Lex Fridman Podcast - #247 – Jamie Metzl: Lab Leak Theory
Episode Date: December 8, 2021Jamie Metzl is an author specializing in topics of genetic engineering, biotechnology, and geopolitics. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Mizzen+Main: https://mizzenandmain.c...om and use code LEX to get $35 off - NI: https://www.ni.com/perspectives - GiveDirectly: https://givedirectly.org/lex to get gift matched up to $300 - Indeed: https://indeed.com/lex to get $75 credit - Blinkist: https://blinkist.com/lex and use code LEX to get 25% off premium EPISODE LINKS: Jamie's Twitter: https://twitter.com/JamieMetzl Jamie's Website: https://jamiemetzl.com/ Jamie's lab leak blog post: https://jamiemetzl.com/origins-of-sars-cov-2/ Hacking Darwin (book): https://amzn.to/3lLqLsM PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (07:44) - Lab leak (1:06:18) - Gain-of-function research (1:15:49) - Anthony Fauci (1:25:31) - Francis Collins (1:30:13) - Joe Rogan, Brett Weinstein, and Sam Harris (2:00:10) - Xi Jinping (2:14:41) - Patient Zero (2:27:55) - WHO (2:51:45) - Government transparency (3:13:45) - Likelihood of a cover-up (3:15:34) - Future of reproduction (3:51:12) - Jon Stewart (3:56:31) - Joe Rogan and Sanjay Gupta (4:21:36) - Ultramarathons (4:31:38) - Chocolate (4:39:51) - One Shared World (4:54:54) - Hope for the future
Transcript
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The following is a conversation with Jamie Mezzel, author specializing in topics of genetic
engineering, biotechnology, and geopolitics.
In the past two years, he has been outspoken about the need to investigate and keep an
open mind about the origins of COVID-19.
In particular, he has been keeping an extensive up-to-date collection of circumstantial evidence
in support of what is colloquially known
as Lab League Hypothesis, that COVID-19 leaked in 2019 from the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
In part, I wanted to explore the idea and respond to the thoughtful criticism
to parts of the Francis Collins episode. I will have more and more difficult conversations like this
with people from all walks of
life, and with all kinds of ideas.
I promise to do my best to keep an open mind, and yet to ask hard questions, while together
searching for the beautiful and the inspiring in the mind of the other person.
It's a hard line to walk gracefully, especially for someone like me, who is a bit of an awkward
introvert with barely the grasp of the English language or any language, except maybe Python and C++. But I hope you stick
around, be patient, and empathetic, and maybe learn something new together with me.
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This is Alex Friedman podcast, and here is my conversation with Jamie Metzel.
What is the probability in your mind that COVID-19 leaked from a lab?
In your write-up, I believe you said 85%.
I know it's just a percentage.
We can't really be exact with these kinds of things, but it gives us a sense where your
mind is, where your intuition is.
So as a stance today, what would you say is that probability?
I would stand by what I've been saying since really the middle of last year.
It's more likely and not in my opinion that the pandemic stems from an accidental lab incident in Wuhan.
Is it 90% is it 65%? I mean, that's kind of arbitrary, but when I stack up all of the available evidence and all of
it on both sides is circumstantial, it weighs very significantly toward elaboration and
origin.
So, before we dive into the specifics at a high level, what types of evidence, what intuition,
what ideas are leading you to or to have that kind of estimate?
Is it possible to kind of condense when you look at the wall of evidence before you,
where's your source, the strongest source of your intuition of this?
Yeah, and I would have to say it's just logic and deductive reasoning.
So before I make the case for why I think it's most likely a lab incident origin, let's
just say why it could be and still could be what we natural origin.
All this is natural origin in the sense that it's a bad virus backbone, horseshoe bad virus backbone.
Okay, I'm gonna keep pausing you to define stuff. So maybe it's useful to say, what do we mean by
lab leak? What do we mean by natural origin? What do we mean by virus backbone? Okay, great questions. So viruses come from somewhere. Viruses have been around for 3.5 billion
years and they've been around for such a long time because they are adaptive and they're growing
and they're always changing and they're morphing. And that's why viruses are, I mean, they've been
very successful and we are, our victims. Sometimes we're beneficiaries.
We have viral DNA has morphed into our, our genomes. But now,
it's certainly in the case of COVID-19, we are victims of the
success of viruses. And so when we talk about a backbone, so the
SARS-CoV-2 virus has a history.
And these viruses don't come out of whole cloth.
There are viruses that morph.
And so we know that at some period, maybe 20 years ago or whatever, the virus that is
SARS-CoV-2 existed in horseshoe bats. It was a horseshoe bat virus, and it evolved
somewhere. And there are some people who say there's no evidence of this, but it's a plausible
theory based on how things have happened in the past. Maybe that virus jumped from the horseshoe
bat through some intermediate species. So it's like, let's say there's a bat,
and then it infects some other animal.
Let's say it's a pig or a raccoon dog or a civet cat.
They're all pangolin.
They're all sorts of animals that have been considered.
And then that virus adapts into that new host,
and it changes and grows.
And then according to the quote unquote
natural origins hypothesis, it jumps from that animal
into humans.
And so what you could imagine, and some of the people
who are making the case, all of the people actually,
who are making the case for a natural origin of the virus,
what they're saying is it went from that
to some intermediate species.
And then from that intermediate species, most likely, there's
some people who say it went directly back to human, but through some intermediate species,
and then humans interacted with that species, and then it jumped from that whatever it is
to humans.
And that's a very plausible theory, it's just that there's no evidence for it.
And the nature of the interaction is, do most people kind of suggest that the,
like, what markets? So the interaction with the humans with the animal is in the form of,
it's either a live animal as being sold to be eaten or recently live animal, but newly dead animal
being sold to. That's certainly one very possible possibility, a possible possibility. I know if
that's a word. But the people who believe in I don't know if that's a word.
But the people who believe in the wet market origin,
that's what they're saying.
So they had one of these animals.
They were cutting it up, let's say, in a market.
And maybe some of the blood got into somebody,
maybe had a cut on their hand, or maybe it was aerosolized.
And so somebody breathed it.
And then that virus found this new host,
and that was the human host.
But you could also have that happen in, let's say, a farm.
So it's happened in the past that let's
say that there are farms and because of human encroachment
into wild spaces, we're pushing our farms and our animal
farms further and further into what
used to be the
just natural habitats.
And so it's happened in the past, for example, that there were bats roosting over pig pens
and the bat dropings went into the pig pens, the viruses in those dropings infected the pigs
and then the pigs infected the humans.
And that's why it's a plausible theory.
It's just that there's basically no evidence for it.
If it was the case that SARS-CoV-2 comes from this type
of interaction, as in most of the at least recent past outbreaks,
we'd see evidence of that.
Viruses are messy.
They're constantly undergoing Darwinian evolution and they're changing
and it's not that they're just ready for prime time,
ready to infect humans on day one.
Normally, you can trace the viral evolution
prior to the time when it infects humans.
But for SARS-CoV-2, it just showed up on the scene
ready to infect humans.
And there's no history that anybody has found so far
of that kind of a viral evolution.
With the first SARS, you could track it
by the genome sequencing that it was experimenting.
And SARS-CoV-2 was very, very stable,
meaning it had already adapted to humans
by the time it interacted with us.
Totally adapted.
So with SARS, there's a rapid evolution when it first kind of hooks onto a human.
Yeah, because it's trying.
Like a virus, its goal is to replicate.
It's a survive replicate.
No, it's true.
It's like, oh, we're going to try this.
Oh, that didn't work.
We'll try it.
Exactly like a startup.
And so we don't see that.
And so there are some people who say, well, one hypothesis is, are you have a totally
isolated group of humans, maybe in southern China, which is more than a thousand miles away
from Wuhan.
And maybe they're doing their animal farming right next to these areas where there are these horseshoe bats,
and maybe in this totally isolated place that no one's ever heard of, they're not connected to
any other place, one person gets infected. And it doesn't spread to anybody else because they're
so isolated. They're like, I don't know, I mean, I can't even imagine that this is the case.
Then somebody gets in a car and drives all night more than a thousand miles through crappy roads
to get to Wuhan. It doesn't stop for anything, it doesn't infect anybody on the way, no one else
in that person's village infects anyone. And then that person goes straight to the Huanan
seafood market according to this in my mind, not very credible theory.
And then unloads this stuff and everybody gets infected
and they're only delivering those animals
to the Wuhan market,
which doesn't even sell very many of these kinds of animals
that are likely intermediate species and not anywhere else.
So that's, it's a little bit of a straw man.
But on top of that,
the Chinese have sequenced
more than 80,000 animal samples, and there's no evidence of this type of viral evolution
that we would otherwise expect.
Let's try to, at this moment, steal man the argument for the natural origin of the virus.
So just to clarify. So Wuhan is actually,
despite what it might sound like to people is a pretty big city. There's a lot of people
that live in it. 11 million. So not only is there the Wuhan Institute of Virology, there's
other centers that do work on viruses. Yes. But there's also a giant number of markets.
And everything we're talking about here is pretty close together
so
When I kind of look at the geography of this
I
Think when you zoom out it's all Wuhan, but when you zoom in there's just a lot of interesting dynamics that could be happening and what the
Cases are popping up and what's being reported all that kind of stuff. So I think the people that
argue for the natural origin, and there's a few recent papers they cannot argue in this.
It's kind of fascinating to watch this whole thing, but I think what they're arguing is that there's this whunah market.
That's one of the major markets, the wet markets in Wuhan.
That there's a bunch of cases that were reported from there.
So if I look at, for example, the Michael Warribee perspective that he wrote in science, he
argues, here are this a few days ago, the predominance of early COVID cases linked to
Hona market, and this can't be dismissed as a
sort of a statement bias, which I think is what people argue that you're just kind of focusing
on this region because a lot of cases came, but there could be a huge number of other cases.
So people who argue against this say that this is a later stage already.
So he says no, he says this is this is the epicenter and
this is a clear
evidence that
circumstantial evidence, but evidence nevertheless that
This is where then jump happened to humans the big explosion. Maybe not case zero
I don't know if he argues that but the early. So what do you make of this whole idea?
Can you steal manate before?
Yeah, so about the other.
And my goal here isn't to attack people on the other side.
And if my feeling is if there is evidence that's presented, that should change my view,
I hope that I'll be open-minded enough to change my view.
And certainly Michael Wariby is a thoughtful person, a respectful, a respected scientist.
And I think this work is, is, is contributed work, but I just don't think that it, that it's
as significant as has been reported in, in, in the press.
And so what his argument is, is that there is an early cluster in December of 2019 around the Juan on Seafood
Market. And even though he himself argues that the original breakthrough case, the original
case, the index case where the first person infected happened earlier, happened in October or November.
So not in December.
His argument is, well, what are the odds that you would have this number, this cluster of
cases in the Juanan seafood market?
And if the origin had happened someplace else, wouldn't you expect other clusters?
And it's not an entirely implausible argument.
But there are reasons why I think it's that
this is not nearly as determinative as has been reported.
And I certainly had a lot of I and others had tweeted a lot about this.
And that is first, the people who were infected in this cluster, it's not the earliest known
virus of the SARS-CoV-2.
It began mutating. So this is, it's not the the SARS-CoV-2. It began mutating.
So this is, it's not the original SARS-CoV-2 there.
So it had to have happened someplace else, too.
The people who were infected in the market weren't infected in the part of the market where
they had these kinds of animals that are considered to be candidates as an intermediary species.
And third, there was a bias, actually, I have four things. Third, there was a bias in the early
assessment in China of what they were looking for, but they were asked, did you have exposure
to the market? Because I think in the early days when people were figuring things out, that was
one of the questions that that was asked.
And fourth, and probably most significantly, we have so little information about those early
cases in China. And that's really unfortunate. I know we'll talk about this later because the Chinese
government is preventing access to all of that information, which they have, which could easily help
us get to the bottom,
at least know a ton more about how this pandemic started.
And so this is, it's like grasping at straws
in the dark with gloves on.
That's right.
But to steal man the argument,
we have this evidence from this market,
and yes, the Chinese government has turned off the lights essentially so we have very
little data to work with, but this is the data we have. So who's to say that this data doesn't
represent a much bigger data set that a lot of people got infected at this market,
even at the parts or especially at the parts where the the meat, the infected meat was being sold.
So that could be true, and it probably is true.
The question is, is this the source, is this the place where this began, or was this
just a place where it was amplified?
And I certainly think that it's extremely likely that the Huanan seafood market was an
point of amplification. And it's just answering a different question.
Basically what you're saying is it's very difficult to use the market as evidence for anything
because it's probably not even the starting point. So it's just a good place for it to continue spreading.
That's certainly my view. What Michael Wariby's argument Michael, is that, well, what are the odds of that?
That we're seeing this amplification in the market.
And if we, let's, let me put this way, if we had all of the information, if the Chinese
government hadn't blocked access to all of this, because there's blood-bank information, there's all sorts of information.
And based on a full and complete understanding, we came to believe that all of the early
cases were at this market.
I think that would be a stronger argument than what this is so far.
But everything leads to the fact that why is it that the Chinese government, which was frankly,
after a slow start, the gold standard
of doing viral tracking for SARS-1.
Why have they apparently done so little
and shared so little?
I think it begs a lot of questions.
Okay, so let's then talk about the Chinese government.
There's several governments, right?
So one is the local government of Wuhan.
And that's just the Chinese government.
Let's talk about government.
No, let's talk about human nature.
This just keeps zooming out.
Yeah, let's talk about planet Earth.
Yeah.
No, so there's the Wuhan local government. There's the Chinese government
led by Xi Jinping and
There's governments in general. I'm trying to empathize. So my father was involved with Chernobyl
I'm trying to put myself into the mind of local officials of people people who are like, oh shit, there is, there's a potential
catastrophic event happening here. And it's my ass because I we there's incompetence all
over the place. A human nature is such that there's incompetence all over the place. And
you're always trying to cover it up. And so, so given that context, I want to lay out all the possible
incompetence, all the possible malevolence, all the possible geopolitical tensions here. your sense that the cover-up start. So there's this suspicious fact. It seems like that the
Wuhan Institute of Virology had a public database of thousands of sampled-back coronavirus
sequences, and that went offline sometime in 2019. What's that about?
So let me talk about that specific. And then I'll also follow your path of zooming out. And it's a really important. Is that a good starting point? It's a great starting point. Yeah,
yeah. So, but there's there's a bigger story. But let me talk about about that. So the Wuhan
Institute of Verology. And we can go into the whole history of the Wuhan Institute of Virology,
either now or later, because I think it's very relevant to the story. But let's focus for now on
this database. They had a database of 22,000 viral samples and sequence information about viruses
that they had collected, some of which, the collection of some of which was supported through funding
from the NIH, not a huge NIH through the E.C. Health Alliance. It's a relatively small amount,
$600,000, but not nothing. The goal of this database was so that we could understand
viral evolution so that, exactly, for this kind of moment where we had an
Unknown virus we could say well is this like anything that we've seen before and that would help us both understand what we're facing and be better able to
respond
so this was a an
Axe a password protected public access database in 2019
It was in September 2019, it became inaccessible. And then the
whole a few months later, the entire database disappeared. The Chinese have said it is that because
there were all kinds of computer attacks on this database. But why would that happen in September 2019 before the pandemic, at least as far as we know?
So just to clarify, yes.
It went down to September 2019 just so we get the year straight.
January 2020 is when the virus really started getting the press.
So we're talking about this December 2019, a lot of early infections
happen. September 2019 is when this database goes down just to clarify, because you said
it quickly, the Chinese government said that their database was getting hacked.
Right.
Well, the direction of this part of the Wuhan Institute of Virology said that.
Oh, she was the one that said it.
She was the one who said, oh, boy, I didn't even know that part.
Okay.
Well, she's an interesting character.
We'll talk about her.
Yeah.
Uh, so the, so the excuse is that, uh, the, the getting cyber attacked a lot.
So we're going gonna take it down
without any further explanation,
which seems very suspicious.
And then this virus starts to emerge
in October, November, December.
There's a lot of argument about that, but after.
Sorry, but some people are saying
that the first outbreak could have happened
as early as September.
I think it's more likely it's October, November,
but for the people who are saying
that the first outbreak,
the first incident of a known outbreak,
at least to somebody happened in September,
they make the argument, well, what if that also happened
in mid-September of 2019?
I'm not prepared to go there,
but there are some people who make that argument.
But I think, again, if I were to put myself in the mind of officials, whether it's officials
within the Wuhan Institute of Virology or Wuhan local officials, I think if I notice
some major problem, like somebody got sick, some sign of, oh shit, was screwed up.
That's when you kind of do the slow,
there's like a Homer Simpson meme
where you slowly start backing up
and I would probably start hiding stuff.
C-Y-A.
Yeah.
And then coming up with really shady excuses,
it's like you're in a relationship
and your girlfriend wants to see your phone.
You're like, I'm sorry, I'm just getting attacked
by the Russians, the Sniper Security, I can't.
Yeah, I wish I could.
I wish I could.
It's just unsafe right now.
So, what'd be okay if I give you my kind of macro view
of the whole information space
and why I believe this has been so contentious.
It's, it's, so here's, here's, if I had to give my best guess and I underline the word
guess of, of what happened and, and your background, your family background with Chernobyl, I
think is highly relevant here.
So after the first SARS, there was a recognition that we needed to distribute knowledge about
virology and epidemiology around the world, that people in China, in Africa, in Southeast
Asia, they were the frontline workers, and they needed to be doing a lot of the viral
monitoring and assessment so that we could have an early alarm system.
