Instead, we must look at their actions, especially how they orient themselves to genuine domain expertise and how they contend with refuting evidence.
This is a common pattern across many different forms of pseudoscience and conspiracism. I am most familiar with it through the lens of people who reject mainstream climate science and espouse debunked conspiracy theories about various scientists and aspects of climate science.
Despite there being no a priori tie between topics as diverse as the JFK assassination, evolution via natural selection, the events of 9/11, vaccine safety, the reality of human-driven climate change, or the Apollo moon landing, parallels abound due to similar cognitive pitfalls.
Some of the unifying themes can include:
- an event/topic with far-reaching societal implications
- access to special or secret Truths that the public ("sheeple") are ignorant or in denial about
- delegitimization of experts as part of the conspiracy or corrupt & untrustworthy
- elevation of pseudo-experts & fringe viewpoints over mainstream expert views
- a reversal of the standard burden of evidence, wherein the conspiracy is assumed to be true/likelier
- circular arguments, where an assumption of the conspiracy is used as evidence for itself
- while mainstream must contend with consilience of evidence, conspiracy relies on mutually inconsistent lines of "evidence" in support of underlying claim
- inability to cede existence of coincidence, mundane error, or malfeasance that do not support underlying conspiracy claim
- allusions/self reference to mavericks, heretics, past iconoclasts who purportedly proved everyone else wrong
- claims of persecution, censorship, gatekeeping by mainstream experts, media, or society
- citing existence of past conspiracies (real or imagined) as justification
- perhaps most importantly, inability to contend with contrary evidence in a normal way, including rejecting the evidence as further proof of conspiracy or expanding/complicating the scope of the conspiracy to explain how the contrary evidence does not refute the original claim
- avoidance of normal evidence/fora for empirical resolution of inquiry (scientific papers, conferences, formal investigations) in favor of things like quotes from media pieces or personal correspondence where context & rigor is frequently missing, meta-data, procedural "fouls"
- (to circle back to the beginning) a denial that one is advancing conspiracy theories, frequently by claiming one is Just Asking Questions, Demanding Balance, Who Is Against More Inquiry, etc
People shouldn't be embarrassed to align their views with experts' absent compelling reason to not, and they are always free to shift their views in accordance with changes in evidence:
It is absolutely INSANE that Alina Chan and the NYT Opinion team are claiming this as evidence for a lab origin for the pandemic when it has been thoroughly discredited for years.
In 2020, contractors within Trump's State Department working for Tom DiNanno were given permission to dig up any & everything they could throw at China to blame them for the pandemic. In late 2020 Mike Pease found mention of non-COVID illnesses on an interagency classified system
Although it was clear these illnesses were not COVID, the Trump State people claimed it was and tried but only partially succeeded in laundering this lie as "intelligence" before they were booted out the door in January 2021 in their "Fact Sheet" on China & the pandemic.
I am not a virologist or epidemiologist. I listen to them & they have pointed out numerous errors in the NYT piece. However I am incredibly familiar with how pseudoscience & conspiracy theory pushers argue after dealing with hordes of them on climate, and it's the same dynamics.
Lab Leakers have been pushing a dog's breakfast of conflicting claims that fail to contend with consilience of evidence and aren't even internally coherent for years. When their claims are shown to be wrong they add epicycles to dodge falsifiability or pretend it never happened.
Alina Chan, the author of the NYT op-ed, has done this for years with zero acknowledgement of being shown to be wrong at nearly every turn.
We should tell people that available evidence indicates SARS-CoV-2 was a mundane zoonosis, that after four years there's zero evidence it was engineered or was inside a lab prior to its discovery in December 2019, and that Lab Leaker claims are overwhelmingly wrong & conspiracist
is there some sort of journalistic purpose being served by not disclosing that it's David Asher & the same other people who have been promoting this story for years, when they have said the same things non-anonymously elsewhere?
Genuine question:
is there some sort of journalistic purpose being served by not pointing out that this story is completely absent from the information these folks were spreading around internally, then across the interagency, then to media before a certain period in time?
Genuine question:
is there some sort of journalistic purpose being served by not pointing out that this story, when it first gets circulated by these people, bears almost no resemblance to the version currently being circulated?
as with so many things David Asher has been involved with promoting in the media, there's not one single clear answer. I can try to summarize what is known from memory here & hopefully circle back at some point with links.
ostensibly the first public claim about the 3 WIV workers meme comes from the Jan 2021 "fact sheet" the AVC/EAP dolts managed to get cleared (despite their stronger allegations being laughed out of the room by career State intelligence & science experts) on their way out the door