EAllusion wrote: ↑Sun Apr 19, 2020 5:59 pm
I think there's an attempt to play on people's inability to keep the timeline straight in their mind. The initial outbreak in Wuhan likely started in late November. We know through reporting that this is when the Trump admin itself started developing intelligence on a disease outbreak in the region. There's an early period from then up until around the end of the year where China successfully suppressed information to the public about the extent of the epidemic and its risk and it appears the WHO abetted this by initially reporting out overly rosy information. The Trump admin had its own intelligence contradicting this, but did not listen to it. But then there was a whole separate phase where the Trump admin was getting clear warnings about the risk from within and without, which was also being paralleled in public reporting, and Donald Trump spent that time downplaying the warnings about the threat to the public and not preparing appropriately. That's not on China, the WHO, or anyone else but Donald Trump. It's conflating the WHO in mid Dec. with the WHO in late January.
Donald Trump's entire response to this, including in this very moment, appears to be dictated by avoiding blame and taking credit while trying to benefit his election chances in opportunistic, short-sighted decision making that seems to exist moment to moment. It's only possible to do this if you have a profound disregard to the human cost going on.
I don’t think your timeline is accurate. By examining medical records, the first likely patient had symptoms in early December. That gets stretched back to mid-November by adding the maximum assumed time between exposure and symptoms. The average is around five days. That’s one patient who was sick with symptoms of pneumonia in early December. There is no evidence other than one news story that there was an outbreak to become aware of in November. It started as old people dying of pneumonia, which is not unusual during the winter. An outbreak big enough to draw US attention in November is not consistent with the medical evidence and the spread of the disease.
WHO reported the information it received when it received it. I went and looked at WHO’s guidance early on. From the beginning it advised that the virus could have epidemic or pandemic potential and advised countries to prepare. WHO didn’t just present the information from China. It sent a delegation to China, observed evidence of human to human transmission and immediately reported it. It didn’t simply rely on China, it relied on its experience with coronavirus and what it knew from SARS-CoV and MERS.
Yes, WHO was very polite to China and bent over backwards to complement China when it cooperated. But they do that with every country, including Trump. That’s how it was able to get a delegation into China — something the US CDC has not been able to do to this day. And I’d bet good money that the difference is Trump’s repeated antagonism toward China.
I think, with the benefit of hindsight, there are things the WHO could have done better. But most of the story that WHO acted too slowly because it is in China’s pocket are based on cherry picked quotations that ignore the guidance that WHO was providing at the same time it reported the information that it had received.
At any rate, the CDC had employees at the WHO who were reporting the information they were learning back to DC. From first report of the disease to WHO declaring a PEIC was less than a month. Frankly, that seems pretty damn fast to me.