And that was why there was a lot of investment in all of those places in building capacity,
in training people, in helping to build institutional capacity.
And the Chinese government, they recognized that they needed to ramp things up.
And then the World Health Organization and the World Health Assembly, they had their
international health regulations that were designed
to create a stronger infrastructure.
So that was the goal.
There were a lot of investments, and I know we'll talk later about the Wuhan Institute of
Virology.
I won't go into that right now.
So there was all of this distributed capacity.
And so in the early days, there's a breakout in Wuhan.
We don't know is it September, October, November, maybe December is when the local authorities
start to recognize that something's happening.
But at some point in late 2019, local officials in Wuhan understand that something is up.
And exactly like in Chernobyl, these guys exist within a hierarchical system. And
they are going to be rewarded if good things happen. And they are going to be in big trouble
if bad things happen under their watch. So their initial instinct is to squash it. And
my guess is they think, well, if we squash this information, we can most likely beat back
this outbreak. Because lots of outbreaks happen
all the time, including of SARS-1, where there was multiple lab incidents out of a lab in Beijing.
And so they start their cover-up on day one. They start screening social media, they send
nasty letters to different doctors and others who are starting to speak up.
But then it becomes clear that there's a bigger issue.
And then the national government of China, again, this is just hypothesis.
The national government gets involved.
They say, all right, this is getting much bigger.
They go in and they realize that we have a big problem on our hands.
They relatively quickly know that it's
spreading human to human. And so the right thing for them to do then is what this African government
is doing now is to say, we have this outbreak, we don't know everything, but we know it's serious,
we need help. But that's not the instinct of people in most governments and certainly not in
authoritarian governments like China.
And so the national government,
they have a choice at that point.
They can do option one,
which is what we would hear called the right thing,
which is total transparency.
They criticize the local officials
for having this cover up.
And they say, now we're going to be totally transparent.
But what does that do in a system like the former Soviet Union, like China now?
If local officials say, wait a second, I thought my job was to cover everything up, to support
this alternative reality that authoritarian systems need in order to survive.
Well now I'm going to be held accountable for if I'm not totally transparent, like your
whole system would collapse.
So the national government, they have that choice and they're only choice according to
the logic of their system is to be all in on a cover-up.
And that's why they block the World Health Organization from sending its team to Wuhan
for over three weeks.
They overtly lie to the World Health Organization
about human to human transmission,
and then they begin their cover-up.
So they begin very, very quickly destroying samples,
hiding records, they start imprisoning people
for asking basic questions soon after they establish
a gag order, preventing Chinese scientists from writing or saying
anything about pandemic origins without prior government approval.
And what that does means that there isn't a lot of data, not nearly enough data, coming
out of China.
And so lots of responsible scientists outside of China who are data driven say, well, I don't
have enough information to draw conclusions.
And then into that vacuum, step a relatively small number of largely virologists, but also
others, respected scientists.
And I know we'll talk about the, I think, infamous Peter Dayzak who say, well, without any real foundation in the evidence,
they say, we know pretty much this comes from nature
and anyone who's raising the possibility
of a lab incident origin is a conspiracy theory.
So that message starts to percolate.
And then in the United States, we have Donald
Trump. And he's starting to get criticized for America's failure to respond, prepare
for, and respond adequately to the outbreak. And so he starts saying, well, I know, first
after praising Xi Jinping, he starts saying, well, I know that China did it and the WHO did it,
and he's kind of pointing fingers at everybody, but himself.
And then we have a media here that had shifted
from the traditional model of he said,
she said journalism, so and so said X,
and so and so said Y,
and then we'll present both of those views.
With Donald Trump, he would make outlandish starting positions.
So he would say, Lex is an ax murderer.
And then in the early days, they would say, Lex is an ax murderer.
Lex's friend says he's not an ax murderer.
And we'd have a four day debate, is he a rizant,
and then at day four, someone would say,
why are we having this debate at all?
Because the original point is just, is baseless.
And so the media, I just got in the habit, here's what Trump said, and here's why it's
wrong.
It's very complicated to figure out what is the role of a politician, what is the role
of a leader in this kind of game of politics.
But certainly in, when there's a tragedy, when there's a
catastrophic event, what it takes to be a leader is to see clearly through the fog and
to make big bold decisions that speak to the truth of things, and even if it's unpopular
truth, to listen to the people, to listen to all sides to the opinions, to the controversial
ideas, and to see past all the bullshit, all the political bullshit, and just speak to
the people, speak to the world and make bold, big decisions.
That's probably what was needed in terms of leadership.
And I'm not so willing to criticize whether it's Joe Biden
or Donald Trump on this.
I think most people cannot be great leaders,
but that's why when great leaders step up,
we write books about that.
Yeah, and I agree.
And even though, I think of myself as a progressive person,
I certainly was a critic of a lot of what President Trump did.
But on this particular case, even though he may have said it in an uncouth way, Donald
Trump was actually, in my view, right.
I mean, when he said, hey, let's look at this lab.
He said, I have evidence. I can't tell you. I don't think he said, hey, let's look at this lab, he said, I have evidence, I can't tell
you, I don't think he even had the evidence. But his intuition that this probably comes from a lab,
in my view, was a correct intuition. And certainly I started speaking up about pandemic origins
early in 2019. And my friends, my democratic friends were brutal with me saying what are you doing?
You're supporting Trump in an election year and I said just because Donald Trump is saying something
doesn't mean that I need to oppose it if he's if Donald Trump says something that I think is correct.
Well, I want to say it's correct just as if he says something that I don't like. I'm going to
speak up about that. Good, you walked through the fire.
So that's, you laid out the story here.
And I think in many ways it's a human story.
It's a story of politics, it's a story,
a story of human nature.
But let's talk about the story of the virus.
And let's talk about the Wuhan Institute of Virology. So maybe this is a good
time to try to talk about its history, about its origins, about what kind of stuff it works on,
about biosafety levels, and about that woman. Yeah, she's technically. She's technically.
So what is the Wuhan Institute of Virology when it is start? Yeah, so it's a great question. So after SARS-1, which was in the early 2000, 2003, 2004,
there was this effort to enhance, as I mentioned before, global capacity, including in China.
So the Wuhan Institute of Virology had been around for decades before then,
but there was an agreement between the French
and the Chinese governments to build
a the largest BSL-4 lab.
So biosafety level four.
So in these what are called high containment labs,
there's level four, which is the highest level.
And people have seen that on TV and elsewhere
where you have the people in the different in suits and all of these protections.
And then there's level three, which is still very serious, but not as much as level four.
And then level two is just kind of goggles and some gloves and maybe a face mask much less. So the French and the Chinese governments
agreed that France would help build the first
and still the largest BSL4
plus some mobile BSL3 labs.
And they were going to do it in Wuhan.
And Wuhan is kind of like China's Chicago.
And I had actually been, it's a different story.
I'd been in Wuhan relatively not that long before the pandemic broke out. And that was why I knew that Wuhan
is a, it's not some backwater where there are a bunch of yokels eating bats for dinner
every night. This is a really sophisticated, wealthy, highly educated and cultured city.
And so I knew that it wasn't like,
that even the one on seafood market,
wasn't like some of these seafood markets
that they have in Southern China or in Cambodia
where I lived for two years.
I mean, it was a totally different thing.
I'm gonna have to talk to you about some of the food,
including the one on market,
just some of the wild food going on here,
because you've traveled that part of the world.
Well, let's not get there.
Yeah.
Let's not get distracted.
Great.
As I was telling you, Lex, before, and this is maybe an advertisement, is having now
listened to a number of your podcast when I'm doing long ultra-training runs or driving
in the mountains.
Like the really, because in the beginning, you have to talk about whatever it is as the
topic, but the really good stuff happens later.
So Francis, you should listen to the end.
I have to say, as I was telling you before,
like when I heard your long podcast with Jeronlin here
and he talked about his mother at the very end,
I mean, just beautiful stuff.
So I don't know whether I can match beautiful stuff,
but I'm gonna do my best. You're going to have to find out.
Exactly.
Stay tuned.
So France had this agreement that they were going to help design and help build this BSL
for Lab in Wuhan.
And it was going to be with French standards, and there were going to be 50 French experts who were going to
work there and supervise the work that happened even after the Wuhan Institute of Virology
in the new location started operating.
But then when they started building it, the French contractors, the French overseers, were increasingly appalled that
they had less and less control.
That the Chinese contractors were swapping out new things, they, it wasn't built up to
French standards so much that at the end when it was finally built, the person who was
the vice chairman of the project and a leading French industrialist
named Mario refused to sign off. And he said, we can't support. We have no idea what this
is, whether it's safe or not. And when this lab opened, remember it was supposed to have
50 French experts, it had one French expert. And so the French were really disgusted.
And actually, when the Wuhan Institute of Verology
and its new location opened in 2018,
two things happened.
One, French intelligence, privately approached US intelligence,
saying, we have a lot of concerns
about the Wuhan Institute of Verology about its safety.
And we don't even know who's operating there.
Is it being used as a dual use facility?
And also in 2018, the US Embassy in Beijing sent some people down to Wuhan to go and look
at, well, at this laboratory.
And they wrote a scathing cable that Josh Rogan from the Washington Post
later got his hands on saying, this is really unsafe. They're doing work on dangerous
bat coronaviruses in conditions where Aleek is possible. And so then you mentioned Shujeng
Lee, and I'll connect that to these virologists who I was
talking about.
So there's a very credible thesis that because these pathogenic outbreaks happen in other
parts of the world, having partnerships with experts in those parts of the world, must
be a foundation of our efforts.
We can't just bring everything home
because we know that viruses don't care about borders
and boundaries and so if something happens there,
it's going to come here.
So very correctly, we have all kinds of partnerships
with experts in these labs and Shijeng Li
was one of those partners.
And her closest relationship was with Peter Dezak,
who's a British, I think now American,
but the president of a thing called
EcoHealth Alliance, which was getting money from NIH.
And basically, EcoHealth Alliance
was a pass-through organization.
And over the years, it was only about $600,000.
So almost all of her funding came from the Chinese government.
But there's a little bit that came from the United States.
And so she became their kind of leading expert and the point of contact between the Wuhan
Institute of Virology and certainly Peter Dayzek, but also with others.
And that was why in the earliest days of the outbreak,
I didn't mention that,
I might have mentioned that there were these virologists
who had this fake certainty that they knew it came from nature
and it didn't come from a lab
and they called people like me conspiracy theorists
just for raising that possibility.
But when Peter Dayzek was organizing that effort
in February of 2020, what he said is we need to rally behind our Chinese colleagues.
And the basic idea was these international collaborations are under threat.
And I think it was because of that because Peter Dayzick's basically his major contribution as a scientist was just tacking his name on work that Shujeng
Lee had largely done.
He was defending a lot, certainly, for himself and his organization.
So you think E.C.
Health Alliance and Peter is less about money, it's more about kind of almost like legacy
because you're so attached to this work.
It's just in a human look.
I think so.
I mean, I've been criticized for being actually,
I'm certainly a big critic of Peter Dayzeg,
but I've been criticized by some for being too lenient.
I mean, it's so easy to say,
oh, somebody, they're like an evil ogre
and just trying to do evil and cackling
in their closet or whatever.
But I think for most of us, even those of us who do terrible, horrible things,
the story that we tell ourselves, and we really believe is that we're doing the thing
that we most believe in.
I mean, I did my PhD dissertation on the Cameroosian Cambodia.
They genuinely saw themselves as idealists.
They thought, well, we need to make radical change
to build a better future.
And what they described as,
but they felt was radical change was a monstrous atrocity
just by us.
So the criticism here of Peter is that he was a part
of Peter is that he was a part of an organization that was kind of, well, funding an effort that was an unsafe implementation of a biosafety level for laboratory.
Well, a few things.
So what he thought he was doing was, and what he thought he was doing is itself
highly controversial, because there's one there that in 2011, there were, I know you've
talked about this with other guests, but in 2011, there were the first published papers
on this now infamous gain of function research. And basically what they did, both in different labs,
and certainly in the United States, in Wisconsin,
and in the Netherlands, was they had a bird flu virus
that was very dangerous, but not massively transmissive.
And they had a gain of function process
through what's called serial passage,
which means basically passing of vices
like natural selection,
but forcing natural selection
by just passing a virus through a different cell cultures
and then selecting for what it is that you want.
So relatively easily, they took this deadly, but not massively
transmissive virus and turned it into, in a lab, a deadly and transmissive virus. And that showed
that this is really dangerous. And so there were, at that point, there was a huge controversy.
There were some people like Richard Ebright and Mark Lipsich and Harvard who were saying that
this is really dangerous. We're in the idea that we need to create monsters to study monsters.
I think maybe even you have said that in the past. It doesn't make sense because there's an
unlimited number of monsters. And so what are we going to do? Create an unlimited number of
monsters. And if we do that, eventually the monsters are going to get out. Then there was the Peter
Desik camp, and he got a lot of funding, particularly from the United States, who said,
well, and certainly Collins and Fauci were supportive of this. And they thought, well, there's a
safe way to go out into the world world to collect the world's most dangerous viruses
and to poke and prod them to figure out how they might mutate, how they might become more dangerous,
with the goal of predicting future pandemics.
And that certainly never happened with the goal of creating vaccines and treatments.
And that largely never happened.
But that was so Peter Deiza kind of epitomized that second approach. And as you've talked
about in the past in 2014, there was a funding moratorium in the United States and then in
2017. That was lifted. It didn't affect the funding that went to the United States and then in 2017, that was lifted.
It didn't affect the funding that went to the to the eco health alliance.
So when this happened in in the beginning and again coming back to Peter's motivations,
I don't think I'm the here's the best case scenario for for Peter.
I'm going to give you if what I imagine was thinking, and then I'll tell you what
I actually think. So I think here's what he's thinking. This is most likely a natural origin
outbreak. It just like SARS-1, again, in Peter's hypothetical mind, just like SARS-1, this is most
likely a natural outbreak, we need to have an international coalition in order to fight it. If we allow these
political attacks to undermine our Chinese counterparts and the trust in this release
relationships that we've built over many years, we're really screwed because they have the
most local knowledge of these outbreaks. And even though, and this guy gets a lot more complicated, even though there
are basic questions that anybody would ask and that Shujeng Lee herself did ask about
the origins of this pandemic, even though Peter Dayzak, and I'll mention this, I'll describe
this in a moment, had secret information that we didn't have, that in my mind massively increases the possibility of a lab incident origin.
I, Peter Dayzak, would like to guide the public conversation in the direction where I think it should
go and in support of the kind of international collaboration that I think is necessary.
That's a strong positive discussion because it's true that there's a lot of political BS
and a lot of kind of just bickering and lies
as we've talked about.
And so it's very convenient to say,
you know what, let's just ignore all of these,
quote unquote lies in my favorite word, misinformation.
And then because the way out from this serious
pandemic is for us to work together. So let's strengthen our partnerships and everything
else is just like noise. Yeah. So let's and so then now I want to do my personal indictment
of Peter Day's act because that that's my view. But I wanted to fairly, because I think that we all tell ourselves stories.
And also when you're a science communicator,
you can't, in your public communications,
give every doubt that you have or every nuance,
you kind of have to summarize things.
And so I think that he was, again,
in this benign interpretation,
trying to summarize in the way that he thought
the conversations should go.
Here's my indictment of Peter Dayzak.
And I feel like Brutus here,
but I've not come here to praise Peter Dayzak,
because while Peter Dayzak was doing all of this
and making all of these statements about,
well, we pretty much know it's a natural origin,
then there was this February 2020 Lancet letter
where it turns out, and we only knew this later,
that he was highly manipulative.
So he was recruiting all of these people.
He drafted the infamous letter,
calling people like me conspiracy theorists.
He then wrote to people like Ralph Barrack and Linfe Wang, who are also very high-profile
virologists saying, well, let's not put our names on it.
So it doesn't look like we're doing it, even though they were doing it.
He didn't disclose a lot of information that they had.
It was a strategic move.
So just in case people are not familiar, February 2020, Lancelletter was TLDR is a lab leak
hypothesis is a conspiracy theory.
Essentially yes. So like with the authority of science,
not saying like it's highly likely,
saying it's obvious, duh, it's natural origin.
Everybody else is just,
is everything else is just misinformation.
And look, there's a bunch of really smart people
that sign this, they're forced to.
Yeah, not only that, so there were the people who's 27 people signed that letter.
And then after President Trump cut funding to eco-health alliance, then he organized 77 Nobel
laureates to have a public letter criticizing that.
But what Peter knew then that we didn't fully know is that in March of 2018,
eco-health alliance in partnership
with the Wuhan Institute of Virology and others
had applied for a $14 million grant to DARPA,
which is kind of like the VC side of the venture capital side
of the defense department,
they're kind of where they do kind of big ideas.
By the way, as a tiny tangent, I've gotten a lot of funding from DARPA.
They fund a lot of excellent robotics research.
And DARPA is incredible.
And among the things that they applied for is that we, meaning Wuhan Institute of Virology,
is going to go and it's going to collect the most dangerous bat coronaviruses in southern China.
And then we, as this group,
are going to genetically engineer these viruses
to insert a furan cleavage site.
So I think when everyone's now seen the image
of the SARS-CoV-2 virus,
it has these little spike proteins,
these little things that stick out, which is why they
call it a coronavirus. Within that spike protein, are these feurin cleavage sites with basically help
with the virus getting access into our cells? And they're going to genetically engineer these
feurin cleavage sites into these bat coronaviruses, the Serbicovir then, and so then a year and a half later, what do we see?
