 95% higher chance that you're implying it's certainty?
That's very unfair, no?
No, very unfair.
Look, it reminds me so strongly of the issues around the discourse around anthropogenic global warming.
So, you know, like most things in science, nothing is known with 100% probability.
There is always a possibility for the alternative.
There is always these margins of error around the consensus opinion.
But there's been an awful lot of confidence around human-caused global warming.
And, yes, there is natural dissension,
and that's a good thing. Yes, there is uncertainty bounds around the rate and the extrapolations
about what's going to happen in the future, all that kind of thing, and debate around that stuff
is always good. But exactly the same thing that these guys are proposing
is going with COVID was happening with that.
There is a consensus.
Yes, there are tales on that consensus in both directions,
and yet there are still an awful lot of conspiracy theorists
who claim that there is this orthodoxy which enforces this view around
global warming, refusing to allow for the possibility that actually humans have nothing
to do with it, actually the Earth's not getting warmer, or maybe the Earth is getting warmer,
but humans have got nothing to do with it. There are various versions of it. but there is natural pushback among the scientific community to the people
who play up those extreme low probability not very plausible views because it is them in fact
who are playing up that potential explanation despite it having very little evidence to support it
because of political or popular opinion reasons and i feel like exactly the same thing is happening
here with covid i feel that the parallels are very strong yes and so what they want to argue
here is this isn't an episode focused on the lab leak that comes up for the first half of
it but the second half gets into vaccines and why they think an alternative this treatment which is
approved for kind of anti what is it anti-parasitic or it's a drug called ivermectin
ivermectin i didn't need to check the pronunciation for that but it's a it's a drug called ivermectin ivermectin i didn't need to check the pronunciation
for that but it's a it's a well-established drug that has good effects and has an earlier
candidacy for potentially having relevant antiviral properties which have now been explored
in various trials and there's still trials ongoing and whatnot, but the results are not looking good. It's almost exactly what we've seen with hydroxychloroquine, low quality, small
sample studies that showed promising results. As soon as they're replicated with larger samples or
better quality, the effects disappear. And so all public health bodies don't advise to use this now,
and the majority of them either take the
position that there's currently no good evidence to support it. And we have vaccines which are
effective, right? But this has become basically the new version of hydroxychloroquine. And I want
to just give an example of why Brett thinks the evidence is strong. And as a statistician, Matt,
I think you'll appreciate the reasoning here. So let me pause us there. So you will see frequently in the discussion of why we mustn't
think about, talk about ivermectin, you will see the claim that there are no large-scale studies
that would give us the evidence. What there is, is meta-analysis that actually looks at many studies, as you just described. And that is,
in fact, a better kind of evidence, right? So it would be nice if we had a really large,
long-standing study. But a meta-analysis that gives you a consistent indication is the equivalent or
more of a large study. A large study can be biased. A meta-analysis, the biases of various different
researchers will tend to be canceled by the fact that they won't be consistent between these
things. The other thing to say is large studies are great because they reveal very small effects.
When you have a very large effect, you do not require a very large study to see it. And so the compilation of all of these things is very strongly suggestive that ivermectin does work. And what we know about it from the context in which it has been used as an antiparasitic suggests it's very safe, which then we would have to put in to juxtapose it to the alternatives here.
The thing is, there's lots of stuff sprinkled in there that's true, right? Large part studies can
detect smaller effects. Meta-analyses are useful for canceling out potential biases of individual
studies. But there's lots of stuff which is also just wrong. Brea doesn't seem to have learned
anything from the replication crisis, right? Which is if you have a large selection of low quality
studies, it doesn't produce better quality evidence to meta-analyze them. Also, meta-analyses
depending on your selection criteria and the various ways that you select
effect sizes and whatnot, can totally be biased by researchers.
So you can get meta-analyses which come out positive and meta-analyses which come out
negative.
And when I did some research into this, there are some higher quality meta-analyses and
there are higher quality studies. And the pattern is exactly what you know, some higher quality meta-analyses and there are higher quality
studies. And the pattern is exactly what you expect, Matt. Better quality studies with control
conditions tend to be negative, but there aren't that many of them. There's only a handful.
And the pattern is exactly what you would expect, especially when there is a cadre of motivated people pushing this specific
treatment right as a work with hydroxychloroquine so i think he's treating meta-analyses as if they
can compensate for bad quality data but you know the famous phrase is garbage in garbage out and
that still applies when you have a meta-analysis. I think a good thing for lay people to do,
and I'm a lay person when it comes to virology,
is to step back a moment and ask yourselves
what is the likelihood that a pair of podcasters
have stumbled upon not just one, but two very large conspiracies about the origins of COVID
and also the alternative treatments for COVID in terms
of the risk-benefit ratio of normal vaccines versus
invermectin.
