The origin of Covid-19 is no longer a scientific question: it is a major question on the functioning of scientific institutions.
@BillyBostickson @TheSeeker268
THREAD
1/n
The Covid-19 epidemic that has claimed millions of lives began in the city of Wuhan, a modern city in China with an institute (the WIV) where bat coronaviruses were studied and housed.
2/n
The most basic way to determine if the SARS-CoV-2 that claimed so many victims came from the WIV would have been to find out what work was being done in this institute by obtaining funding requests and lab notebooks.

3/n
This is a forensic investigation rather than a scientific study. Chinese authorities have refused to provide this information. The police investigation was finally carried out by non-professionals on the Internet (DRASTIC group).
4/n
It revealed that Chinese authorities lied about the origin of the epidemic by pretending it was linked to the Wuhan Wet Market and that they suppressed data on the first infected patients and on the viruses that were studied in the WIV.
5/n
For a judicial institution, removing clues from a crime scene would be an admission of guilt. But the investigation revealed much more: The laboratory had applied for funding to produce a virus similar to the one that caused the epidemic.

6/n
The scientific community, for its part, has not remained inactive. One can get an idea of the origin of SARSCoV2 from its DNA sequence by comparing it to the sequences of known coronaviruses, in order to understand how a bat virus could have evolved to cause a human pandemic
7/n
Two theories were possible: adaptation by an intermediate host; adaptation in the laboratory. Despite intensive searches, no intermediate host could be found.
8/n
The pangolin hypothesis has been ruled out. A number of researchers, on the contrary, have found some evidence for a laboratory origin.
9/n
Now, what have done the scientific institutions?
10/n
1) Leading scientific journals (Lancet, Nature Medicine) have called research suggesting laboratory origin a conspiracy theory. The correspondence to the Lancet was signed by top virologists, most of them with conflict of interest.
11/n
Their work was mostly funded by an international organization, EcoHealth Alliance, which also funded the WIV.
12/n
2) The scientific manuscripts suggesting a laboratory origin written by various researchers have almost all been systematically rejected, including at the preprint level on BioRxiv, i.e., it is simply censorship.
13/n
3) A petition supporting virus research in Wuhan funded by EcoHealth Alliance received the support of 77 Nobel laureates in May 2020.

14/n
Thus, far from having a neutral attitude and open to all possibilities, major scientific institutions have tried to impose an alternative reality on the origin of the virus, which avoided questioning certain activities.
15/n
One can be frightened as to how such a "conspiracy" could have been carried out, but our preliminary reflection on the subject indicates that it's simply the usual functioning of scientific institutions, based not on argumentation, unlike science, but on the balance of power
16/n
Scientists do not only live in the world of ideas and have to make a living, too. It is fallacious to imagine that large scientific institutions are disinterested and only perverted from the outside (Big Tobacco, Big Pharma).
17/n
They are rarely independent of political power and must present their work in a favorable light to continue to be funded.

In some cases, the assertions of scientific institutions may be confronted with a perceptible reality outside their realm of influence.
18/n
This reality reveals that the Emperor is naked. This is the case for the origin of Covid-19, as is the case for cancers linked to x-ray imaging, perhaps the main cause of cancers in developed countries.
19/n
Despite an abundant literature tending to affirm the safety of the doses of radiation used, a simple examination of the incidence of breast cancer after the establishment of screening shows that this is not the case and that they are are responsible for a cancer epidemic
20/n
Society must address the issue of the independence of scientific institutions with the same acuteness as it does for judicial institutions.

21/21
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More from @daniel_corcos

17 Oct
The chance that a woman will die from breast cancer in developed countries is 1 in 40 (remember that 1 out of 8 women will have breast cancer). Therefore, in a theater of one thousand women, 25 will die from breast cancer.
2/
This means that if regular mammography screening was really reducing breast cancer death by 20%, more than 5 women out of 1000 have been saved by regular mammography screening (since the above numbers are in countries with national screening).
3/
Read 5 tweets
18 Jun
In 2016 I've discovered while working at the @Inserm (the French National Institute of Health and Medical Research) that mammography screening is a major cause of breast cancer, due to X-ray induced-radiation. I was harassed by the INSERM and lost my permanent position in 2018
2/
I received support from Archie Bleyer, Professor Emeritus at OHSU, and we could publish in the New England of Medicine some data on the consequences of nationwide mammography screening in France and in the USA (Corcos & Bleyer, NEJM, 2020).
3/
Read 11 tweets
13 Jun
#Wuhan #lableak
Le complotisme, c'est d'imaginer que tout relève d'un projet élaboré. Mais généralement, la réalité est encore plus tragique : c'est la stupidité au pouvoir et la crédulité face aux manoeuvres grossières pour couvrir les erreurs et l'incompétence. 1/n
Il fallait être stupide pour croire que des expériences en laboratoire visant à "améliorer" un virus avaient plus d'intérêt que de risques. Il fallait vraiment ignorer que les fuites de laboratoire était des évènements fréquents. Pourtant, les Chinois n'était pas les seuls.. 2/n
dans cette entreprise. Quand la théorie du "wet market" est arrivée, il fallait être extrêmement crédule pour continuer à la prendre au sérieux quand on a appris qu'aucune chauve-souris n'y étaient vendue. Si l'étude de l'origine la plus plausible, la fuite de laboratoire .. 3/n
Read 13 tweets
1 Jun
Chronologie de l’affaire des cancers du dépistage mammographique.
@RecheckHealth @HealthWatchUK @Lanceursalertes @JouanAnne1 @gijnFr @TranspariMED @stephanehorel

1/
L’affaire des cancers du dépistage mammographique cache en fait un scandale sanitaire encore plus grand, celui des risques des examens radiologiques, qui pourrait bien être une cause majeure de cancers dans les pays développés.
2/
Le risque de K lié aux examens radiologiques a été systématiquement occulté par le monde médical et industriel pour des raisons d’habitude, de dogme, et de COI. Le "consensus" est qu'il y a un risque mais qu’il est négligeable. Les opposants au consensus sont en fait éliminés
3/
Read 47 tweets
2 Apr
@JouanAnne1 @pascale_santi @sandrine_cabut @fabricearfi @EliseLucet @SCoignard @vincentglad @hervenirom
Ce fil est pour @DgCostagliola. Pas de chance pour elle, c’est l’#épidémiologiste de l’@Inserm la plus visible sur Twitter. Je lui demande de réagir à mes affirmations. 1/10
2/10
Il existe une correlation parfaite, temporelle et géographique, entre dépistage mammographique et incidence du cancer du sein. La corrélation temporelle est observable partout, j’y reviendrai plus loin.
3/10 Pour la corrélation géographique, on la voit également partout. Ici par exemple, l’incidence du cancer du sein relative à la pratique du dépistage mammographique par département aux USA.

Harding et al. JAMA Intern Med. 2015 Image
Read 11 tweets
24 Sep 20
October test (thread) @VPrasadMDMPH @adamcifu @EricTopol @HealthWatchUK
1) Let’s suppose that you screen for cancer people aged 50 to 75 years every 2 years and remove all the cancers you detect for 25 years.
After 25 years of this, in people over 75 years, will you find:
2) Answer: fewer prostate cancers; but more breast cancers.
In 75+ year olds: Corcos & Bleyer, NEJM, 2020
3) Why are there more cancers in old women after mammography screening?
Read 9 tweets

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