We see a bat coronavirus with a fear and cleavage site, unlike anything that we've
ever seen before in that category of SARS-like coronaviruses.
That, well, yes, I mean, the DARPA very correctly didn't support that application.
Well, that's actually, that's like pausing that. So for a lot of people, that's like the smoking
gun. Yeah. Okay, let's talk about this 2018 proposal to DARPA. So I guess who's drafted
the proposal? Is it equal health? But the proposal is Is it, yeah, ECO Health. ECO Health, but the proposal is to do,
so ECO Health is technically a US funded organization.
Primarily.
And then the idea was to do work
at Wuhan Institute of Virology.
With, yeah, so is the, with ECO Health.
Yeah, so ECO Health, basically that the one institute
of Virology was gonna go
and they were gonna collect these viruses and store them at
We want to do a virology. But they're also going to do the actual
tab. According, it's a really important point. According to their proposal, the actual work was going to be done at the lab of Ralph
Barrack at the University of North Carolina, who's probably the world's leading experts on
Carolina, who's probably the world's leading experts on coronaviruses. And so we know that DARPA didn't fund that work.
We know, I think quite well, that Ralph Barrick's lab, in part, because it was not funded
by DARPA, they didn't do that specific work. What we don't know is, well, what work
was done at the Wuhan Institute of Virology because WIV was part of this proposal. They had
access to all of the plans. They had done, they had their own capacity, and they had already
done a lot of work in genetically, genetically altering this exact category of viruses they
had created, a chimeric mixed viruses they had done, they had mastered pretty much all
of the steps in order to achieve this thing that they applied for funding with eco-health
to do.
And so the question is, did Wuhan Institute of Verology go through with that research
anyway? And in my mind, there's that's a very, very real possibility. It was certainly explained
why they're giving no information. And as you know, I've been a member of the World Health Organization
Expert Advisory Committee on Human Genome editing, which Dr. Tedros created in the aftermath
of the announcement of the world's first CRISPR babies.
And it was just basically the exact same story.
So Ho-Jean Kwe, a Chinese scientist,
it was not a first-tier scientist,
but a perfectly adequate second-tier scientist
came to the United States, learned all of these capacities,
went back to China and said,
well, there's a much more permissive environment.
I'm going to be a world leader.
I'm going to establish both myself and China.
So in every scientific field, we're seeing this same thing
where you kind of learn a model.
And then you do it in China.
So is it possible that the Wuhan Institute of Virology
with this exact game plan was doing it anyway.
Do we possible?
We have no clue what work was being done at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
It seems extremely likely that at the Wuhan Institute of Virology,
and this is certainly the US government position, there was the work that was being done
in Dr. Shosh Lab. But that wasn't the
whole WIV. We know, or at least according to the United States government, that there was the Chinese
military, that PLA was doing work there. Were they doing this kind of work not to create a bioweapon,
but in order to understand these viruses, maybe to develop vaccines and treatments,
to understand these viruses, maybe to develop vaccines and treatments, it seems like a very, very logical possibility.
And then, so we know that the one instead of virology had all of the skills, we know that
they were part of this proposal.
And then you have Peter Day's Act, who knows all of this, that at that time in February
of 2020, we didn't know.
But then he comes swinging
out of the gate, saying anybody who's raising this possibility of a lab incident origin
is a conspiracy theorist. I mean, it really makes him look in my mind very, very bad.
Yeah, not to at least be somewhat open-minded on this because he knows all the details. He knows that it's not zero percent.
I mean, there's no way in his mind could even argue that. So it's potential because of the bias,
because of your focus. I mean, it could be the Anthony Fauci masks thing, or is he knows there's
some significant probability that this is happening, but in order to preserve good relations with our Chinese colleagues,
we want to make sure we tell a certain kind of narrative.
So it's not really lying.
It's doing the best possible action at this time to help the world, not that this already happened.
But that's how like...
Yeah, I think it's quite likely that that was the story that he was telling himself.
But it's that lack of transparency in my mind is fraudulent, that we were struggling to
understand something that we didn't understand.
And that I just think that people who possess that kind of information, especially when the existence,
like the entire career of Peter Dayzak
is based on US taxpayers.
There's a debt that comes with that,
and that debt is honesty and transparency.
And for all of us, and you talked about your girlfriend
checking your phone, for all of us,
being honest and transparent in the most difficult times. It's really difficult.
If it were easy, everybody would do it. And that's, I just feel that Peter was the opposite
of transparent and then went on the offensive. And then had the goal of joining, I know we can talk about this, this highly compromised joint study process
with the international experts
and their Chinese government counterparts
and used that as a way of furthering this,
in my mind, fraudulent narrative
that it almost certainly came from natural origins and and a lab
origin was extreme them likely. Just to stick briefly on the proposal to wrap that
up because I do think in a kind of John Stewart way if you heard that a bit yet, sort of kind of like common sense way, the 2018 proposal to DARPA from
Eco Health Alliance and Wuhan Institute of Virology just seems like a bit of a smoking gun to me,
like that. So there's this excellent book that people should read called viral, the search for the origin of COVID-19
Matt Ridley and Alina Chan, I think Alina is in MIT.
Probably the Broad. Yeah. I brought Institute. Yeah. Yeah. So she I heard her in an interview
give the analogy of unicorns. Yeah. And
where Yeah, and uh, where basically somebody writes a proposal to add horns to horses.
The proposal was rejected.
And then a couple of years later or a year later, a unicorn shows up in the place where they're proposing to do it.
I mean, that's so I had.
And then I was like, yeah, I is natural origin.
Yeah.
It's like it's possible It's natural origin like we haven't detected a unicorn yet
And this is the first time we've detected a unicorn or it could be this massive organization that was
Planning is fully equipped has like a history of being able to do this stuff has the world experts to do it
Has the funding has the motivation to add horns to horses and
now unicorn shows up and they're saying, no, definitely not.
That connects to what you, your first question of how do I get to my 85% and here's a summary
of that, of that answer.
And so it's what I said in my 60 minutes interview a long time ago of all the gin joints
and all the towns and all the world the quote from
From Casablanca and so of all the places in the world where we have an outbreak of a
SARS-like bat coronavirus
It's not in the area of the natural habitat of the horseshoe bats. It's the one city in China with the first and largest level four
virology lab, which actually wasn't even using it. They were doing level three and level
two for this work, where they had the world's largest collection of bat coronaviruses, where
they were doing aggressive experiments designed to make these scary viruses scarier, where they had been
part of an application to insert a fearing cleavage site able to infect human cells.
And where when the outbreak happened, we had a virus that was ready, ready for action to infect
humans and to this day better able to infect humans
than any other species, including bats.
And then from day one, there's this massive cover-up.
And then on top of that, in spite of lots of efforts
by lots of people, there's basically no evidence
for the natural origin hypothesis.
Everything that I've described just now
is circumstantial, but there's a certain point
of where you add up the circumstances.
And you see, this seems pretty, pretty likely.
I mean, if we're getting to 100%,
we are not at 100% by any means.
There still is a possibility of a natural origin,
and if we find that great, but from everything that I know,
that's how I get to my 85.
And we'll talk about why this matters in the political sense
and the human sense in the science,
in the realm of science, all of those factors.
But first, as Nietzsche said, let us look into the abyss.
And the games we play with monsters
that is colloquially called
gain of function research.
Let me ask the kind of political sounding question, which is how people usually phrase it.
Did Anthony Fauci fund gain of function research at the Wuhan Institute of Aralogy?
So it depends.
I mean, I've obviously been very closely monitoring this.
I've spoken a lot about it.
I've written about it.
And it depends on, I mean, not to quote Bill Clinton,
but to quote Bill Clinton.
It depends on what the definition of is is.
And so if you use a common sense definition
of gain of function, and by gain of function, there are lots of things
like gene therapies that are gain of function.
But here what we mean is gain of function
for pathogens able, potentially able to create human
pandemics.
But if you use the kind of common sense language,
and well then he probably did.
If you use the technical language from a 2017 NIH
document, and you read that language very narrowly, I think you can make a credible argument
that he did not. There's a question, though, and Francis Collins talked about that in his
interview with you. But then there's a question that we know from now that we have the information of the
reports submitted by E.C. H.O. H.O.
Alliance to the NIH, and some of which were late or not even delivered, that some of
this research was done on MERS, Middle Eastern respiratory syndrome virus. And if that was the case, there is, I think, a colorable argument
that that would be considered gain of function research even by the narrow language of that
2017 document. But I definitely think, and I've said this repeatedly, that Rand Paul can
be right. And Tony Fauci can be right.
And the question is, what how are we defining gain of function?
And that's why I've always said the question in my mind
isn't, was it or wasn't it gain of function?
Is if that's like a binary thing,
if not grade and if yes, guilty.
The question is just, what work was being done
at the Wuhan Institute of Virology?
What role, if any, did US government funding play in supporting that work? And what rights do we
all have as human beings and as American citizens and taxpayers to get all of the relevant information about them. So let's try to kind of dissect this.
So who frustrates you more?
Rand Paul or Anthony Fowlchini's discussion or the discussion itself.
So for example, gain a function is a term that's kind of more used just to mean making playing with viruses in a long lab to try to develop
more dangerous viruses. Is this kind of research a good idea? Is it also a good idea first to talk about it in public in the political way that it's been talked
about.
Is it okay that US may have funded gain a function research elsewhere?
I mean, it's kind of assumed, just like with Bill Clinton, there was very little discussion
of, I think, correct me if I'm wrong, but you know, whether
it's okay for a president, male or female to have extramarital sex, okay?
Or is it okay for a president to have extramarital sex with people on their on his staff or her staff
It was more the discussion of lying. I think it was did you did you lie about having sex or not and in this gain of function discussion What frustrates me personally is there's not a deep philosophical
discussion about whether we should be doing this kind of research and
what kinds like what are the ethical lines,
research on animals at all. Those are fascinating questions. Instead, it's a goth-yething. Did you or
did you not fund research on gain of function? And did you fund, it's almost like a bio-upping,
did you give money to China to develop this bio-upping that now attacked the rest
of the world? Yeah. So, I mean, all those things are pretty frustrating, but is there,
I think the thing you can untangle about Anthony Fauci and gain a function research in the United
States and equal health alliance and Wuhan is the new virology that's kind of, that's clarifying.
What were the mistakes made?
Sure.
So on-game function, there actually has been a lot of debate.
And I mentioned before in 2011, these first papers, there was a big debate, Mark Lipsich,
who's formerly at Harvard now with the US government working in the president's office.
He led a thing called the Cambridge Group
that was highly critical of this work,
but basically saying we're creating monsters.
They had the funding pause in 2014,
they spent three years putting together a framework
and then they lifted it in 2017.
So we had a thoughtful conversation.
Unfortunately, it didn't work.
And I think that's where we are now.
So I absolutely think that there are real issues
with the relationship between the United States government
and eco-health alliance.
And through that, eco-health alliance
with the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
And one issue is just essential transparency,
because as I see it, it's most likely the case,
that we transfer a lot of our knowledge and plans
and things to the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
And again, I'm sure that Shujeng Li
is not herself a monster.
I'm sure of that, even though I've never met her.
But there are just a different set of pressures on people working in an authoritarian system than
people who are working in other systems.
That doesn't mean it's entirely different.
And so I absolutely think that we shouldn't give one dollar to an organization, and certainly
a verology institute, where we don't have full access to their records, to their databases. We don't know what work is happening there.
And I think that we need to have that kind of full examination.
And that's why so I understand what Dr. Fauci is doing
is saying, hey, what I hear, Dr. Fauci,
I think what I hear from you, Rand Paul,
is you're accusing me of starting this pandemic.
And you're using G of starting this pandemic.
And you're using Gain of Function as a proxy for that.
And we have, when there are Senate hearings,
every senator gets five minutes.
And the name of the game is to translate your five minutes
into a clip that's going to run on the news.
And so I get that kind of...
So the dark dark game.
Gotcha.
But I also think that the Dr. Fauci and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious
Diseases and the NIH should have been more transparent because I think that in this day
and age where there are a lot of people poking around in this whole story of COVID origins,
we would not be where we are if it wasn't for a relatively
small number of people.
And I'm part of, as I know, two groups.
One, these internet sleuths known as drastic, and a number of them are part of a group
that I'm part of called, it's not our official name, it's called the Paris Group, it's about
two dozen experts around the world, but centered
around some very high level French academics. So we've all been digging and meeting with
each other regularly since last year. And our governments across the board, certainly China,
but including the United States, haven't been as transparent they they need to be. So there's definitely
mistakes were made on all sides. And that's why for me from day one, I've been calling for a
comprehensive investigation into this issue that certainly obviously looks at China, but we have
to look at ourselves. We did not get this right. So do you I'm just just gonna put Rand Paul aside here.
He politician playing political games.
It's very frustrating, but it is what it is on all sides.
Anthony Fauci, you think should have been more transparent.
And maybe more eloquent in expressing the complexity of all of this, the uncertainty and all of this.
Yeah, and I get that it's really hard to do that because let's say you have one, you speak
a paragraph and it's got four sentences.
And one of those sentences is the thing that's going to be turning to be Twitter and let me put it back. I get really so I'll try not to be emotional about this but I
heard
Anthony Fauci a couple of times now say that he represents science.
I know what he means by that he means in in his political bickering, all that kind of stuff that for a lot of people he
represents science.
But words matter and this isn't just clips.
I mean, maybe I'm distinctly aware of that doing this podcast.
Like, yeah, I talk for like hundreds of hours now, maybe over a thousand hours.
But like, I'm still careful with the words.
Like I'm trying not to be an asshole and I'm aware when I'm
an asshole and I'll apologize for it.
Like if the words I represent science left my mouth, which
they very well could, I would sure as hell be apologizing for it.
And not enough because I got in trouble, I would just feel bad about saying something like that.
And even that little phrase, I represent science.
No Dr. Fauci, you do not represent science.
I love science, the millions of scientists that inspired me to get into it. The following love with the scientific method
in the exploration of ideas through the rigor of science,
that Anthony Falschie does not represent.
He's one, I believe, great scientists of millions.
He does not represent anybody.
He's just one scientist.
And I think the greatness of a scientist
is best exemplified in humility
because the scientific method basically says
like you're you're like standing before the fog the mystery of it all and like
slowly chipping away at the mystery and the it's like it's embarrassing. It's
Humiliating how little you know.
That's the experience.
So the great scientists have to have humility to me.
And especially in their communication,
they have to have humility.
And I don't know.
And some of it is also a words matter,
because you have to, like great leaders
have to have the poetry of action.
They have to be bold and inspire action across millions of people.
But you also have to, through that poetry of words, express the complexity of the uncertainty
you're operating under.
Be humble in the face of not being able to predict the future or understand
the past or really know what's the right thing to do, but we have to do something.
And through that, you have to be a great leader that inspires action.
And some of that is just words.
And he chose words poorly.
I mean, so I'm all torn about this.
And then there's politicians there taking those words and magnifying them and playing
games with them.
And of course, that's a decent incentive for the people who do the scientific leaders
that step into the limelight to say any more words.
So they kind of become more conservative with the words they use.
I mean, it just becomes a giant mess, but I think the solution is to ignore all of that
and to be transparent, to be honest, to be vulnerable.
And to express the full uncertainty
of what you're operating under,
to present all the possible actions
and to be honest about the mistakes
they made in the past. I mean, there's something, even if you're not directly responsible for
those mistakes, taking responsibility for them is a way to win people over. I don't think
leaders realize this often in the modern age, in the internet age, they can see through
your bullshit. And it's really inspiring when you take ownership.
So, to do the thought experiment, like in public, do a thought experiment, if there was a lab leak,
and then lay out all the funding, the E.C.A. Health Alliance, all the incredible signs going on at the Wuhan Institute of Virorology and NIH. Lay out all the possible ethical problems,
lay out all the possible mistakes that could have been made.
And say, like, this could have happened.
And if this happened, here's the best way to respond
to it and to prevent it in the future.
And just laid all that complexity out.
And I wish we would have seen it.
And I have hope that this conversation, conversations like at your work and a book on this topic
will inspire young people today when they become in the Anthony Fauci's role to be much more
transparent and much more humble and all of those kinds of things.
This is just a relic of the past.
When there's a person, no offense to me in a suit that has to stand up and speak with clarity and certainty, that's just
the relic of the past. It's my hope.
But you do mind if I have a mic. I agree with a great deal of what you said. It's really
unfortunate. That are certainly the Chinese government, as I said before,
our government wasn't as transparent as I feel they should have been, particularly in the
early days of the pandemic, and particularly with regard to the issue of pandemic origins.
I mean, we know that Dr. Fauci was on calls with people like Christian Anderson,
at scripts, and others.
In those early days, raising questions, is this an engineered virus?
There were a lot of questions.
And it's kind of sad.
I mean, as I mentioned before, I've been one, and certainly there were others, but there
weren't a lot of us of the people who from the earliest days of the pandemic were raising questions about, hey, not so fast.
Here and I launched my website on pandemic origins in April of last year, April 2020, it got a huge amount of attention and actually my friend Matt Pottenger, who was the deputy national security advisor, when he was reaching out to people in the US government and in allied government, saying, hey, we should look into this.
What he was sending them was my website, who wasn't some US government information.
And so that-
And by the way, people should still go to the website.