And if you are to believe them, they have figured this out from their home, and the entire virology community has not only not figured it out, or they have figured it out, and they're not telling anyone.
that as the elites often do when they are unable to control a story, they are going to do everything in their power to not allow the implications of it to be understood. The implications are
something is wrong with our institutional structure that it got this one so very wrong.
And that forces us to ask the question, what else might it be getting wrong? So we can leave it at that, but I very much want people to keep an eye on what was
actually said and what this pivot is going to do in terms of portraying what was being said.
Now, there is this conspiratorial ideation lying underneath this, which requires you
to distrust absolutely everything that has ever come out
of the scientific or academic community so if you have that level of distrust
in terms of what people are telling you why on earth would you believe the published studies that
brett and heather are citing because you can't trust anything. In fact, the only source of information
that you can trust is them. You know, it's exactly these organizations who are in part,
and they're representatives who are saying, well, we can't assess this because there are no large
scale studies, exactly while I think we are seeing evidence that they may be helping make sure that there are no large
scale studies. So that, you know, that's, that's a problem right there. So, you know, what landscape
are we in? Pretty hard to know whether the NIH is integral to why the big studies don't exist,
maybe. But I think the point is you somehow at the root of all of this is some weird license with no limit to a double standard,
right? So if the powers that be decide they don't like something like ivermectin,
they can establish any standard up to a ridiculous degree that nothing can overcome,
right? When it comes to the thing that they favor, there's almost no standard at
all, right? There's no level of danger that could be sufficient to call it into question. And so,
we don't know what that looks like on the inside, but what you can see is the hallmark of it
is a double standard that is glaring if you know how to analyze what's being said.
So, I just would, you know, I tend to rule these things out on first principles.
If I had several weeks to spare, I could stop what I'm doing in terms of my everyday work
and review that literature and so on and come up with those rebuttals.
But really, for me anyway, it falls at the first hurdle in that I don't believe that there is an international conspiracy among an entire scientific discipline any more than I believe that there is a huge conspiracy among all climate scientists.
If you're going to make such a strong claim, an outlandish claim, then you need equally strong evidence to back it up, not just hand-waving and supposition.
Yeah, and in case it sounds like we are unfairly inserting that they are positing a conspiracy
about why this treatment is not being considered,
let me just play two short clips of them discussing the reasons for this.
Let me just play two short clips of them discussing the reasons for this.
The relevant large-scale clinical studies on ivermectin, and thus it not being approved by the FDA for use in COVID, that opens the door for EUAs, for emergency use authorization, for the vaccines that we are now all living with and among.
This is stunning. If that is the explanation, then we are talking about something for which I'm not even sure we have a proper term because.
Anger inducing.
It is that.
But let's just say this would have elements of malpractice.
This would be gross negligence.
I think it verges on depraved indifference, given that we're talking about a life or death situation for vulnerable people who get this disease.
In addition to effectively the crippling of the world economy. And who knows
how much harm? We'll never be able to measure all the harm that came from this pandemic and the way
it has forced us to alter our behavior, all the businesses that have closed, all the people who've
been rendered homeless. Who's to say what all of the costs actually are? And if there is...
If this is effective.
If this is effective. And, you know, we can't say that it is, but we can say, look,
evidence works a certain way. This certainly seems like a whole lot of evidence that points
in a direction. I mean, Chris, I have to say my disdain for these two knows no bounds,
but I have to hand it to them in some ways, because they found a way to do conspiracy
ways because they found a way to do conspiracy hypothesizing in a tone of voice that makes them sound not like alex jones they found a way to do it that makes them sound as if they are
respectable scientists applying their generalist knowledge, applying the evolutionary lens and applying scientific critical thinking.
But that is such a thin veneer
to what they are actually doing.
And that is nothing more
than Alex Jones level conspiracies
about any popular topic
that seems like it would gain them some attention.
Yeah.
And so this runs so counter to the claims of,
we are not saying anything's being settled.
We're just talking about various possibilities.
No, listen to the way that they frame it.
The other people in their stories are villains.
And they'll add in the caveat, you know,
if this is true,
and we're not saying it's true, but we're just saying all of the evidence that exists strongly suggests that.
And if you listened to scientists who, you know, have got so many things right in the recent period of time, there's really only one conclusion that you're reaching.
95% probability, Chris.
Not saying it's definitely true, but just in excess of a 95% probability, Chris. Not saying it's definitely true, but just in
excess of a 95% probability. Yeah. And again, like, listen, this is them framing. It is hyperbolic. So
here's another clip about the conspiracy to keep these results hidden. So our viewers ought to be
considering this question in light of conspicuous patterns like that.
And in light of the fact that the drug in question has a very long, extreme safety record.
Why wouldn't you test it?
Right.
Why wouldn't you do that large scale study?
Why wouldn't you deploy it somewhere to see whether it had the effect and then discover whether or not this was, you know, I mean, I don't think we've said this time.
But this appears to be effective in controlling COVID from people who've already contracted it and preventing contraction.
Right.
Treatment and prophylaxis.
Treatment and prophylaxis.
If you imagine the thing blocks the spike protein, that's integral to how it gets between people it's also integral to how it gets
between cells right so this is highly effective in both cases it would appear so what on earth
is the excuse for not testing this first of all matt they have tested it like there's research
and there's ongoing clinical trials like this, but also that it's just
the constant insertion of a qualifier.
So here's one point where they respond to the point that some critics have raised about
the problems with the studies.
So just listen to this.
Like the actual fact and the critique, like the actual critique is something like the studies that suggest that ivermectin is effective are not the gold standard, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
And the point is, well, that's not an argument at all.
Yes, it is an argument that you might want, you know, a study that didn't have the defects of the ones that exist.
But that's hardly the same thing as there's no evidence for it. I just like, you know, the way that the studies are low quality is reframed as like,
blah, blah, blah. They're just, they're saying there's no evidence. Like if you take that
criteria, almost every medical treatment has evidence for it, including things like homeopathy.
If you don't care about the quality of the studies,
who are promoting the studies, then you can find evidence for every single medicine. And it just
reeks of the same kind of reasoning that we heard with on the group podcast, right? It's the same
kind of thing that it's all about the mainstream doctors hiding the really
effective treatments. They don't care about people like this pandemic, the unprecedented
efforts to develop effective vaccines, which are now working in the countries where they're being
deployed. That's all just people playing, you know, games and hiding what's the real effective treatment that
it's the worst kind of cancerism yeah no it's it's upsetting because if you just listen to the tone
of their voice and the syntax the way in which they're saying things it doesn't sound like alex
jones they sound they sound good right they sound
like sciencey people and i think it's very upsetting to to yourself and to me because
that's just a very thin veneer because implicit under every little thing they say is that they're
all lying to you it's all a big. Why are they trying to suppress this alternative
point of view? They're clever in that they don't go quite as far as Alex Jones. They use the
qualifiers and they use the appropriate language. But I'm sure their audience are in no doubt about
what they're saying. But go ahead. Yeah. And Matt, let me, you know, you're right that they do
qualify things, but I think they're not as good as we might
be giving them credit for like disguising the point that they're wanting to make so listen to
this the fact is ivermectin isn't new we could have been investigating this all along if there
needed to be a campaign to ratchet up its production it could be underway and if it turns
out that it's disappointing i mean frankly if it was half as good as it appears to be, it would be tremendous. So, you know, if it's as good as it appears to be, then how much did we lose dragging our heels and on whose behalf and how many people participated in shutting down this discussion and why? Right? That just,'s mind-boggling to me it really looks like
crime of the century stuff and you know hopefully somebody century is still young but it seems like
a good contender see what you're saying right no you're right the video gets very thin the
tilting and windmills in that it's very important for scientific hipsterism and their iconoclastic contrarianism
that there is this rampant orthodoxy which has this tunnel vision, refuses to see other options.
I mean, what reasonable person wouldn't?
Yeah, what reasonable person wouldn't if they actually cared about the things they say they care about,
if they're actually interested in the health of humanity and the societies that we live in. But I'm looking here at something you shared, a quote,
which goes along the lines of, as far as WHO is concerned, all hypotheses remain on the table.
This report is a very important beginning, but it is not the end. We have not yet found the source
of the virus. We must continue to follow the science and leave no stone unturned as we do that's about the lab leak and not about this but i think it goes to the the same
point which is they want to promote a world view in which there is this tunnel vision orthodoxy
with probably very nefarious hidden goals or objectives and presenting themselves as the only ones who have the courage
to even consider that there might be alternative explanations or alternative avenues.
It's a dangerous world when corporate marketing determines public health policy.
Global vaccine rollout to everyone is the policy.
So is there a polite way of saying what the fuck is going on?
Right?
Yeah.
Like we're talking about a situation in which life and limb is on the line at a scale that's
almost impossible to comprehend.
We're talking about millions of dead worldwide.
This is an immense number of people who stand to comprehend. We're talking about millions of dead worldwide. This is an immense number of
people who stand to benefit, not to mention all of the suffering that comes to people who have
lost a family member, right? That is an immense amount of harm before you ever get to the massive
disruption of planet Earth, right? And it appears that there's something just on the shelf, cheap to make,
safe to distribute, long longitudinal safety data that comes from the fact that millions of people
take this thing. In fact, I believe 4 billion doses of this thing have been administered already
on planet Earth. And that simply isn't the case. As you said, there's been heaps of studies done on ivermectin. There's been a heap of people calling for further investigation
on the source of virus. Of course, people want to know where the virus is coming from. Nobody
has confirmed it is of natural origin. So it's really quite frustrating that they craft a fake demon in the form of covered the lab leak as a conspiracy theory.
But I want to keep hammering this point.
It is a conspiracy theory for lots of the people that advocate for it.