You keep getting it, keep updating it, and it's an incredible resource.
Thank you, thank you, JamieMetzel.com.
And it's really unfortunate that our governments and international institutions, for pretty much
all of 2020, weren't doing their jobs of really probing this issue.
People were hiding behind this kind of false consensus.
And I'm critical of many people, even when I heard
Francis Collins interview with you, I just felt, well, he wasn't as balanced on the issue of
COVID origins. Certainly Dr. Fauci could have in his conversation with Rand Paul. I wasn't even
a conversation, but in some process and the aftermath could have laid things out a bit better.
He did say, in Francis Collins, did say that we don't know the origins,
and that was a shift, and we need to have an investigation.
So now, but having said all of that,
I do kind of, one, I have tremendous respect for Dr. Fauci,
for the work that he's done on HIV AIDS.
I mean, I have been vaccinated with the Moderna vaccine.
Dr. Fauci was a big part of the story
of getting us these vaccines
that have saved millions and millions of lives.
And so I don't think, when there's a lot to this story,
and then the second thing is,
it's really hard to be a public health expert because you have your mission is
public health and so and you have to if you are leading with all of your uncertainty
It's a really hard
Way to do things and so like even now like if I go to CVS and I and I get a Tylenol
Somebody has done a calculation of how many people
will die from taking Tylenol and they say,
well, we can live with that.
And that's why we have regulation.
And so all of us are doing kind of summaries.
And then we have people in public health
who are saying, well, we've summed it all up.
And you should do it.
You should get your kids vaccinated for measles.
You should not drive your car at a hundred miles an hour.
You should, you know, don't drink lighter fluid. Whatever these things are, and we want them to kind of give us broad guidelines.
And yet now our information world is so fragmented that if you, if you're not being honest about something, something material,
someone's going to find out and it's going to undermine your credibility.
And so I agree with you that there's a greater requirement for transparency now.
Maybe there always has been, but there's even greater requirement for it now because
people want to trust that you're speaking honestly. And that you're saying, well, here's what I know.
And this is based on what I know, here are the conclusions that I draw.
But if it's just, and again, I don't think the words I'm science or whatever it was are the right words.
But if it's just, you know,
trust me because of who I am, I don't think that that flies anywhere anymore.
Can I just ask you about the Francis Collins interview that I did if you got a chance to hear
that part? I think in the beginning we'll talk about the lab leak. What are your thoughts about
his response? Basically saying it's worthy of an investigation,
but I don't know how you would interpret it.
It's funny because I heard it in the moment
as it's great for the head of NIH to be open-minded on this.
But then the internet and Mr. Joe Roggan,
a bunch of friends and colleagues told me that, yeah, well, that's too late and too little.
Yeah. So first, let me say, I've been on Joe's podcast twice and I love the guy, which does mean that I agree with everything he does or says.
And on this issue, and I'm normally a pretty calm
and measured guy, and when you're just out running
with your AirPods on and you start yelling
into the wind and central park, nobody else knows
why you're yelling.
But well, you had such a moment. I had a moment with Collins.
And again, Franz Collins is someone I respect enormously. I mean, I live a big chunk of my life,
living in the world of genetics and biotech and my book, Hacking Darwin, is about the future of
human genetic engineering and his work on the human genome project and so many other
things have been fantastic.
And I'm a huge fan of the work of NIH and he was right to say that the Chinese government
hasn't been forthcoming and we need to look into it.
But then you asked him, well, how will we know?
And then his answer was, we need to find the intermediate host.
Remember I said before and so that made it clear that he thought
well we should have an investigation but it comes from nature and we just need to find that
whatever it is that intermediate animal host in the wild and that'll tell us the story.
So here we had the conclusion in mind and they're just waiting for the evidence to support the
conclusion. That was my feeling. I for the evidence to support the conclusion.
That was my feeling. I felt like he was in the old thing in general, but he was tilting.
And again, your first question was where do I fall? He was like, I'm 85% or whatever it
is, 80, 75, 90, whatever it is in the direction of a lab incident. It made it feel that he
was 90, 10 in the other direction, which is it feel that he was 90-10
in the other direction, which is still means
that he's open-minded about the possibility.
And that's why, in my view, every single person
who talks about this issue, meaning the right answer,
in my view is we don't know conclusively,
then this is my personal view,
the circumstantial evidence is strongly
in favor of a lab incident origin, but that could immediately shift with additional information.
We need transparency, but we should come together in absolutely condemning the outrageous cover-up
carried out by the Chinese government, which to this day is preventing any meaningful
investigation into pandemic origins.
We have, if you use the, the economist numbers, 15 million people who are dead as a result
of this pandemic.
And I believe that the actions of the Chinese government are, um, discreasing the memory of these 15 million dead. They're insulting the families
and the billions of people around the world who have suffered from this totally avoidable
pandemic. And whatever the origin, the fact the criminal cover-up carried out by the Chinese
government, which continues to this day, but
most intensely in the first months following the outbreak.
That's the reason why we have so many, so many dead.
And certainly, as I was saying before, I, in a small number of others, have been carrying
this flame since early last year, but it's kind of crazy that our governments haven't been demanding
it. And we can talk about the World Health Organization process, which was deeply compromised
in the beginning. Now it's become much, much better. But again, it was the pressure of
outsiders who that played such an important role in shifting our national and international
institutions.
And while that's better than nothing, it would have been far better if our governments
and international organizations had done the right thing from this.
If I could just make a couple of comments about Joe Rogan.
So there's a bunch of people in my life who have inspired me, who have taught me a lot,
who I even look up to.
Many of them are live, most of them are dead.
I want to say that Joe said a few critical words about the conversation with Francis Collins.
Most of it offline with a lot of great conversations
about it, uh, some he said publicly, and, um, he was also critical to say that me asking
hard questions and interviews, not my strong suit. And I really want to kind of respond
to that, which I did privately as well, but publicly to say that Joe is 100% right on that.
But that doesn't mean that always has to be the case. And that is definitely something
I want to work on because most of the conversations I have, I want to work on. Because most of the conversations
I have, I want to see the beautiful ideas in people's minds. But there's some times where
you have to ask the hard questions to bring out the beautiful ideas. And it's hard to do.
It's a skill. And Joe is very good at this. He says the way he put it in his criticisms, and he does this in his conversations,
which is, well, well, well, stop, stop, stop, stop.
There's a kind of sense like, did you just say what you said?
Let's, let's make sure we get to the bottom, we'll clarify what you mean.
terrified what you mean. Because sometimes really big, negative, or difficult ideas can be said as a quick side
in a sentence.
Like, it's nothing.
But it could be everything.
And you want to make sure you catch that and you talk about it. And not as a gotcha, not as a kind of way to destroy another human being, but to reveal
something profound.
And that's definitely something I want to work on.
I also want to say that, as you said, you disagreed, Joe, on quite a lot of things.
So for a long time, Joe was somebody that I was just a fan of, listen to, he's now a good
friend.
And I would say we disagree more than we agree.
And I love doing that.
And but at the same time, I learned from that.
So it's like dual, like nobody in this world can tell me what to think. But I think everybody has a
lesson to teach me. I think that's a good way to approach it. Whenever somebody has
words of criticism, I assume they're right and walk around with that idea to really
sort of empathize with that idea because there's a lesson there.
And oftentimes my understanding of a topic becomes is altered completely or it becomes much more
nuanced and much more much richer for that kind of empathetic process, but definitely, I do not allow anybody to tell me
what to think, whether it's Joe Rogan or Fido,
or Dusty F Skirrenicia, or my parents,
or the proverbial girlfriend,
which I don't actually have.
Like all the...
But she's still busted in my balls exactly in my imagination. I have a girlfriend in Canada
That yeah, that I have a imagining exactly
Imagine conversation. I so want to mention that but also I
Don't know if you've got any chance to see this I'd love to also mention this
Twitter feud between two other interesting people,
which is Brett Weinstein and Sam Harris
or Sam Harris and others in general.
And it kind of breaks my heart
that these two people I listened to
that are very thoughtful about a bunch of issues.
Let's put COVID aside,
because people are very motion about a bunch of issues. Let's put COVID aside, because people are very motion about this topic.
I mean, I think they're deeply thoughtful and intelligent
whether you agree with them or not.
And I always learn something from their conversations.
And they are legitimately or have been for a long time friends.
And it's a little bit heartbreaking to me to see that they basically don't
talk in private anymore.
And there's occasional jobs on Twitter.
And I hope that changes.
I hope that changes in general for COVID that COVID brought out the, I would say,
the most emotional sides of people, the worst in people.
I think there has been enough love and empathy and compassion.
And to see two people from whom I've learned a lot, whether it's Eric Wandsheim, Brett
Wandsheim, Sam Harris, you can criticize them as much as you want, their ideas as much
as you want their ideas as much as you want. But if you're not sufficiently open-minded to admit that you have a lot to learn from their conversations,
I think you're not being honest. And so I do hope they have those conversations.
And I hope we can kind of, I think there's a lot of repairing to be done post-COVID of relationships, of conversations, and I think empathy and love
can help a lot there.
This is also just a, I talk to Sam privately, but this is also a public call out to put a
little bit more love in the world. And for these difficult conversations to happen. Because Brett Weinstein
could be very wrong about a bunch of topics here around COVID, but he could also be right.
And the only way to find out is to have
those conversations. Because there's a lot of people listening to both Sam Harrison and Brian Stein.
And if you go into these silos where you just keep telling each other the
that you're the possessors of truth and nobody else is the possessor of truth, what starts
happening is you both lose track or the capability of arriving at the truth because nobody's
in the possession of the truth.
So anyway, there's just a call out that we should have a little bit more conversation,
a little bit more life.
I totally agree.
And both of those guys are guys who I respect. And as you know, Brett, and again,
as I mentioned, they're just handful of us who were the early people raising questions about
about the origins of this pandemic. Right. He was there also talking. Yeah. So people have heard him
speak quite a bit about any viral drugs and all that kind of stuff, but he was also
raising concerns about lab leak early on.
Yeah, exactly.
And so, but I completely agree with you that we don't have to agree with everybody, but
it's great to have healthy conversations.
That's how we grow and absolutely we live in a world where we're kind of, if we're not
careful, pushed into these little information pockets. So, I think that's a lot of the things that we do, and I think that's a lot of the things that we do,
and I think that's a lot of the things that we do,
and I think that's a lot of the things that we do,
and I think that's a lot of the things that we do,
and I think that's a lot of the things that we do,
and I think that's a lot of the things that we do,
and I think that's a lot of the things that we do,
and I think that's a lot of the things that we do, and future. And when I say critical things like the Chinese government, we'd have to demand a full investigation into pandemic
origins. This is an average. Then it's really popular. When I say, let's build a better future
for everyone in peace and love. It's like, wow, three people liked it. And one was my
mother. And so I just feel like we need to build.
We used to have that connectivity just built in
because we had these town squares
and you couldn't get away from them.
Now we can get away from them.
So engaging with people who are
a different background is really essential.
And I'm on Fox News sometimes three, four times a week. And I wouldn't mean in my normal life,
I'm not watching that much of Fox News or even television more generally. But I just feel
like if I just speak to people who are very similar to me, it'll be comfortable. But
what have I contributed? So I think we really have to have those kinds of conversations and recognize that at the
end of the day, most people want to be happy.
They want to live in a better world.
They maybe have different paths to get there.
But if we just break into camps that don't even connect with each other, that's a much
more dangerous world.
Let's dive back into the difficult pool. connect with each other. That's a much more dangerous world.
Let's dive back into the difficult pool. Just like you said, in the English speaking world, it seems popular, almost easy to demonize China. The Chinese government, I should say.
But even China, there's this kind of gray area
that people just fall into. And I'm really uncomfortable with that, perhaps because in my
mind, in my heart, in my blood, or echoes of the Cold War and that kind of tension.
It feels like we almost desire conflict.
So we see demons when there is none.
So I'm a little like cautious to demonize, but at the same time you have to be honest.
It's like honest with the demons that are there and honest when they're not.
This is kind of a geopolitical therapy session, a source. So let's keep talking
about China a little bit from different angles. So let's return to the director of the center
of emerging infectious disease at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. She, Zhang Li, colloquially referred to as batwoman. So do you think she's lying?
Yes.
Do you think she's being forced to lie?
Yes.
I've known a bunch of virologists in private and public conversation that respect her as a
human being, as a scientist.
I respect her as a human being.
Sorry, as a scientist, not a human being.
Well, I think they don't know the human. They know the scientists, and they respect her a lot of the scientists. Human being. Sorry, as a scientist, not a human being. I think they don't know
the human. They know the scientists and they respect for a lot of the scientists. Yeah, I respect
her. I've never met her. We had one exchange, which I'll mention in a second in a virtual forum,
but I do respect her. I actually think that she is somebody who has tried to do the right thing. She
was one of the heroes of tracking down the origins of the SARS-1, and that was a major
contribution.
But as we talked about earlier, it's a different thing living, being a scientist, or really
kind of anything.
It's different being one of those people in an authoritarian society than it is being in a different type of society. And so
when Xi Jinping said that the reason the the WIV database was taken offline in September 19 was
because of computer hacks, I don't think that's the story. I don't think she thinks that's the story. When I asked her in March of 2021, March of this year, in a Rutgers online forum, when
I asked her whether the Chinese military had any engagement with the Wuhan Institute of
Virology in any way, and she said absolutely not paraphrasing, I think she was lying. Do I think that she had the ability to say,
well, either one, yes, but I can't talk about it?
Or I know there are a lot of things
that are happening at this institute
that I don't know about and that could be one.
Could she have said that the personnel
at the one institute of virology
have all had to go through classification training
to so that they can know about what can and can't be said.
Like she could have said all those things,
but she couldn't say all of those things.
And so, and I think that's why so many, at least in my view,
so many people in the, certainly in the Western world,
got this story wrong from the beginning,
because if your only prism was the science,
and you just assumed that this is a science question
to be left to the scientists,
should Zheng Li is just like any scientist working
in Switzerland or Norway.
The Chinese government isn't interfering in any way, and we can trust them.
That would lead you down one path.
In my view, the reason why I progressed as I did is I felt like I had two keys.
I had one key as I live in the science world through my work with WHO and my books and things like
that.
But I also have another part of my life in the world of geopolitics as an Asia quote-unquote
expert and former national security council official and other things.
And I felt for me, I needed both keys to open that door.
But if I only had the science key, I wouldn't have had the level of doubt and suspicion that
I have.
But if my starting point was only doubt and suspicion, well, it's coming from China, it
must be that the government is guilty, like that wouldn't help either. I wonder what's in her mind, whether it's fear or habit, because I think a lot of people
in the former Soviet Union, it's like Chernobyl.
It's not really fear.
It's almost like a momentum.
It's like the reason I showed up to this interview weren't close as opposed to being naked. It's like,
all right. It's like, all of us are doing the clothes thing.
Well, though, there was a startup years ago called Naked News. Did you ever hear about that?
They just would read the exact news. But naked. No, they would, after each story, they'd take
something off until the end. I don't think it's a good idea for podcast
They have an IPO next time on with Michael mouse. Yeah, okay
So what do you think I mean because the reason I asked that question is
How do we kind of take steps to improve?
Without then you kind of revolutionary action. You could say,
we need to inspire the Chinese people to elect, to sort of revolutionize the system from
within. But like, who are we to suggest that because we have our flaws too. We should
be working on our flaws as well. And so, but at the individual scientists level, what are the small acts of rebellion that can be done?
How can we improve this? Well, I don't know about small acts of rebellion, but I'll try to answer
your question from a few different perspectives.
So right now, actually, as we speak,
there is a special session of the World Health Assembly going on.
The World Health Assembly is the governing authority over the World Health Organization,
where it's represented by states and territories, 194 of them,
tragically not including Taiwan, because of the Chinese government's assistance.
But they're now beginning a process of trying to negotiate a global pandemic treaty to try
to have a better process for responding to crises exactly like we're in.
But unfortunately, for the exact same reasons that we have failed, I mean, we had a similar process after the first SARS,
we set up what we thought was the best available system,
and it has totally failed here.
And it's failed here because of the inherent pathologies
of the Chinese government system.
We are suffering from a pandemic that exists
because of the internal pathologies of the Chinese state.
And that's why on one hand, I totally get this impulse. Well, we do it our way,
they do it their way, who's to say that one way is better, and certainly right now in the United
States, we're at each other's throats, we have a hard time getting anything meaningful
done.
And I'm sure there are people who are saying, well, that model looks appealing.
But just as people could look to the United States and say, well, because the United States
has such a massive reach, what we do domestically has huge implications for the rest of the
world, they become stakeholders in our politics.
And that's why I think for a lot of years,
people have just been looking at US politics,
not because it's interesting, but because the decisions that we make
have big implications for their lives.
The same is true for ours.
You could say that the lack of civil and political rights in China
is, I mean, it's up to the Chinese not even people
because they have no say, but to their government and they weren't democratically elected
that they are recognized as the government. But some significant percentage of the 15 million
people now dead from COVID are dead because in the earliest days following the outbreak, whatever
whatever the origin, the voices of people sounding the alarm were suppressed that the Chinese government
had an, just like in Chernobyl, that Chinese government had a greater incentive to lie
to the international community than to tell to tell the truth. And everybody was incentivized to pretty much
do the wrong thing. And so that's why I think one of the big messages of this pandemic is that
all of our fates are tied to everybody else's fates. And so what we can say and should say,
well, let's focus on our own communities and our countries. we're all stakeholders in what happens elsewhere.
Gasco a weird question. So I'm going to do a few podcast interviews with interesting people in
Russia in the Russian language because I could speak Russian. And a lot of those people have, you know, are not usually speaking in these kinds of formats.
Do you think it's possible to interview Xi Jinping? Do you think it's possible to interview
somebody like her or anyone in the Chinese government?
her or anyone in the Chinese government. I think not.
And I think the reason is because I think they would one be uncomfortable being in any
environment where really unknown questions will be asked.
And I actually, I was, so as you know, on this topic, the Chinese, as I mentioned earlier,
Chinese government has a gag order on Chinese scientists.
They can't speak without prior government approval.
Shijing Lee has been able to speak.
And she's spoken in a number of forums.
I mentioned this Rutgers event.
What was the nature of that forum that brought this up?
It was, it was, it was, it was all of them were kind of science conversations about the pandemic, including the origin's issue.
But I think that she, in her response to my question,
it was kind of this funny thing.
So they had this event for organized by Rutgers.
And I went on, there was an online event on Zoom.
But I got on there and I just realized
it was very poorly organized.
Like normally the controls that you would have
about who gets to chat to, who gets to ask.
Questions, none of them were set.
And so I kind of couldn't believe it.
I was just sitting at home in my neon green fleece,
and I just started sending chat messages to Shujeng Lee.
So you could, anyway you could send it.
Anybody could, it was insane.
And so I thought, wow, this is incredible.
And so then it was unclear who got to ask questions.
And so I was like posting questions
and then I was sending chats to the organizers of the events
saying I really have a question.
And first they said, well, you can submit your questions
and we'll have submitted questions
and then if we have time, we'll open up.
So I just, I mean, I just said, what the hell?
I just sent messages to everybody.
And then the event was already done.
They were 15 minutes over time.
And then they said, we have time just for one question
and it's Jamie Metzell.
And like I said, I'm sitting there in my running clothes.
I wasn't, I was like multitasking and I heard my name. And like I said, I'm sitting there in my running clothes, I wasn't, I was like multitasking,
and I heard my name.
And so I went dive back and I asked this question
about did you know all of the work
that was happening at the Wuhan Institute of Virology,
not just your work?
And can you confirm that US intelligence has said that the military played
a role, it was engaged with the Wuhan Institute of Virology, do you deny that the Chinese military
was involved in any way with the Wuhan Institute of Virology? And as I said before, she said,
this is crazy, absolutely not. It actually got that one question got covered in the media
because it was like, I think an essential question.
But I just think that since then, to my knowledge,
she's not been in any public forums,
but that's why most people would be shocked
that to date, there has been no comprehensive
international investigation into pandemic origins.
There is no whistleblower provision.
So if you're a, I might guess is there are at least tens, maybe hundreds of people in
China who have relevant information about the origins of the pandemic who are terrified
and don't dare share it.
And let's just say somebody wanted to get that information out to send it somewhere.
There's no official address.
The WHO doesn't have that.
Nobody has that.
And so I would love, I mean, you may as well ask.
I don't think it's likely that they'll be a yes,
but it could well be that there are defectors
who will want to speak.
So let me also push back and say, so one, I want to ask if the language barrier is a thing,
because I've talked to, so I understand Russian culture, I think, or not understand, I
don't understand basically anything in this world, but I mean, I hear the music that
is Russian culture, and I enjoy it.
I don't hear that music for Chinese culture.
It's just not something I've experienced, so it's a beautiful, rich, complex culture.
And from my sense, it seems distant to me. Like I, like whenever I look,
even like we mentioned offline Japan and so on,
I probably don't even understand Japanese culture.
I believe I kind of do,
because I did martial arts my whole life,
but even that, it's just so distant.
People who've lived in Japan foreigners for like 20 years,
say the exact same thing.
Yeah.
This makes me sad, it makes me sad,
because I can't, I will never be able to fully
appreciate the literature, the conversations,
the people, the little humor in the subtleties.
And those are all essential to understand
even this cold topics of science.
Because all of that is important to understand.
So that's a question for me if you think language barriers are thing.
But the other thing I just want to kind of comment on is
the criticism of journalism that somebody like Xi Jinping
or even Xi Jinping, just anybody in China,
is very skeptical to have really conversations with anybody in the Western media
Yeah, because it it's like what are the odds?
that they will try to bring out the beautiful ideas in the person and
Honestly, just this is a harsh criticism. I apologize, but I kind of mean it is
the I apologize, but I kind of mean it. Is the journalists that have some of these high profile conversations often don't do the work.
They come off as not very intelligent, and I know they're intelligent people.
They have not done the research.
They have not come up and like read a bunch of books.
They have not even read the Wikipedia article, meaning put in the minimal effort to empathize,
to try to understand the culture of the people, all the complexities, all the different
ideas in the spaces.
Do all the incredible, not all, but some of the incredible work that you've done initially,
like that, you have to do that work to earn the right to have a deep, real
conversation with some of these folks. And it's just disappointing to me that journalists
often don't do that work.
Yeah. So on that, just first, I completely agree with you. I mean, there is just an incredible
beauty in Chinese culture. And I think all cultures, but certainly China has such a deep and rich history,
amazing literature and art and just human beings. I mean, I'm a massive critic of the Chinese
government. I'm very vociferous about the really genocide and Xinjiang, the absolute effort to destroy Tibetan culture, the destruction of democracy in Hong Kong,
incredibly illegal efforts to seize
basically the entire South China Sea.
And I could go on and on, and on.
But Chinese culture is fantastic.
And I can't speak to every technical field,
but just in terms of having journalists, and
I'll speak to American journalists, people like Peter Hessler, who have really invested
the time to live in China, to learn the language, learn the culture.
Peter himself, who is maybe one of our best journalists covering China from a soul level,
he was kicked out of China. So it's very, very difficult.
And so yeah, it's really, and so for me,
you talked about my website on pandemic origins.
So when I launched it, I had it,
I'm not a Chinese speaker,
but I had the entire site translated into Chinese.
And I have it up on my website,
just because I felt like, well, if somebody, I mean the great firewall,
makes it very, very difficult for people in China
to access that kind of information.
I figured if somebody gets there and they want to have it
in their own language, but it's hard because the Chinese government
is represented by these quote-unquote wolf warriors, which is it's
like these basic ruffians. And I personally was condemned by name and by the spokesman
of the Chinese foreign ministry from the podium in Beijing. And so it's really hard because
I absolutely think the American people and the Chinese people, I mean, maybe all people,
we have so much in common.
I mean, yes, China is an ancient civilization, but they kind of wiped out their own civilization
in the Great Leap Forward and Cultural Revolution.
They burned their scrolls.
They smashed their artworks.
And so it's a very young society, kind of like America is a young society. So we have a lot in common.
And if we just kind of got out of our own ways, we could have a beautiful relationship. But there's a lot of things that are happening.
Certainly the United States feels responsible to defend the post-war international order that past generations help
build.
I'm a certain believer in that, and China is challenging that.
And the Chinese government, and they've shared that view with the Chinese people, feel
that they haven't been adequately respected.
And now they're building a massive nuclear arsenal and all these other things to try
to position themselves in the
world with an articulated goal of being the lead country in the world.
And that puts them at odds with the United States.
So there are a lot of real reasons that we need to be honest about for division.
But if that's all we focus on, if we don't say that there's another side of the story
that brings us together, we'll put ourselves
on an inevitable glide path to a terrible outcome.
What do you make of Xi Jinping?
What, so two questions.
So one in general, and two more on Lab League and his meeting with our president Biden in
discussion of Lablich. Yeah, so I feel that Xi Jinping has a very narrow goal
of articulated, of establishing China as the lead country
in the world by the hundredth anniversary
of the founding of the modern Chinese state.
And it's ruthless and it's strategic.
There's a great book called The Long Game
by Rush Dochi, who's actually now working in the White House
about this goal and are pretty clearly articulated goal
to subvert the post-war international order.
And in China's interest, every maybe every leader wants to
Organize the world around their interests, but I feel that his vision of what that entails
Is not one that I think is shareable for the rest of the world
I mean the strength of the United States with all of our flaws is
particularly in that that post-war period
We we put forward a model that was desirable to a lot of people.
Certainly it was desirable to people in Western Europe,
in the Eastern Europe, and Japan, and Korea.
It doesn't mean it's perfect.
The United States is deeply flawed as articulated to date.
I don't think most people and countries would like to live in a synocentric world.
And so I certainly, as I mentioned before, I'm a huge critic of what Xi Jinping is doing,
the incredible brutality in Xinjiang, in Tibet, and elsewhere.
Yeah, the censorship one gives me a lot of trouble. On the science realm and in just in journalism
and just the world that prevents us
from having conversations with each other.
Do you know what the the way the poo thing?
Yes.
I mean, it's ridiculous.
It's so so to me, that's such a good illustration
of censorship being petty.
The censorship has to be petty because the goal of censorship
It may be experienced in the Soviet Union is to get into your head Like if it's just censorship like you you say
Down with the state and like you can't say that
But you can say all the other things up to that point
Eventually people will feel empowered
to say down with the state.
And so I think the goal of this kind of authoritarian censorship is to turn you into the censor.
And so the, the, the self-sensorship, because they almost have to have you think, well, if
I'm going to make any criticism, maybe they're going to come and get me so it's, it's safer
to not do.
I mean, I traveled through North Korea pretty extensively and I've seen that in its ultimate
form, but that's what they're trying to do in China too.
Yeah.
So for people who are not familiar, it's such a clear illustration of just the pettiness
of censorship and leaders, the corrupting nature of power. But there's a meme of Xi Jinping
with, I guess, Barack Obama, and the meme is that he looks like we need a poo in that picture.
And that was the president Xi Jinping looks like we need need the poo and I guess that became a because that got censored
Like mentions a we need to put got censored all across China
We need the poo became the unknowing
Revolutionary hero that represents freedom of speech and and so on
But it's just such a absurd
Because because we spend all so much time in this conversation talk about the censorship
that's a little bit more understandable to me, which is like, we messed up.
And it wasn't maybe it's almost understandable errors that happen in the progress of science.
I mean, you can always argue that there's a lot of mistakes along the way and the censorship
along the way cause the big mistake.
You can argue that same way for the Chernobyl.
But those are sort of understandable and difficult topics.
But when you the poo.
But in your message, it shows both sides of the story.
I mean, one how petty authoritarian sensors have to be, and that's why the messaging from the Chinese government
is so consistent, no matter who you are, you have to be careful what you say. And that's why
it's the story of Punxhue that tennis player, she dared raise her voice in an individual way,
Jack Ma, the richest man in China, had a minor criticism of the Chinese government.
He had basically disappeared from the public eye,
von Bingbing, who's like one of the leading Chinese movie stars.
She was seen as not loyal enough and she just vanished.
And so the message is no matter who you are, no matter what level, if you don't mind everything you say, you could lose everything.
I'm pretty hopeful optimistic about a lot of things. And so for me, if the Chinese government stays with it was current structure, I think what I hope they start fixing is the freedom of speech. But they can't. I mean, the thing is, if they open up freedom of speech,
really in a meaningful way,
they can't maintain their current form of government.
And it's connected, as I was saying before,
to the origins of the pandemic.
And if my hypothesis was right,
that was the big choice that the national government had. Do we really
investigate the origins of the pandemic? Do we deliver a message that transparency is required?
Public transparency is required from local officials. If they do that, the entire system
collapse pretty much everybody in China has a relative who has died as a result of the actions of the Communist
Party, particularly in the Great Leap Forward.
It's nearly 50 million people died as a result of Mao's disastrous policies.
And yet why is Mao's picture still on Tiananmen Square and it's on the money?
Because maintaining that fiction is the foundation of the legitimacy of the Chinese state.
If people were allowed, just say what you want.
Do you really think Mao was such a great guy, even though your own relatives are dead as
a result?
Do you really buy even on this story that China did nothing wrong, even though in the earliest
days of the pandemic,
these two, at least Chinese scientists themselves, courageously issued a preprint paper that
was later almost certainly forcibly retracted, saying, well, this looks like this comes from
one of the Wuhan labs that we're studying.
Like if you opened up that window, I think that the Chinese government would not be able to continue in its current form, then that's why they crack down at Tannum and Square.
That's why with Punxue the tennis player, if they had let her accuse somebody from the Communist Party of sexual assault, and they said, okay, now people, you can use social media, and you can have your
meet-to moment. And let us know who in the Chinese Communist Party or your boss in a business
has assaulted you. Just like in every society, I'm sure there's tons of women who've been
sexually assaulted, manipulated, abused by men. And so I certainly hope that there can be that kind of opening.
But if I were an authoritarian dictator,
that's the thing I would be most afraid of.
Yeah, dictator, perhaps,
but I think you can gradually increase the freedom of speech.
So I think you can maintain control
over the freedom of press first.
So control the press more, but let the lower levels sort of open up YouTube, right?
Open up like where individual citizens can make content.
I mean, there's a lot of benefits to that.
And then, you know, from an authoritarian perspective, you can just say that's misinformation,
that's conspiracy theories, all those kinds of things.
But at least I think if you open up that freedom of speech at the level of the individual
citizen, that's good for entrepreneurship, for the development of ideas, of exchange of
ideas, all the kind of stuff.
I just think that increased the GDP of the country.
Yeah.
I think there's a lot of benefits.
I feel like you can still play,
we're playing some like dark thoughts here, but I feel like you can still play the game of thrones, still maintain power while giving freedom to the citizenry. Like I think just like
with North Korea, it's a good example of where cracking down too much can completely destroy your country.
Like there are some balance you can strike in your evil mind and still maintain authoritarian
control over the country.
Obviously, it's not obvious, but a big supporter of freedom of speech.
I mean, it seems to work really well.
I don't know what the failure case is for freedom of speech are. Probably we're experiencing them with Twitter and like
where the nature of truth is being completely kind of flipped upside down, but it seems
like on the whole ability to defeat lies with more, not through censorship, but through more conversations, more information
is the right way to go.
Can I tell you a little story?
Truth stories about North Korea.
So a number of years ago, I was invited to be part of a small six-person delegation advising
the government of North Korea on how to establish special economic zones. Because other countries have used these S.E.Zs as a way of building their economies.
And when I was invited, I thought, well, maybe there's an opening.
And I certainly believe in that.
So we flew to China across the border into North Korea.
And then we were met by our partners from the North Korean development organization,
and then we zigzagged the country for almost two weeks,
visiting all these sites for where they were intended
to create these special economic zones,
and in each site, they had their local officials,
and they had a map, and they showed us
where everything that was going to be built.
And the other people who were like really technical experts on how to set up
especially economics, they were asking questions, well, like, should you put
the entrance over here or shouldn't you put it over there and what if there's
flooding? And I kept asking just these basic questions, like, what do you think
you're going to do here? Why do you think you can be competitive? Do you know
anything about who you're competing against? Are you empowering your workers to innovate
because everybody else is in a way?
So at the end of the trip,
they flew us to Pyongyang and they put us in this,
it looked kind of like the United Nations.
They probably had 500 people there
and I gave a speech to them.
I obviously was in English and it was translated
and I figured, you know, I've come all this way.
I'm just gonna be honest.
If they arrest me for being honest, that's on them.
And I said, I'm here because I believe
we can never give up hope
that we always have to try to connect.
I'm also here because I think that North Korea
connecting to the world economy is an important first step.
But having visited all of your special economic zone sites and having met with all of your,
or many of your officials, I don't think your plan has any chance of succeeding because you're trying
to sell into a global market. But you need to have market information that, and I gave examples of GE and other,
there are others that the innovation can't only happen at one place.
And if you want innovation to happen from the people who are doing this, you have to empower
them.
They have to have access.
They have to have voice.
I mean, nobody, I mean, the people after they kind of had to condemn me because
what I was saying was, was challenging.
So I certainly agree with you.
And then just one side story of then that night.
And it was just kind of bizarre because North Korea is, it's so desperately poor, but they
were trying to impress us.
And so we had these, I mean, embarrassingly, some
shu-us banquets. And so for our final dinner that night, it
really looked like something from Beauty and the Beast in the,
I mean, it was like China and waiters and tuxedos. And they had
this beautiful dinner. And then afterwards, because we'd now
spent two weeks with the our North Korean partners, they brought
out this karaoke machine. with our North Korean partners, they brought out this karaoke machine and our North Korean counterparts, they sang songs to us in Korean.
And so I said, well, we want to reciprocate, one of the women who'd been part of the North Korean delegation.
She was able just to play the piano.
Just like you could hum a tune
and she could play it on the piano.
And so I said, all right, here's this tune,
which I whispered in her ear.
When I give you the signal, just play this tune over and over.
And so I got these, I mean, there were the six of us,
and maybe 20 North Koreans,
and we were all in the circle,
I said, everybody hold hands.
And then put your right, just try put your right foot
in front of your left, and then left foot
in front of the right, going sideways.
And I said, all right, hit it.
And she played a North Korean version of Havenigilah.
And I think it was the first and only horror
that they've ever done in North Korea.
I survived to tell.
Was this recorded or no?
It was not.
Oh no.
Yeah, if they had free YouTube, this would have been a big one.
Let's return to the beginning.
And just patient zero. It's kind of always incredible to think that there's one human at which it all started.
Who do you think was patient zero?
Do you think it was somebody that worked at Wuhan Institute of Virology, do you think it was there's a leak of some other kind that led to the infection?