I listen to Alex Jones week in and week out talk about it.
And yes, there are scientists who are more careful about what they say. But it's in this context that people
are talking about lab leak and the relationship with conspiracy theories, because there are tons
of conspiracies around it. And the people who are relatively detached scientific probability,
and even if they assign the probability higher or much higher
than other people in the field, yes, they will be seen as fringe people because when you assign a
high probability to something which everyone else in your field or the majority consider a low
probability, that does get you negative attention. But if you're right, you'll be vindicated in the
end. But no one is saying we should just shut it all down
let's stop looking at these things it's like the the origins of the virus are unimportant
like no they're not saying that they keep open the possibility and and say we can't rule it out
but here's the reasons we don't think it's true and if the evidence changes the opinion will change and this is the same thing with the ivermectin pretty much all public health bodies
have have converged on this finding which is there's not strong evidence for its effect the
studies are too low quality higher quality studies are, but we have alternative vaccines at the minute,
which don't make this a priority. That's not a big conspiracy. Like that's exactly what you
would expect if the evidence is what all of the agencies, all of, you know, the Cochrane reviews,
whatever, if they're actually just assessing the evidence and finding it's low quality,
just like hydroxychloroquine was not a conspiracy.
So Brett and Heller framed that as opposition to that was like completely because Trump took that
up, right? And it's not to say there's no knee-jerk responses, but it's more like that becomes this
convenient deflection that they have where they're saying anybody who who addresses this is immediately
painted as being sympathetic to trump and that's what it is it's trump derangent syndrome which is
preventing the consideration of this and it's it's a really convenient rhetorical technique
um with regard to ivermectin quote it's like the new hydroxychloroquine said ang Angela Rasmussen, a virologist at Georgetown University's Center for Global Health Science and Security, referring to the malaria drug published, pushed by President Donald Trump that proved ineffective against COVID-19.
Quote, it would be great if ivermectin did work.
It's been around for years and it's cheap.
But to my knowledge, there is no data that suggests it's good for COVID-19.
And of course, that's just thinly veiled code for this thing smells like Trump.
And if it smells like Trump, it must be bad.
So good people not just can, but indeed should, must safely ignore this thing.
And it's probably better if you mock and deride anyone who takes this seriously as well.
Yeah, it's framing it as that reasoning that she gave, saying there's not good quality
evidence to support it.
It would be good if it was but it's not there that's then reframed by the ah this is just to try and black get a black
eye because of the association with trump and it's like no if trump was right if he was right
it would come through the evidence and the scientists who are devoting their fucking careers to trying to treat these kind of viruses,
they wouldn't care that Trump said it was good
because the evidence would support it.
The fact that the evidence doesn't support it,
that's the crucial thing.
The fact that Trump is pushing it is just an indication that,
you know, it is, ironically ironically it is highly politicized but by the
people that brett and heller want to claim are innocent it's ironic that they perceive everything
through a political conspiratorial culture war lens and can't imagine that there are people out there who don't see things
through that lens or don't let it determine everything right like the the scientists the
public health bodies it's all about giving trump a black eye yeah that's the last clip i'll play
for this is that it sometimes seems that like Brett is willing to go farther than
Heller and she's the more reasonable one holding him back raising objections and stuff but but just
just one clip to highlight how in a very real way she's completely on board and adding on we still
don't have the giant clinical trials with regard to efficacy against COVID but maybe especially
given the problem in schools,
and especially given that variants may be now figuring out how to leap into kids because more
and more of the adult population is vaccinated, there's less reservoir in the adult population,
maybe ivermectin to 18-year-olds and under would be a legitimate way to start rolling this out.
And maybe if you really have to play
your damn games, you can do it in such a way that, you know, the vaccines are only for over
18 year olds and the kids are for the ivermectin is for younger people. But, you know, really,
why do you need to play those games with all of our lives? Like that's the big question.
Yeah, that is the big question.
That is the big question, Matt. Why are these people not, you know, they're just playing games,
keeping the effective treatments away and instead pushing these, like,
vaccines which have untold risks?
Just asking questions, Chris.
Just asking questions.
It does do your head in.
With everything they say, the implication is of this this terrible far-reaching deep conspiracy
but they don't go full alex jones yeah and they're they're the lone bastions of science
like the real science still willing to put against political correctness and to
critically evaluate the evidence where all of the relevant fields are completely corrupted
by other incentives and politics so these two non-virologists non-epidemiologists
non-researchers non-researchers yeah not even researchers although they would contest that but
you know you have to usually produce research output to be at cataract research in any case yeah like there's a there's
another episode matt the week before brett brought up this analogy which he likes where he likens
taking the vaccine to playing russian roulette no i would i want to correct two things okay one
i am saying this is unsafe i am not saying it is harmful enough to matter. But previously, we've been very careful and we have said that something that does no harm is not necessarily safe. Playing as risk and harm is the is actual harm right so like
i do think this needs real clear language every time you say it because it's not these words are
not used cleanly by anyone and so you're saying i understand that there has to be risk and i am
not saying that that therefore means there is harm. I prefer the word risk here
to safe. But I'm going to upgrade that because I've been super careful about that. And I have
said, I've used this example deliberately. The fact that you have put a gun to your head and
pulled the trigger is not inherently harmful, but it is inherently unsafe. Okay. So that distinction
is the important one. Now, I think with greater clarity about the mechanism of action
when things go right, we know that there is harm being done to tissues in the course
of action of this vaccine. And he says that if you play Russian roulette and you don't get,
the gun doesn't go off, you can say that you weren't harmed, but you can't say that the game
isn't dangerous. And this is how he frames taking the vaccine.
Maybe people won't be harmed.
Maybe there won't be long-term effects.
But we're essentially playing with a loaded gun and not considering the potential to blow our fucking brains out.
Such an evocative, demonizing analogy. And it's completely wrong because of course health vaccine creation
scientists and virologists and all of them care if we were creating a vaccine that was going to kill
or badly harm people down the line. These are like, you know, major concerns, including for the people who will pass it as verified, you know, safety acceptable.
So the notion that like people don't really care about this and it's people are left to really think through these issues are Brett and Heller.
just so irresponsible because it demonizes the very people who are making vaccines who are doing safety tests who are working on these very things i mean what reasonable person wouldn't yeah what
reasonable person wouldn't if they were actually if they actually cared about the things they say
they care about if they're actually interested in um the health of humanity and the societies that we live in. And just these podcasters, Brett and Hela are just, you know,
a small fish in a big pond, week in, week out, demonizing the scientists,
hinting at nefarious motives behind like public health bodies.
And that's why you end up with like vaccine hesitancy, anti-vax movements.
They are the tip of the spear,
but not of the scientific community,
of the anti-vaccine community.
Yeah, exactly.
I think when we first came across Brett and Heather,
I think I thought of them as really a far less extreme
and more innocuous version of Eric.
a far less extreme and more innocuous version of eric and and really didn't think there was anything too bad about them but as time's gone on they have staked their claim really heavily
in that conspiratorial anti-vax worldview i mean i'm sure they've convinced themselves of their correctitude and
their moral righteousness but i feel that underlying it is simply a pursuit of attention
and clicks and more views and developing an audience very similar to our other gurus
and i think that they're actually well placed to do that because they do have phds
in this relatively unconnected field of evolutionary biology but they do a pretty
good job of convincing people that it is applicable to a whole range of socially contentious issues. Everything.
Everything, apparently.
And even though they really have no research track record,
and frankly, if I just look at their output from the point of view
of somebody assessing a job application or a promotion interview,
I would judge them as having no research track record
and, in fact, a very disappointing
career when it comes to research post-PhD or even during their PhDs. They've successfully
managed to present themselves as intrepid researchers, people who are eminently qualified
to evaluate and make judgments on entire disciplines.
So the fact that they are making any headway whatsoever is immensely dispiriting to me.
I see them as an enhanced version of Alex Jones.
Someone like Alex Jones will always have very limited appeal.
He will only appeal to a certain segment of society
and the rest of us will laugh and not take someone
like that seriously.
They yell too much and they say crazy stuff.
These guys have enough education to put really the same kinds
of messaging together in a way that's far more plausible.
And, yeah, so it just makes me sad.
I'm with beautiful disclaimers.
Like they're crafted so expertly that when you point out
how extreme their positions are,
it's easy for their fans to come back and say,
look, they said they're not certain.
They said they're not wanting to
convince anyone about what they're doing, their decisions. They're leaving everything up to their
audience. They're not pushing a specific narrative, but obviously they are. I mean,
from the clips here, it should be completely obvious about that. But the last thing I'll
mention about this is on the stream
brett decides to demonstrate the courage of his convictions that he's going to take
the ivermectin on the podcast stream and and this is how he sets that up and uh if you haven't
uh been confronted with covid if you think you've been exposed and the treatment of patients.
And so anyway, the guidelines are fairly simple. And so anyway, I feel like I should be on it
because as much as no drug is perfectly safe, I feel the danger of COVID in the world is much
greater than the danger that comes from taking this stuff, which, among other things, very cheap,
but it's also, it doesn't have to be taken frequently.
You take it two doses, 48 hours apart, and then I think it's weekly.
So anyway, I think cost-benefit for me, it makes sense to go on the prospectus.
It sounds similar to a prophylactic dosage regime for most of the anti-malarial drugs yeah exactly so um which you know for those you wouldn't want to be on forever
but you know we used to spend a long long long you know many months at a time uh in places where
malaria was endemic and we're on malaria prophylaxis and yeah yeah so you can hear the
capsules being open there and he's gonna
like ask carol there and she's gonna hesitate and say well look i don't want to do this on the
stream you know i i want i probably will but i need time to consider okay so you just you just
did that you just took your first prophylactic dose of of ivermectin and you offered it to me
as well and i said you know i i think i, and I'll report out next week if I did.