Like what do we know? Because there's this December 8th, the summer 16th case of maybe you canied with that is and then there's like what's his name? Michael Warabi has a nice
timeline. I'm sure you have a timeline, but his nice timeline that puts the average at
like November something like 18th and November 16th is the average estimate for when the
patient zero got infected when the first human infection happened.
Yeah, so the just two points one is it may be that there's infecting zero and patient zero.
It could be that the first person infected was asymptomatic because we know there's a lot of
people who are asymptomatic and then there's the question of, well, who is patient zero, meaning the
first person to present themselves in some kind of health facility where that diagnosis
could be made?
So could we actually look on the definition?
Yeah.
So is that to you a good definition of patient zero? What? Okay, there's a bunch of stuff
here because this virus is weird. So one is who gets infected, one who is infectious, or the first person infect others.
Yeah.
And who shows up to a hospital?
Yeah.
So I think that's why that's why I'm calling the first person to show up to a hospital
who's diagnosed with COVID-19.
I'm calling that person patient zero.
There's also that there is somewhere, the first person to be infected.
And that person maybe never showed up in a hospital
because maybe they were asymptomatic and never get sick.
So got sick.
So let me start with what I'm calling infecte zero.
Here are some options.
I talked before about some person who was a villager
and some remote village. It's almost impossible to imagine,
but possible to imagine because strange things happen.
And that person somehow gets to Wuhan.
By the way, just to steal man that argument,
there's not arguments to statement,
but strange things happen all the time.
No, I agree.
It doesn't mean that logic doesn't apply
and probabilities don't apply,
but we all, I mean, in general principle,
everyone, if we were honest, should be agnostic
about everything.
Like, I think I'm Jamie,
but is there a point, oh, 1% chance,
or oh, 1% chance that I'm not,
but it could be, I mean, how would I be? there's a large number of people arguing about the meaning of the word
I in that I'm Jamie. So exactly what is conscious exactly exactly so we could spend another three hours going into that one
So one possibility is there some remote villager another possibility is there's some somehow
bizarrely
There are these infected animals that come from
Southern China most likely they all the maybe there's only one of them that's infected which how could that possibly be
And it's only sent to Wuhan. It's not sent anywhere else
To any of the markets there or whatever and then maybe somebody in a market is infected. That's one
remote possibility, but a possibility.
Another is that researchers from the Wuhan Institute
of Virology go down to Southern China.
We haven't talked about it yet, but in 2012,
there were six miners were sent into a copper mine
in Southern China and Yunnan province.
All of them got very sick with what now appear like COVID-19-like symptoms.
Half of them died.
Blood samples from them were taken to the Wuhan Institute of Virology and elsewhere.
And then after that, there were multiple site visits to that mine collecting viral samples that were brought
to the Wuhan Institute of Virology, included among those samples, was this now infamous
RATG-13 virus, which is among the genetically closest viruses to SARS-CoV-2.
There were other eight other viruses that were collected from that mine
that were presumably very similar to that. And again, we have no access to the information about
those and many of the other, most almost all of the other viruses. So, could it be
that one of the people who was sent from the Wuhan Institute of Virology or the Wuhan Center for Centers for Disease Control,
they went down there to collect and they got infected asymptomatically and brought it back.
Could it be that they were working on these viruses in the laboratory?
And there was an issue with waste disposal. We know that the Wuhan CDC had a major problem with waste disposal.
know that the Wuhan CDC had a major problem with waste disposal and just before the pandemic, one, they put out an RFP to fix their waste disposal.
And in early 2019, they moved to their new site, which was basically across the street
from the Juan on seafood market.
So there have been issue of somebody infected in the lab of waste disposal?
Could a laboratory animal, their experiences in China, actually China just recently passed a
loss saying it's illegal to sell laboratory animals in the market because they were scientists,
or one scientist who was selling laboratory animals in the market and people would just come and buy
animals in the market and people would just come and buy it. It's so.
There's so many scenarios.
But if I again, connect it to my 85% number, I think in the whole category of laboratory-related
incidents, whether it's collection, waste, something connected to the lab, I think that's the
most likely.
But there are other credible people who would say they think think that's the most likely, but there are other credible
people who would say they think it's not the most likely, and I welcome their views, and
we need to have this conversation.
So in your write up, what's the URL, because I always find it by doing jameymetzel.
Yeah, it's lab leak.
It's probably the easiest thing you can do.
So the easiest thing you can do, but if you just go to jameymezzo.com,
J-A-M-I-E-M-E-T-Z-L.com, then there's just a thing, it's COVID origins. COVID origins.
Or you could just Google Jamie Mezzo lab leak. Google search engines says you're powerful
thing. You mentioned in that right up that you don't think this could be just me misreading it or it's just
slightly miswritten, but you don't
think that the viruses from that
2012 mind just fascinating could be the backbone for SARS-CoV-2.
So what I mean just the specific virus, which I mentioned RATG-13. And there's a whole history of that because it had a different name
and it looked and then should Jeng Li provided wrong information about when it had been
sequence. I mean, there was a whole issue connected to that. But the genetic difference,
even though it's 96.2% similar to the SARS-CoV-2 virus,
that's actually a significant difference,
even though that and a virus called Benal 52
that was collected in Laos are the two most similar.
There's still differences,
so I'm not saying RITG-13 is the backbone,
but is there, I believe there is a possibility that other viruses that were
collected, either in that mine, in Yunnan, in southern China, or in Laos or Cambodia, because
that was with the eco-health alliance proposals and documents, their plan was to collect viruses in Laos and Cambodia and elsewhere
and bring them to the Wuhan Institute of Verology so that there are people, I don't know if
I just when I was sitting here before this message, I got before this interview, I got
a message from somebody who was saying, well Peter Dayzac is telling everybody that the viral sample, the banal 52
from Laos, proves that there's not a lab incident origin of the pandemic.
And it actually doesn't prove that at all because these viruses were being collected in
places like Laos and Cambodia and being brought to the Wuhan Institute of Verology.
So those are like early early like the prequel.
So these are they're not sufficiently similar to be to serve
as a backbone, but they kind of tell a story that they could
have been brought to the lab through through several processes,
including genetic modification or through the natural evolution
processes, accelerated evolution, they could have arrived as something that has the spike protein and the cleavage,
the foreign cleavage side, and all that kind of stuff.
So what I'm saying is the essential point is if we had access, if we knew everything that was
being every virus, it was being held at the Wuhan Institute of Virology
and the Wuhan CDC.
We had full access.
We had full access to everybody's lab notes.
And we did just the kind of forensic investigation that has been so desperately required since
day one.
We'd be able to say, well, what did you have?
Because if we knew, if it should come out, the one institute of virology had in its repository,
I prior to the outbreak, either SARS-CoV-2
or a reasonable precursor to it,
that would prove the lab incident hypothesis.
In my mind, that's almost certainly why they are preventing
any kind of meaningful investigation.
So my hypothesis is not that what RITG13 says
is because, as I mentioned earlier,
the genetics of virus are constantly recombinating.
So that what that means is if you don't have
very many total outlier viruses in a bat community
because these viruses are always mixing
and matching with each other.
And so if you have RITG 13,
which is relatively similar to SARS-CoV-2,
there's a pretty decent likelihood.
There was other stuff that was collected
at this mine called Mojang Mine in Yunnan Province,
maybe in Laos and Cambodia, and that's why we need to have that information.
Do you think somebody knows who patient zero is and who then churns?
So do you think that is a big issue?
Well, there's two things.
One is, I think, somebody and people probably know.
And then two, it's been incredibly curious that the
best virus chasers in the world are in China, and they are in Wuhan. And when we can talk
about this deeply compromised, now vastly improved world health organization process. But when
they went there, the Chinese, the local and national Chinese authorities, they said, well, we haven't tested the samples in our blood center.
We haven't done any of this tracing, and these deeply compromised people who were part
of the international part of the joint study tour when they came out with their visit
early this year and came out with their, they had their visit early this year and came out with their report,
they had, in my mind, just an absurd letter to the editor in nature saying, well, if we don't
hurry back, we're not going to know what happened, assuming that the people in China are like
bumpkins who, on their own, don't know how to trace the origin of a virus. And the opposite is,
is the case. So I think there are people in China who at least know a lot.
They know a lot more than they're saying.
And at the best case scenario is the Chinese government
wants to prevent any investigation, including by them.
The worst case scenario is that there are people who already
know.
And that's why, again,
my point from day one has been we need a comprehensive international investigation
in Wuhan with full access to all relevant records, samples, and personnel.
When this, again, deeply flawed, can I give you a little history of this WHO process. Okay. Who are the, that's funny.
I'm so, I'm so, who's on first?
Who's on first?
I'm so funny with the jokes.
Look at me go.
Who are the WHO?
So what, what is this organization?
What is its purpose?
What role did it play in the pandemic?
It certainly was demonized in the realm of politics.
This is an institution that was supposed to save us from this pandemic. A lot of people believe
it failed. Has it failed? Why did it fail? And you said it's improving. How is it improving?
Great. All right. I hope you don't mind. I'm going to have to talk for a little bit of extra,
I love this.
I love this.
Good, good, good.
So the WHO is an absolutely essential organization created
in 1948 in that wonderful period after the Second World War,
when the United States and allied countries
asked the big bold questions, how do we
build a safer world for everyone?
And so that's the WHO.
If we, although there are many critics of the WHO, if we didn't have it, we would need
to invent it because the whole nature of these big public health issues, and certainly for
pandemics, but all sorts of things, is that they are transnational
in nature.
So we cannot just build moats.
We cannot build walls.
We are all connected to it.
So that's the idea.
There's a political process because the United Nations and the WHO as part of it exists
within a political context.
And so the current director general of the World Health Organization, who was just reelected
for his second five-year term, is Dr. Tedros Adenome Gabor Jesus, who is from Ethiopia. And in full disclosure, I have a lot of respect for Tedros. Tedros got
his job. He was not America's candidate. He was not Britain's candidate. Our candidate
was a guy named David Nabaro, who I also know and have tremendous respect for. China led the
process of putting Tedros in this position.
And in the earliest days of the pandemic, Tedros, in my view, even though I have tremendous
respect for him, I think he made a mistake.
The WHO doesn't have its own independent surveillance network.
It's not organized to have it, and the states have not allowed it, so it's
dependent on member states for providing it information. And because it's a poorly funded
organization dependent on its bosses who are these governments, it's not, it's natural instinct
isn't to condemn its bosses. It's to say, well, let's quietly work with everybody.
to condemn its bosses. It's to say, well, let's quietly work with everybody. Having said that, the Chinese government knowingly lied to Tedros, and Tedros in repeating the position of the
Chinese government, which incidentally I will say Donald Trump also did the exact same thing.
And Donald Trump had a private conversation with Xi Jinping and then repeated
with Xi Jinping and then repeated what she had told him. Both of them were wrong. Dr. Tedros, I think when Chinese government was lying, knowingly lying, saying there's no
human to human transmission, Dr. Tedros said that. And even though within the World Health
Organization, there were private critiques saying China is now doing
exactly what it did in SARS-1.
It's not providing access, it's not providing information.
Tedros is instinct because of his background,
because of his role.
And wrongly was to have a more collaborative relationship
with China, particularly by making assertions based on the
information that was drawn. So don't call people liars and they're not going to be happy with you.
They're not going to be happy. And the job of the WHO isn't to condemn states. It's to do the best
possible job of addressing problems. And I think that the culture was, well, let's do the most that
we can. If we totally alienate China on day one,
we're in even worse shape than if we call them out for not exactly sure, by the way, that
maybe you can also steal man that argument. It's not completely obvious that that's a terrible
decision. If you're an eye or in that role, we would make that decision. It's complicated because like,
you want China and your side to help solve this.
So I would have made a different decision,
which is why I never would have been selected
as the director general.
There's a selection criteria
that everybody kind of needs to support you.
And so let me just,
this is just the beginning.
Can you also just elaborate or kind of restate what were the inaccuracies that you quickly
mentioned? So human to human transmission? What were the thing that was the most important
where there were a few things. One, China didn't report the outbreak. Two, they had the sequenced genome of the SARS-CoV-2 virus,
and they didn't share it for two critical weeks.
And when they did share it, it was inadvertent.
I mean, there was a very, very courageous scientist
who essentially leaked it and was later punished for leaking it,
even though the Chinese government is now saying
we were so great by by releasing.
Wait, I was really confused.
Really?
So I'm so cool.
It's about this as most things because I thought because there's a celebration of isn't
this amazing that we got the sequence like like this amazing and then the scientific community
across the world stepped up and were able to do a lot
of stuff really quickly with that sharing, because I thought
that it's changed.
He's got from a shared.
No, no, they, so they sat on it for two weeks when they shared
it against their will.
It was incredible.
Moderna 48 hours later, after getting the, the information,
getting the sequence, you know, they had the formulation
for what's now the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine. But that's two critical weeks. In those,
that are those early days, they blocked the World Health Organization from sending its experts to
Wuhan for more than three weeks. I said they lied about human to human transmission.
During that time, they were aggressively enacting their cover-up destroying records, hiding
samples, imprisoning people who were asking tough questions.
They soon after established their gag order, they fought internally in the World Health
Organization to prevent the declaration
of a global emergency.
So China, definitely, I mean, I couldn't be stronger in my critique of China particularly
what it did in those early days, but it really, it's what it's doing even today is outrageous.
So that was, so then there was the question of, well, how do we examine what actually happened?
And the prime minister of Australia, then and now, Scott Morrison, was incredibly courageous.
And he said, we need a full investigation.
And because of that, the Chinese government attacked him personally and imposed trade sanctions
on Australia to try to not just to punish Australia,
but to deliver a message to every other country if you ask questions, we're going to punish
you ruthlessly.
And that certainly was the message that was delivered.
The Australians brought that idea of a full investigation to the World Health Assembly
in May of 2020. As I mentioned before,
the WHO is the governing authority above states, above the World Health Organization.
And so, but instead of passing a resolution, calling for a full investigation,
what ended up, ironically and tragically passing, with with Chinese support was a mandate to have
essentially a Chinese controlled joint study where half of the team, a little more than
half of the team, was Chinese experts, government affiliated Chinese experts, and half were
independent international experts, but organized by the WHO. And then it took six months to negotiate the terms
of reference. And again, while China was doing all this cover up, they delayed and delayed
and delayed. And by the terms of reference that were negotiated, China had veto power over
who got to be a member of the international group. And that group was not entitled to access to raw data.
The Chinese side would give them conclusions
based on their own analysis of the raw data,
which was totally outrageous.
So then, and I was a big eye and others,
now friend of mine, although we've never met in person,
Gildem Anouffe in New Zealand.
He did a great job of chronicling just the letter
by letter of the terms of reference.
So then it took, now it's the January of this year,
January 2021, this deeply flawed,
deeply compromised international group is sent to Wuhan.
So what's the connection to this group in the joint study? So the joint study had had the Chinese side compromised international group is sent to Wuhan.
So what's the connection between this group
and the joint study?
So the joint study had had the Chinese side
and the international side.
So these international experts,
then part of their examination was going
for one month to Wuhan.
And the nature of the flaws of this international group,
it has, it's, okay, really important point.
And I'm sorry, I was, I was unclear on that.
They were, rather the mandate of what they were doing
was not to investigate the origins of the pandemic.
It was to have a joint study
into the zoonotic origins of the virus,
which means, which was interpreted to mean
the natural origins hypothesis.
They weren't in power.
The fine evidence for a single hypothesis, not so. They weren't in power for a single hypothesis.
So they weren't empowered to examine the lab incident origin.
They were there to look at the natural origin hypothesis.
You shopped for some meat at some markets.
Yeah, so that was, so then they were there for a month.
Yeah.
Of the makeup of the team.
Guess who was, so the United States government proposed three
experts for this team, people who had a lot of background.
This was the Trump administration, people who had a lot of
background, including in investigating lab incidents.
None of those people were accepted.
The one American who was accepted, Don't tell me it's Peter Desik.
Peter Desik.
Peter Desik, who had this funding relationship
for many years with the Wuhan Institute of Virology,
whose entire basically professional reputation
was based on his collaboration with Sho Zheng Li,
who had written the February 2020 Lancet letter
saying it comes from natural origin and anybody
who's suggesting otherwise is a conspiracy theorist and who at least according to me had been
at very, very least the opposite of transparent and at most engaged in a massive disinformation
campaign. He is the one American who's on this. So they go there, they have one month in Wuhan.
Two weeks of it are spent in quarantine and just in their hotel rooms. So they have two weeks,
but really it's just 10 working days. One of the earliest, and so then they're kind of,
we've all seen the pictures. They're traveling around Wuhan in little buses. One of the first visits
they have is to this museum exhibition on the, it's basically a propaganda exhibition on
the success, Xi Jinping and the success in fighting COVID. And they said, well, we had to
show respect to our Chinese host, but I think what the Chinese hosts were saying is, let's
just, we're just going to rub your noses in this. You're gonna go where we tell you, you're gonna hear what we want you to, what we want you to hear.
So they have that little short time. They spend you have a few hours.
So they weren't in control of where the bus goes.
No, I mean, they made recommendations. Many of their recommendations were accepted.
But they, like when they went to the Wuhan Institute of Virology and some
of them of them did, they had to, they weren't able to do any kind of audit when they asked
for access to raw data.
They weren't provided that.
They were, it was, as I said in my 60 minutes interview, it was a shaperoned study tour.
It was not even remotely close to an investigation, and the thing they
were looking at wasn't the origins of the pandemic. It was the single hypothesis of a
quote unquote natural natural origins. Then, I mean, it was really so shocking for me.
On February 9 of this year in Wuhan, The Chinese government sets up a joint press event
where it's the Chinese side and the international side.
And during that press event, a guy named Peter Ben Embarak,
and it's a little confusing, he was basically the head
of this delegation, and he works for the WHO,
even though this was an independent committee was
organized by the WHO.
So Peter Ben Embarick gets up there and says, we think it's most likely it comes from nature.
Then he says, we think it's possible it comes through frozen food, which is absolutely outrageous.
I mean, it's basically preposterous. Alina Chan calls this
popsicle origins, but it's really, really unlikely. And but then most significantly, he says that
we've all agreed that a lab incident origin is, quote, unquote, extremely unlikely and shouldn't be investigated.
We later learned that the way they came up with that determination was by a show of hands
vote of the international experts and the Chinese experts.
And the Chinese experts had to do their vote in front of the Chinese government officials
who were constantly there.
So even if whatever they thought, there was no possibility that someone raises their hand.
It's, oh yeah, I think it's a lab origin.
So that was outrageous thing number one.
Outrageous thing number two, which,
I mean, which, and I'll come back to my response in February,
outrageous thing number two is months later,
Peter Ben and Barak does an interview on Danish television. And he says, actually, I was
lying about extremely unlikely because the Chinese side, they didn't want any mention of a lab
incident origin anywhere, including in the report that later that later came out. And so the deal
we made, even though he himself thought that at least some manifestation of a lab
incident origin was likely, and that there should be an investigation, particularly he said,
well, that's kind of weird that the Wuhan CDC moved just across from the one on seafood
market just before the beginning of the pandemic.
But he said, as a horse trading deal with the Chinese authorities, it shouldn't be that he
agreed to say it was extremely unlikely and shouldn't be investigated.
So I was in actually in Colorado staying with my parents and I stayed up late watching
this press event and I was appalled because I knew after two weeks there was no way they
could possibly come to that conclusion.
So I immediately sent a private message to Tedros,
the WHO Director General, essentially saying
there's no way they had enough access
to come to this conclusion.
If the WHO doesn't distance itself from this,
the WHO itself is going to be in danger because it's going to be basically institutional
capture by the Chinese.
This was repeating the Chinese government's propaganda points.
And Tedros sent me a really, again, why I have so much respect for Tedros.
Send me a private note saying, don't worry, we are determined to do the right thing.
And so I got that private message.
And again, I really like Tedros.
Bethara, well, what are you gonna do three days later?
Tedros makes a public statement.
And he says, I've heard this thing.
I don't think that this is a final answer.
We need to have a full investigation into this process.
He then released two more statements saying we need to have a full investigation with access
to raw data and we need a full audit of the Wuhan labs.
So that part was really, really great.
But then this saga continues because so I was part of a group, as I mentioned before,
this Paris group.
It was about two dozen or so experts and we'd been meeting since 2020 and having regular
meetings.
We just present papers, present data, debate to try to really get to the bottom of things.
And it was all private.
So I went to this group and I said,
look, this playing field is now skewed.
These guys, they've put out this thing,
lab ins in an origin,
extremely unlikely.
It's in every newspaper in the world.
We can't just be our own little private group
talking to each other.
So I led the political process
of drafting what became four open letters that
many of us signed, most of us signed, that saying, all right, here's why this investigation,
not a study group and the report are not credible. Here's what's wrong. Here's what a full investigation
would look like. Here's a treasure map of all the resources
where people can look and we demand
a comprehensive investigation.
So those four open letters were pretty much every newspaper
in the world.
And it played a really significant role
along with some other things.
There was a short letter in science,
making basically similar points in a much more condensed way. Later, there was a short letter in science,
making basically similar points
in a much more condensed way.
There was some higher profile articles
by Nicholas Wade and Nick Baker and others.
And those collectively shifted the conversation.
And then really impressively, the WHO, and with Tedros' leadership, did
something that was really incredible. And that is earlier this year, they meaning the leadership
of the WHO, not the World Health Assembly, but the leadership of the WHO, announced the
establishment of what's called SAGO, the scientific advisory group on the origins of novel pathogens.
And basically what they did was overrule their own governing board and say we're going to create our own entity.
And so it basically dissolved that international deeply flawed international joint study group.
And a lot of those people they have become very critical, like the Chinese of Tedros. So then they had an open call for nominations to be part of
Sago. And so a lot of people put in their nominations, they selected 26 people. But our group, we had a meeting and we were unhappy with that list of
26. It still felt skewed toward the natural origin hypothesis. So again, I drafted and we worked
on together an open letter, which we submitted to the WHO saying, we think this list, it's a step
in the right direction, but it's not good enough. And we call on these three people to be removed,
and we have these three people who we think should be added.
Incredibly, and I was in private touch with the WHO,
after announcing the 26 people, the WHO said,
we're reopening the process.
So send in more, and then they added two more people,
one of whom is an expert in
the auditing of lab incidents. And then one of the, so they added those two. And then when
they just released the list of people who are part of Sago, this one woman, a highly respected
Dutch virologist named Mary and Coupmins, who had been part of that deeply flawed and compromised
international study group who had called, who has consistently called the lab incident origin, quote unquote a debunked conspiracy theory.
As of now, her name is not on the list. We haven't seen any announcements.
So I summary, and I'm sorry to go on for so long and to be so animated
about this. I genuinely feel that the WHO is trying to do the right thing, but they exist
within a political context. And they're kind of it's like, you're they're pushing at the
edges, but there's only so far that they can go. And that's why we definitely need to have full accountability for the WHO.
We need to expand the mandate to WHO.
But we need to recognize that states have a big role.
And China is an incredibly influential state that's doing everything possible
to prevent the kind of full investigation into pandemic origins that so desperately required.
Well, it sounds like the leadership made all the difference in the WHO.
So like the way to change the momentum of large institutions is through the leadership.
It leadership and empowerment, as I mentioned, the World Health Assembly is meeting now.
And I think that it shouldn't be that we require super humans.
And there are some people who are big critics of WHO, the leader of the WHO in SARS-1,
was definitely more aggressive. She had a different set of powers at that time.
But it can't be entirely,
I mean, we definitely need strong willed
aggressive, independent people in these kinds of roles.
We also need a more empowered WHO,
like when the Chinese government
in the earliest days of the pandemic,
said we're just not going to allow you to send a team
to collect your own information,
and we're not gonna allow you to send a team to collect your own information. And we're not going to allow you to have any kind of independent surveillance.
There was very little that the WHO could do because of the limitations of its mandate.
And we can't just say we're going to have a WHO that only compromises Chinese sovereignty.
If we want to have a powerful WHO, we should say,
you have emergency teams when the director general says an emergency team needs to go somewhere.
If they aren't allowed to go there that day, you could say there's an immediate referral
to the security council, there needs to be something, but we have all these demands rightfully, so
of the WHO, which doesn't have the authorities, the WHO itself only controls 20% of its own
budget.
So the government is saying, we're going to give you money to do this or that.
So we need a stronger WHO to prevent, to protect us, but we also have to build that.
So looking a little bit into the future, let's first step into the past sort of the philosophical
question about China, if you were to put yourself in the shoes of the Chinese government. If there were to be more transparent, how should they be more transparent?
Because it's easy to say we want to see this, perform a perspective of government, and
not just the Chinese government, but a government on whose geographic territory, say it's a lab leak, a lab leak occurred that has resulted in
trillions of dollars of loss, countless of lives, just all kinds of damage to the
world. If they were to admit or show data that could serve as evidence for a lab leak, that's something that people
could like in the worst case start wars over. Or in the most likely case, just constantly bring that up at every turn
making you like a
that up at every turn, making you like a powerless in negotiations. It's like whenever you want to do something in geopolitical sense, the United States will
bring up, I'll remember that time, you cost us trillions of dollars because of your fuck
up.
So what is the incentive for the Chinese government to be transparent and if it is to be transparent
How should it do it? So like there's a bunch of people like the reason I'm talking to you
As opposed to a bunch of other folks
Because you are kind harder than thoughtful and open mind and really respected
There's a bunch of people that they're talking about lab leak, they're a little
bit less interested in building a better world.
And more interested in pointing out the ampoule has no clothes.
They want step one, which is saying like, basically tearing down the bullshitters.
They don't want to do the further steps of building.
And so as the Chinese government,
I would be nervous about being transparent with anybody
that just wants to tear our power centers,
our power structures down.
Anyway, that's a long way to ask like,
how should the Chinese government be transparent
now and in the future?
So maybe I'll break that down into a few subquestions.
The first is what should in an ideal world,
what should the Chinese government do?
And that's pretty straightforward.
They should be totally transparent.
The South African government now,
there's an outbreak of this Amacron variant
and the South African government has done what we would want a government to do.
Say, hey, there's an outbreak. We don't have all of the information.
We need help. We want to alert the world. And in some ways, they're being punished for it through
these travel bands, but it's a separate topic. But I actually think short-term travel bands actually
are not a terrible idea.
They should have in on day one, if they should have allowed WHO experts in, they should have
shared information, they should have allowed a full and comprehensive investigation with
international partnerships to understand what went wrong.
They should have shared their raw data.
They should have allowed their scientists
to speak and write publicly,
because nobody knows more about this stuff,
certainly in the early days than their scientists do.
So it's relatively easy to say what they should do.
It's a hard question to say, well, what would happen?
Let's just say tomorrow, we prove for certain that this pandemic stems from an accidental
lab incident and then from what I've consistently called a criminal cover-up because the cover-up
has done in many ways as much or more damage than the incident.
Well, what happens?
You could easily imagine Xi Jinping has had two terms
as the leader of China.
And he can now have unlimited terms.
Well, they've changed the rules for that,
but he's got a lot of enemies.
I mean, there are a lot of people
who are waiting in line to step up.
So is there a chance that Xi Jinping could be deposed if it was proven that this comes
from a lab that I think there's a real possibility?
Would people in the United States Congress, for example, demand reparations from China?
So we've had four and a half trillion dollars of stimulus, all of the economic losses, and we owe a lot
of money to China from our debt.
I'm quite certain that members of Congress would say, you know, we're just going to wipe
that out.
It would destroy the global financial system, but I think they would be extremely likely.
Would other countries like India that have lost millions of people and had terrible economic damages,
would they demand reparations?
So I think that from a Chinese perspective,
starting from now,
it would have major geopolitical implications
and go back to Chernobyl.
Like, there was a reason why this Soviet Union
went to such lengths to cover things up.
And when it came out, there are different theories, but certainly,
Chernobyl played some role in the end of communist power in the Soviet Union.
So the Chinese are very, very aware of that.
But the difference, of course, with Chernobyl, the damage to the rest of the world
was not as nearly as significant as COVID.
So you say that the cover-up is a crime,
but everything you just described,
the response of the rest of the world is,
I could say unfair.
If it's a, so, okay, if we say the best possible version of the story, you know,
lab leaks happen. They shouldn't happen, but they happen. And how's that on the
Chinese government? I mean, what was a good example? Well, the Union
Carbide. Union Carbide. There was this American company operating in India.
They had this leak.
All these people were killed.
The company admitted responsibility.
I was working in the White House when the United States government, in my view, which I know
to be the case, but other people in China think differently, bombed the Chinese embassy
and billgrade.
And so the United States government allowed a full investigation.
Then we paid reparations to the family, the families.
And so to your question, if I were, let's just say,
I were the Chinese government, not, I mean,
kind of an idealized version of the Chinese government.
And let's just say that they had come to the conclusion that it was a lab incident.
And let's just say they knew that even if they continued to cover it up, eventually this
information would come out.
I mean, maybe there was a whistleblower, maybe they knew of some evidence that we didn't
know about or something.
What would I do starting right now?
What I would do is I would
Hold a press conference and we would say and I would say
We had this terrible accident the reason why we were doing this research in Wuhan and elsewhere Is that we had SARS-1 and we felt a responsibility to do everything possible to prevent that kind of terrible thing happening again
for our country and for the world.
That was why we collaborated with France,
with the United States,
in building up those capacities.
We know that nothing is perfect,
but we're a sovereign country
and we have our own system.
And so we had to adapt our systems
so that they made sense internally.
When this outbreak began, we didn't know how it started.
And that was why we wanted to look into things.
When the process of investigating became so political, it gave us pause.
And we were worried that our enemies were trying to use this investigation in order to undermine
us.
Having said that, now that we've digged deeper, we have recognized because we have access
to additional information that we didn't have then, that this pandemic started from an accidental
lab incident.
And we feel really terribly about that.
And we know that we were very aggressive
in covering up information in the beginning,
but the reason we were doing that
is because we thoroughly, we fully believe
that it came from a natural origin.
Now that we see otherwise, we feel terribly.
Therefore, we're doing a few different things.
One is we are committing ourselves
to establishing a stronger
WHO, a new pandemic treaty that addresses the major challenges that we face and allows the
World Health Organization to pierce the veil of absolute sovereignty because we know that
when these pandemics happen, they affect everybody. We are also
putting, and you can pick your number, but let's start with five trillion US dollars, some massive
amount into a fund that we will be distributing to the victims of COVID-19 and their- China would do
that. This is a fantasy speech. But I just agree with your,
I mean, okay. So you think China has responsibility? So it's not just
elaborately. Like if China on day one had said, we have this outbreak, we don't know where it came from. We want to have a full investigation.
We call on international
responsible international partners to join us in that process. And we're going to do everything in our power
to share the relevant information because however this started, we're all victims. That's a totally different story.
Then punishing Australia, preventing WHO, blocking any investigation, condemning people who are trying to look at.
So cover up for a couple of weeks, you could understand maybe, because there's so much uncertainty.
You're like, oh, let's hide all the way to the poo pictures while we figure this out. At the moment, you really figure out what happened.
You always, as a joke, says, always find like a like blame the Jews kind of situation
a little bit, just a little bit.
Like, all right, it's not us.
I'm just kidding.
But be proactive in saying.
Just to start here, but the joke about that is there's a big problem because a lot of people
have to leave the Jewish socialist conspiracy to make it for the Jewish capitalist conspiracy
meeting.
I love it.
So I would say not five trillion, but some large amount.
And I would really focus on the future, which is every time we talk about the lab leak
The unfortunate thing is I feel like people don't focus enough about the future to me the lab leak is important
Because we want to construct a kind of
framework of thinking and a
Global conversation that minimizes the damage done by future lab leaks, which will almost certainly happen.
And so to me, the any lab leak is about the future.
I would launch a giant investment in saying we're going to
create a testing infrastructure like all of this kind of
infrastructure investments that help minimize the damage of
a lab leak here in the rest of the world.
So the challenge with that is one, it's hard to imagine a fully accountable future system
to prevent these kinds of terrible pandemics that's built upon obfuscation and cover-up
regarding the origins of this worst pandemic in a century.
So it's just like that foundation isn't strong enough.
Second, China across the fields of science
is looking to leapfrog the rest of the world.
So China has current plans to build BSL4 labs
in every of its province.
Yeah, they're scaling up.
They're scaling up every end with the plan on leading.
And that's why, again, I was saying before,
I think there's a lot of similarity between this story,
at least as I see it, at least the most probable case.
And these other areas where China gets knowledge
and then tries to leap-rog.
It's the same with AI and autonomous killer robots. It's the same with human
genome editing, with animal experimentation, with so many, basically, all areas of advanced
science. So the question is, would China stop in that process? And then third,
it's a little bit of a historical background, but defending national sovereignty is one
of the core principles of certainly of the Chinese state.
And the historical issue is for those of us who come from the West, I mean, one of the
lessons of the post-war planners was that absolute national sovereignty was actually a major feeder into the first
and second world wars.
That we had all these conflicting states.
And therefore, the logic of the post-war system is we need to, in some ways, pool sovereignty.
That's like the EU and have transnational organizations like the UN organizations and
the Bretton Woods organizations. For most Asian states, and also for some African, the people who were kind of on the colonized
side of history, sovereignty was the thing that was denied them.
That was the thing that they want, that the European powers denied.
And so the idea of giving up sovereignty was the absolute opposite.
And so that's why China is,
and again, I mentioned this Russian doshi book,
it's not that China is trying to strengthen
this rules-based international order,
which is based on the principle that,
well, there are certain things that we share,
and how do we build a governance system
to protect those things?
What it seems to be doing is trying to advance its own sovereignty.
And so I think I agree with you, but I don't think that just we can just go forward without
some accountability for the...
So, the cover-up was a big problem.
It's like, I often find myself playing devil's, because I'm trying to sort of empathize.
And then I forget that like two or three people
listen to this thing and then they're like,
look, Lex is the fan of the Chinese government
with their cover up.
No, I'm not, you know, I'm just trying to understand.
I mean, it's the same reason
I'm reading my comp now is like
You have to you have to really understand the minds of people as if I
Too could have done that
You know, you have to understand that we're all the same to some degree and
That kind of empathy is required to figure out solutions for the future.
It's just in empathizing with the Chinese government in this whole situation,
I'm still not sure I understand how to minimize the chance of a cover up in the future,
whether for China or for the United States.
If the virus started the United States, I'm not exactly sure we would be with all the emphasis we put on freedom of speech. With all the emphasis we put
on freedom of the press and access to the press to sort of all aspects of government.
I'm not sure the US government wouldn't do the similar kind of cover up.
Let me put it this way. So we're in Texas now doing this interview.