But upon being confronted with it in real time with an audience, I feel about like I would if you had asked me to marry you in a very public place.
No matter how I felt, I'm going to go someplace private and think on this and make my decision.
But just imagine that in another context.
someplace private and think on this and make my decision. But just imagine that in another context, right? Imagine like this week in virology,
where they start like taking their pills on the podcast. It feels obviously performative,
obviously not in line with the, look, everybody can do their own mind up about this, and there are different
opinions available. It's more like a guru, in the classical sense, demonstrating to the followers,
this is what responsible scientists do. We work out the probabilities like this, then we have the
courage of our convictions to take the pill.
And so this isn't about us being anti-vaccine. This is about us selecting the right kind of
treatment. And like, I think people assume that anti-vaccine people come out and say,
I'm a huge guy against vaccines vaccines i think all vaccines are going to
transform you into a mutant and anyway who knows if chickenpox is real and all this and that's not
what they say all anti-vaccine advocates say i'm just concerned about the safety i'm not anti-vaccine
i am pro-safety and there's concerns with the safety profile of these specific vaccines and so on.
So like that's not an unusual position.
That's the norm.
But people like act like it disqualifies them from the category of anti-vaccine because hypothetically, they are pro-Olo vaccines. Yeah. Like, I appreciate the stuff about this that upsets you,
which is that they've rebranded conspiratorial ideation
and anti-vaxxer rhetoric.
And they've done it quite effectively, actually,
in such a way that seems on the surface to be reasonable.
I guess for people who don't think about this stuff that much
for whom thinking about vaccines or thinking about science it's not a day-to-day thing for them it
could be quite easy to be lulled into a false insecurity by their presentation it's very
compelling it sounds convincing it sounds scientific and it sounds like the kind of deep dive that you want to hear. And I'm not for one minute saying that their audience, by not picking up on this, are somehow deficient, because I don't think it's easy to pick that up. And I'm not even talking about that. Oh, what a big science Bree and I have. And you
know, how fantastic that you and I can see through them. No, like part of this is I've spent so long
around anti-vaccine kind of rhetoric and conspiracy theories that it flashes up.
But the other thing is that a lot of academics will be familiar with doing critical reviews about the efficacy or the
effect size of something and how misleading a lot of the various claims can be, especially
around the whole replication crisis.
This was exactly it.
There were small, low quality studies which had plausible sounding effects, but they couldn't
be replicated. And it's very familiar, but I think it would be
unfair to present it as if anybody falling for this is just a rube who has no interest in science
and doesn't have any critical faculties. It's exactly what you said. It's presented in a really
convincing way. And that's why the Weinsteins in a way are so interesting to me, because I know
they don't have the reach of other conspiracy theorists, but they've done this, I think,
better than most of them, where they can maintain that air of legitimacy. And yes,
there's lots of like more extreme conspiracy theorists who do the same thing. But I think
their scientific background lets them do it in a way that doesn't
work so well for others it's a concerning development a concerning development they've
certainly shown a willingness to latch on to topics that uh the background to this is that
the united states is quite insane right now where you have,
I don't know, it seems what, 30%, 40% of the population is unwilling to take a vaccine.
So there is vaccine hesitancy out there.
There has been a whole bunch of stuff that's been politicised about this
and these guys, I guess, capitalizing on this weird culture war around things that there shouldn't be a culture war on.
It really should be a simple matter of public health and virology and epidemiology and scientific consensus. consensus it's quite frightening to me the way that i guess the public discourse has projected
their own political hang-ups their political concerns onto entire disciplines which are
filled with people like you and me that actually spend their lives in a very nerdy dorky way
trying to get to the bottom of very niche things like spike proteins or like melting of
ice caps or whatever which when they embarked on that they had no idea that it had some great
political ramifications they were just into that right that was their job and now it has been the subject of this rampant political projection.
And so, yeah, look, I'm with you, Chris.
The fact that the people are taking advantage of this
and projecting their political culture wars
onto purely scientific questions is really concerning.
And I don't have a good solution to it
because I don't think any of
this should be expected to get into the literature and study the meta-analyses and understand the
intricacies of of how the ivermectin or other substances work really we need to have confidence
in our scientific communities and there's no reason not to
except for the fact that political actors have a real incentive to incite it but that's yeah that
will be framed as like naivety right because the the argument will be that scientists have revealed
that they are just as politicized as anyone else and i one point i would
make that is like the like take this week in virology right this is an alternative podcast
i listened to which is hosted by virologists and as you say it didn't come out of the pandemic
it existed prior to the pandemic just for all just sitting around talking about viruses.
And then it became very big because of the pandemic.
But these people are people with, you know, decades of research in viruses and some of them relevant expertise in coronaviruses specifically.
Now, when I hear them talk about these issues, first of all, they're human, right?
issues. First of all, they're human, right? So they sometimes overstate things or they're snippy or they're like, they might like events of political naivety about the Chinese government
or something like that, right? That's true. They're human. So they don't always choose the
word so perfectly. But on the other hand, when you hear them talk about virology and the science of the specific papers, what you don't get is any sense that these are people who are just playing.
They're people with like such a depth of knowledge and that are communicating with other experts that they talk about an issue and they pick up immediately why this is important.
And they relate it to research that they've done for 20 years and why this is unlikely and so on.
And almost universally on that podcast, they're very skeptical of a lab origin outbreak.
And they give tons of reasons about it, rates of mutation and how long even serial passage stuff would take and so on.
And I know that there are alternative,
there are some researchers who disagree with them, but the vast majority do. And it's lazy and frankly, just completely wrong to view it that these people hold those opinions because
of their political biases. No, they hold it because of their expertise.
And if they're wrong, they're wrong because of the evidence that will emerge that will prove that.
But it isn't about a conspiracy to cover their ass.
And it isn't about denying effective treatments to shore up vaccines because they don't care about long-term harms.
That's a cartoon.
That's just a cartoon image of them.
And in this specific episode, Heller recommends people don't listen to them
because they are some of the villains that have been criticizing the lab leak.
And therefore, we have to wonder about gain-of-function research.
We should also then be wondering about the people who pushed it, you know, Fauci, Peter
Daszak, right?
All of the things that got that in motion, we should now be questioning.
All of the newspapers that signed up for the standard line.
Frankly, the This Week in Virology podcast.
This Week in Virology.
They were very instrumental
in making sure that no one who took lab leaks seriously was taken seriously early on.
Right. And we've got entire fields of biology, the fields that we most need, which are apparently
compromised by some political willingness to shut down discussions they find inconvenient
or threatening to their future prospects or whatever. So we have to look at this.
they find inconvenient or threatening to their future prospects or whatever.
So we have to look at this.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, the kind of line that I tend to hear is that virologists and epidemiologists all over the world are closing ranks and holding to a particular orthodoxy and denying the
possibility of a lab leak because they are concerned that if the truth were to come
to light and that a leak from the chinese laboratory in wuhan was confirmed then that
would damage the reputation of their field and imperil their future funding. Now, that is just a perfect example of what you described,
which is this cartoonish, pseudo-sceptical,
conspiratorial view of the world, which is just...
It's hard for me to find words to explain how implausible that is.
The idea that there could be such coordination and shared interest among disparate
professionals all over the world and that they would put aside basically all of their training
their their entire i guess purpose of their career in in favor of some nefarious conspiracy to hypothetically improve their chances of
funding in the future because they think that the shade or the,
or the parlor that might,
that might hang over their field from a lab leak in a far distant country by a
completely different group might somehow affect them.
It's yeah. It's, i just i i can't explain definitely
i mean look they would get demonized because people would draw a connection warranted or
not but you know the vast majority of virologists are not doing gain of function research and
they're not i i don't know the exact split that are focused on coronaviruses, but I imagine
there's a lot of viruses out there. So while coronaviruses are bound to be a big topic,
I doubt they're taking up the vast majority of everyone in the field. But I think the point that
you emphasize that what they're positing isn't just that the people are wrong in their assessment it's that they're lying they're they're lying
about the the likelihood that it's a lab outbreak they're lying about the effect is the effectiveness
of specific medicines that's the bit which is a conspiracy and it's's also a brutal characterization of the scientific community.
And that is not the same thing as saying scientists don't have egos, scientists don't
have conflicting interests from pharmaceutical companies that they're involved with. Or like,
no, these things are all, there are issues with science that are well documented.
Publication bias is real.
There can be conservative tendencies in the field to not address specific theories which seem established. But all of that being true does not make the conspiracies that Brett and Heller and other like them are weaving any less convincing.
and other like them are weaving any less convincing.
And in fact, that they don't know about these issues with meta-analyses or that they never talk about open science endeavours
and the replication crisis,
except as a means to address culture war topics.
That should be telling because if you're really about science reform,
if you're really about science reform, if you're really about like improving the standards of science, what your output looks like is like Ben Goldacre
or Stuart Ritchie or someone like that, right? You don't look like Eric and Brett Weinstein.
That's what you look like when you want to be an online guru with a YouTube channel.
Like you hear that first clip, it sounds reasonable reasonable they're adding all these disclaimers
and they've got like everything mapped out as you go on the words the disclaimers what are they worth
it's a global conspiracy of the worst crime of the century right like the difference is obvious
and i think we feel sometimes that okay we ranted about that and we didn't extend
the fullest amount of charity that we could, but that's because they've demonstrated in their own
content why they can't be taken at face value when they issue those disclaimers. And if those
disclaimers were sincere, they wouldn't go on to say what they
say. And, you know, the other context, Matt, is that there's a global pandemic where millions
have died, right? Like all over the world. And their contribution to the public discourse is to
demonize vaccines, argue that scientists are not to be trusted
and are lying about effective treatments.
It's okay to be pissed.
Well said.
That's a good final word.
So that's the intro to that.
That's the intro, Chris.
That's a hell of an intro.
That's an amazing intro.
I feel like this was more
therapy than intro but you know well well doesn't it feel like we probably should split this off
into its own standalone uh pre jordan and brady episode like an interim. It does feel that way.
It does feel that way.
Like an interim rant.
Not so much a full episode, but a rant that we can put in there.
I feel it had to be said.
We said important things that need to be said,
that the powers that be don't want said,
that we had the courage to say, I think it was good.
And what we're not saying, Mark, is that we are completely right.
We could be wrong.
We're just raising possibilities.
The scientific method requires that you apply a critical mind to the output that people have.
Well, I'll just say that I'm 95% confident
that Heather and Brad are rampant conspiracy theorists.
I'm not saying they are.
I'm just saying that there's a 95% probability.
If I follow my decision tree, that's where I end up.
That's all I'm saying.
Yeah.
And who could fault you?
Like anybody that says you're expressing certainty about that point,
what fools, Matt?
They don't understand likelihood.
They barely understand Bayesian analysis, I think.
So these are things
to consider so i guess then we we should probably do a sign off so that we can package this into a
a thing special edition a special edition a missive yes yeah so consider this a taster for the actual target for this week, which is Brett and Jordan.
And I promise you that there's very little talk of coronaviruses, but there's plenty of talk about revolutionary theories, conspiracy theories and various scorching hot takes about a wide range of topics.
And, you know, Jordan Peterson being there,
I think actually adds a nice dynamic to it
because there is a contrast between the two of them.
And it's an interesting one.
So we also do get, actually, there's a link to this episode
because we get Brett explaining how he tests his theories in the flaming hot fiery
oven of feedback from his family Eric and Heller and in that respect he he knows if he's going to
be going out in the limb and saying stuff because they give him the pushback he needs so we've just
seen some of that valuable pushback in action yeah yeah no
it's a good episode there'll be talk of lineage selection the evolutionary psychology basis of
rape and genocide and jordan peterson seems baffled through at least 50 of this
i think the bafflement is a constant because like jordan pearson is baffled at his predicament
but i actually have a specific folder which is just brett and jordan saying we don't know
anything about x and there's a lot of x's right so we don't know anything about religion we don't
know anything about evolution or whatever the topic may be i think it's the internet and various other things that
we don't know anything about but yeah it'll be it'll be fun to copy or maybe a bit less heavy
than the coronavirus stuff and okay things always get heavy you know when coronavirus skepticism
comes in it does it does well look we don't know how to sign this off because well
first of all we don't know how to sign off even at the best of times but in this case doubly so
because it's not really a proper episode it's just us talking about stuff that's annoying us
uh so it's kind of it's what do you call it like a stealth episode it just came it just flew it you know it emerged even with the clip prepared
it just emerged from the ether naturally an organic it was a self-organizing emergent episode
and yeah i think that's okay sometimes in some sense this is the universe attempting to inoculate itself against the disinformation i can't do it i can't
do it but we're just the avatars of the instruments of the universe chris i like it
all right the universal scientific mind yes that's what i we i often refer to myself as
so so yes ma i will see you again, maybe with a little less negative energy to bring.
But, yeah, so, you know, we're not going to do the reviews and stuff
because we'll leave that to the next episode.
But that will be the Feebled Jordan and Brett episode.
And there's really only one thing I can say to you, Matt,
and that's grovel at the feet of your muscle mass.
I will most certainly do so.
Thank you, Chris.
Bye.
Bye. Thank you. Really, it just pisses me off, hey?
Like, I don't get upset about Alex Jones.
I really don't.
I haven't listened to as much of him as you have,
but I've listened to some pretty extreme shit.
And because he's, to me, he comes across as a madman, you know.
He comes across as a ranting lunatic.
And I can accommodate that in my scheme of the universe.
And, yeah, these people that add that veneer,
the thing that I really love, you know, the thing that I love,
which is scientific objectivity and dispassionate
analysis and logic and so on i really love that and they they use it as a fucking tool
yeah to just smuggle in the alex jones shit and it makes it makes me upset i you know maybe i'm
not as just demonstrative about it as you, but I, but I, it does upset
me.
I, yeah.
Maybe I'll include that little rant of yours as a bonus at the very end.
Yeah, by all means, by all means.
Everything up.
This is the real Matt behind the curtain after the music plays.
I'm an open book.
I'm an open book, Chris.
Everything I say, I stand by.
Almost Matt, I've got it all.
Yeah.
That's good.
That's good.