Imagine there is a kind of horseshoe bat that we'll call the Texas horseshoe bat.
And the Texas.
There's a lot of bats in Austin, but it's a whole thing.
It's true.
It's true.
And so let's just say that the Texas horseshoe bats only exist in Texas.
But in Montana, we have a thing,
it's called the Montana Institute of Verology.
And at the Montana Institute of Verology,
they have the world's largest collection
of Texas horseshoe bats, including horseshoe bats
that are associated with a previous global pandemic called the Texas Horseshoe Bat
pandemic.
And let's just say that people in Montana, in the same town
where this Montana Institute of Virology is, start getting a
version of this Texas horseshoe bat syndrome that is genetically relatively
similar to the outbreak in Texas.
There are no horseshoe bats there.
The government says it's your same point, Alina's point about unicorns, like nothing to see
here just move along. You know, I would know what the answer is.
Joe Rogan and Brett Weinstein and Josh Rogan.
And I mean, would they say, oh, I guess, I mean, I just think that.
No, no, but the point is the government going to say it.
So, uh, Joe Rogan is a comedian.
Brett Weinstein is a podcaster.
Yeah. is a comedian. Brett Weinstein is a podcaster.
The point is what we want is not just those folks
to have the freedom to speak.
That's important, but you want the government
to have the transparent, like,
like, I don't think Joe Rogan is enough
to hold the government accountable.
I think they're going to do their thing anyway.
But I think that's our system and that was the genius of the founding fathers.
Which is that enough.
That the government probably is going to have a lot of instincts to do the wrong thing.
That was the experience in our in England before.
And so that's why we have free speech to hold the government accountable. I mean, I'm
a kind of broadly a gun control person,
but the people who say, well, we need to have broad gun rights.
As somebody who's now in Texas, I am offended.
But their argument is, look, we don't fully trust the government.
If the government, just like we fought against the British,
if the government's wrong, we
want to at least have some authority.
So that's our system.
It's to have that kind of voice, and that is the public voice actually balances.
Because every government, as you correctly said, every government has the same instincts,
and that's why we have, and it's imperfect here, but kind of these ideas of separation of powers
of inalienable rights so that we can have,
it's almost like a vast market where we can have balance.
So you think if the lab leak occurred in the United States,
what probability would you put some kind of public report
led by Rand Paul would come out saying this was a lab leak.
What's the way you have good confidence
that that would happen?
I have pretty decent comment.
And the reason I say, I mentioned that I'm a,
I might think of myself, I'm sure I'm not anymore,
because as I get older, but as a progressive person,
I'm a Democrat and I worked in Democratic administrations,
worked for President Clinton
on the National Security Council.
But my kind of best friend in the United States Senate,
who I talk to all the time,
is a senator from Kansas named Roger Marshall.
And Roger, I mean, if you just lined up our positions
on all sorts of things, we're radically different.
But we have a great relationship. on all sorts of things were radically different.
But we have a great relationship. We talk all the time and we share a commitment
to saying, well, let's ask the tough questions
about how this started.
And again, if we had, what is the United States government?
Yeah, it's the executive branch, but there's also Congress.
And Congress, you talk about Rand Paul,
and as a former executive branch worker
when I was on the National Security Council,
and I guess technically when I was at the State Department,
all of this stuff, all of this process,
it just seems like a pain in the ass.
It's like these, you know, efforts,
they're just attacking us.
We tried to do this thing with, we had all the best intentions, and now they're holding attacking us. We tried to do this thing with,
we had all the best intentions
and now they're holding hearings
and they're trying to box us in and whatever.
But that's our process.
And there's like a form of accountability as chaotic,
as crazy as it is.
And so it makes it really difficult.
I mean, we have other problems of just chaos
and everybody doing their own thing.
But it makes it difficult to have
the kind of systematic cover up.
And again, all of that is predicated on my hypothesis,
not fully proven, although I think likely
that there is a lab into an origin of this pandemic.
Well, we're having like several layers of conversation,
but I think whether a lab leak hypothesis is true or not,
it does seem that the likelihood of a cover-up
if it leak from a lab is high.
That's the more important conversation to be having.
Well, you could argue a lot of things, but I took me arguably,
that's the more important conversation is about what is the likelihood of a cover-up?
100%.
Like in my mind, there is a legitimate debate about the origins of the pandemic.
There are people who I respect, who I don't necessarily agree with.
People like Stuart Neal, who's a virologist in
the UK, who's been very open-minded, engaged in productive debate about the origin.
And you know where I stand.
There is, is, and can be no debate about whether or not there has been a cover-up.
There has been a cover-up.
There is, in my mind, no credible argument
that there hasn't been a cover up. And we can just see it in the regulations, in the lack of access.
There's an incredible woman named Zhang Zhang, who is a Chinese, we have to call her a citizen
journalist because everything is controlled by the state. But in the early days of the pandemic, she went to Wuhan, started taking videos and posting
them.
She was imprisoned for picking quarrels, which is kind of a catch-all.
And now she's engaged in a hunger strike and she's near death.
And so there's no question that there has been a cover-up.
And there's no question in my mind that that cover up is
responsible for a significant percentage of the total deaths
due to COVID-19.
In a pivot, can I talk to you about sex?
Let's roll.
OK, so you're the author of a book, Hacking Darwin.
Okay, so you're the author of a book Hacking Darwin. So, humans have used the sex allegedly as I've read about to mix genetic information
to produce offspring and sort of through that kind of process,
adapt to their environment. Like, you mentioned earlier about
you're asking tough questions and people
pushing you to ask tough questions.
This is.
Is it okay if I do?
So you said, have done this as I've read about.
Is that right on the internet?
Yeah.
All I'm saying, as a person sitting with you
to people who would be open-minded and
Experimenting of as I've read about to reality what I would say is
Lex Friedman is handsome
Charming
I'm gonna open a Tinder
Holy a great guy. I'm sorry to interrupt. Thank you. I appreciate that
Thank you. So I was reading about this last night
I was gonna tweet it up, but then I'm like this is going to be misinterpreted
but uh
This is why I like podcasts because I can I could say stuff like this
It's kind of incredible to me that the average human male
produces like 500 billion plus sperm cells in their lifetime.
Like, each one of those are genetically unique.
Like they can produce like unique humans, each one of 500 billion.
There's like 100 billion people who's ever lived.
Maybe like a hundred times whatever, whatever the number is.
So it's like five times the number of people have ever lived is produced by each male
of genetic information.
So those are all possible trajectories of lives that could have lived.
Like those are all little people that could have been.
And like all the possible stories, all the hitlers and Einstein's that could have been, and like all the possible stories, all the hitlers
and Einstein's that could have been created, and all that, I mean, I don't know, this kind
of, you're painting this possible future, and we get to see only one little string of
that.
I mean, I suppose the magic of that is also captured by the, in the space of physics, of having multiple dimensions in the many worlds,
hypothesis of quantum mechanics,
that the interpretation that were basically just
at every point, there's an infinite offspring
of universes that are created.
But I don't know, that's just like a magic of
this game of genetics that we're playing. And the winning sperm is not the fastest. The winning sperm is basically the
luckiest as the right timing. So it's not, I was also got into this whole, uh,
I was also got into this whole,
started reading papers about like, is there something to be said about who wins the race, right?
Genetically, so it's fascinating
because there's studies and animals and so on
to dance to that question,
because it's interesting,
because I'm a winner, right?
I won, I won a race.
And so you wanna know like,
what does that say about me in this,
in this fascinating genetic race against, I I think what is it 200 200 million others?
I think so
one you know pool of sperm cells is
Something like 200 million is it could be yes, but that millions
Yeah, I thought it was much more than that. So like that, those are all brothers and sisters in mind.
And I beat them all out.
Yeah.
I won.
And so it's interesting to know, there's a temptation to say,
I'm somehow better than them, right?
And now that goes into the next stage of something you're
or deeply thinking about, which is if we have more control now over the
winning genetic code that becomes offspring. If we have first, not even control, just information,
and then control, what do you think that world looks like
from a biological perspective and from an ethical perspective
when we start getting more information and more control?
Yeah, great question.
So first on the sperm, there can be up to about 1.2 billion
sperm cells in a male ejaculation.
So, as I mentioned in Hackendarwin, male sperm, it's kind of a dime a dozen with all the guys
and all the world just doing whatever they do with it.
And it's an open question, how competitive?
I mean, there is an element of luck and there is an element of competition.
And it's an open question, how much that competition impacts the outcome or whether it's just
luck, but my guess is there's some combination of fitness and luck. But you're absolutely right that all of those other sperm cells in the
ejaculation, if that's how the union of sperm and egg is happening, all of them represent
a different future. And there's a wonderful book called Invisible Cities by Italo Calvino.
And he even talks about a city as something like this
where everybody, you have your life,
but then you have all these alternate lives.
And every time you make any decision,
you're kind of end so, but in this invisible cities,
there's a little string that goes toward that alternate life.
And then the city becomes this weaving
of all the strings of people's real lives and the alternate lives that they could have taken had they made any other any other different steps.
So that part, it's like a deep philosophical question. It's not just for us. It's for all of it's baked into evolutionary biology. is what are the different strategies for different species to achieve fitness?
And there's some of the different corals or other fish where they just kind of
release the eggs into the water and there's all different kinds of ways.
And then you write in my book, Hacking Darwin, and into the full titles, Hacking
Darwin, Genetic Engineering, and the future of humanity.
I kind of go deep into exploring the big picture implications of the future of human reproduction.
We are already participating in a revolutionary transformation,
not just because of the diagnostics that we have,
things like ultrasound.
But because now an increasing number of us are being born through in vitro fertilization,
which means the eggs are extracted from the mother, they're fertilized by the father's sperm in vitro in a lab,
and then re-implanted in the mother.
On top of that, there's a somewhat newer, but still now older technology called pre-implantation
genetic testing.
And so as everyone knows from high school biology, you have the fertilized egg, and then
it goes one cell, the two cells, to four, to eight, and whatever.
And after around five days, in this PGT process,
a few cells are extracted. So let's say you have 10 fertilized eggs, early stage embryos. A few
cells are extracted from each and those cells, if they would, the ones that are extracted, would end
up becoming the placenta. But every one of our cells has other than a few, has our full genome.
And so then you sequence those cells, and with pre-implantation genetic testing now,
what you can do is you can screen out deadly single-gene mutation disorders,
things that could be deadly or life-ruining. And so people use it to determine which of those 10 early stage
embryos to implant in a mother.
As we shift towards a much greater understanding of genetics,
and that is part of our just the broader genetics revolution.
But within that, in our transition from personalized to precision healthcare,
more and more of us are going to have our whole genome sequenced because it's going to
be the foundation of getting personalized healthcare.
We're going to have already millions, but very soon billions, of people who've had their
whole genome sequenced, and then we'll have big databases of people's genetic genotypic
information and life or phenotypic information.
And using, coming into your area,
our tools of machine learning and data analytics,
we're going to be able to increasingly understand patterns
of genetic expression, even though we're all different.
So predict how the genetic information will get expressed.
Correct.
Yeah.
Never perfectly, perhaps, but more and more, always more and more.
And so with that information, we aren't going to just be, and even now, we aren't going
to just be selecting based on which of these 10 early stage embryos is carrying a deadly
genetic disorder, but we can, we'll be able to know everything that can be partly or entirely
predicted by genetics. And there's a lot of our humanity that fits into that category. And
certainly simple traits like height and eye color and things like that. I mean, height is not
at all simple, but it's, it it's, if you have good nutrition,
it's entirely or mostly genetic,
but even personality traits and personality styles,
there are a lot of things that we see
just as the experience, the beauty of life,
that are partly have a genetic foundation.
And so whatever part of these traits are definable
and influenced by genetics, we're going to
have greater and greater predictability within a range.
And so selecting those embryos will be informed by that kind of knowledge.
And that's why in HackingDar when I talk about embryo selection as being a key driver of the future
of human evolution.
Then on top of that, there is in 2012, Shania Yamannaka, a Japanese, amazing Japanese scientist,
won the Nobel Prize for developing a process for creating what are called induced pleuripotent
stem cells, IPS cells. And what IPS cells are is you can induce an adult cell
to go back in evolutionary time and become a stem cell.
And a stem cell is like when we're a fertilized egg,
like our entire blueprint is in that one cell,
and that cell can be anything.
But then it starts to, our cells start to specialize, and
that's why we have skin cells and blood cells and all the different types of things.
So with the Yamannaka process, we can induce an adult cell to become a stem cell.
So the relevance to this story is what you can do, and it works now in animal models,
and as far as I know, it hasn't yet been done in humans, but it works pretty well in animal models. And as far as I know, it hasn't yet been done in humans,
but it works pretty well in animal models.
You take any adult cell, but skin cells are probably the easiest.
You induce this skin cell into a stem cell.
And if you just take a little skin graft,
it would have millions of cells.
So you induce those skin cells into stem cells.
Then you induce those stem cells into stem cells, then you induce those stem cells into
egg precursor cells, then you induce those egg precursor cells into eggs, egg cells.
Then, because we have this massive overabundance of male sperm, then you could fertilize. Let's call it 10,000 of the mother's egg. So you have 10,000
eggs, which are fertilized. Sounds like a party. Yeah. Then you have an automated process
for what I mentioned before in pre-implantation genetic testing. You grow them all for five days.
You extract a few cells from each. You test them, and that's, I had a piece in
the New York Times a couple of years ago, imagining what it would be like to go to a fertility clinic
in the year 2050. And the choice is not- No humans involved. Yeah. Well, no, no, there are, but the
choice is not, do you want a kid who does or doesn't have, let's call it, um, Tasex?X. It's a whole range of possibilities,
including very intimate traits like high IQ personality style.
It doesn't mean you can predict everything,
but it means that we'll be increasing predictability.
So if you're choosing from 10,000 eggs,
fertilized eggs, early stage embryos,
that's a lot of choice.
And on top of that, then we have the new technology of human genome editing.
Many people have heard of CRISPR, but what I say is, if you think of human genome editing as a pie,
human genome engineering as a pie, genome editing is a slice and CRISPR
is just a sliver of that slice. It's just one of our tools for genome editing and things
are getting better and better. Then you can go in and change, let's say, I mean, again,
it starts simple. A small number of genes, let's say you've selected from among the one
of 10 or the one of 10,000,
but there are a number of changes that you would like
to make to achieve some kind of outcome,
and biology is incredibly complex,
and it's not that one gene does one thing.
One gene does probably a lot of things simultaneously,
which is why the decision about changing one gene
if it's causing deathly harm, is easier than
when we think about the complexity of biology.
But if the machine learning gets better and better at predicting the full complexity of
biology, see, exactly.
As one gets better than you're editing your ability to reliably edit such that the conclusions
are predictable, gets better and better.
So those are two or a couple together.
You got it. Exactly.
And then so that's why, and people would say, well, that, I mean, I wrote about that in my two science fiction novels,
Genesis Code and Eternal Sonata years ago, especially with Genesis Code, I wrote about that, and as a sci-fi,
and I had actually testified before Congress, but now 15 years ago saying here's what the future
looks like. But even I, and in my first edition of Hacking Darwin, when it was already in production,
and then in November 2018, this scientist, Hujang Kwei, announced in Hong Kong that the world's first two and later three
CRISPR babies had been born, which he had genetically altered in a misguided, in my view,
and dangerous view, dangerous goal of making it so they would have increased resistance
to HIV.
And so I called my publisher, and I said,
I've got good news and bad news.
I'll start with the bad news, is that the world's first
CRISPR babies have been born.
And so we need to pull my book out of production,
because you can't have a book on the future of human
genetic engineering, and have it not
mention the first CRISPR babies that had been born.
But the good news is in the book, I had predicted that it's going to happen and it's going
to happen in China and here's why.
And all we need to do is add a few more sentences.
And that was the hard back.
And then I updated it more in the paperback saying, and it happened and it was announced
on this day.
Yeah.
Well, then let's fast forward.
Given your predictions are slowly becoming reality.
Let's talk about some philosophy and ethics, I suppose.
So I can, I'm not being too self-deprecating here, and saying if my parents had the choice,
I would be probably less likely to come out the winner.
We're all weird, and I'm certainly a very distinctly weird specimen of the human species.
I can give the full long list of flaws,
and we can be very poetic of saying,
like those are features and so on,
but they're not.
If you look at the menu,
again, for these women who are listening,
I'll propose you're thinking,
they're all kind of charming individualities.
Yes, that's beautiful.
That's wonderful.
Yes, thank you.
But anyway, on the full sort of individual, let's say IQ alone, right?
What do we do about a world where IQ could be selected in a menu when you're having children.
What concerns you about that world?
What excites you about that world?
Are there certain metrics that excite you more than others?
IQ has been a source of, I don't know, I'm not sure IQ as a measure
flawed as it is has been used to celebrate the successes of the human species nearly as
much as has been used to divide people, to say negative things about people,
to make negative claims about people. And in that same way, it seems like when there's a selection,
a genetic selection based on IQ, you can start now having classes of citizenry. And like, further divide,
classes of citizenry and like further divide, you know, the rich get richer. You know, it'll be very rich people. They'll be able to do kind of fine selection of IQ and then they
will start forming these classes of super intelligent people and those super intelligent people
in their minds would of course be the right people to be making global authoritarian decisions about everybody else, all the usual aspects
of human nature, but now magnified with the new tools of technology.
Anyway, all that to say is what's exciting to you, what's concerning to you.
It's a great question. And just stepping into the IQ, we'll call it a quagmire for now.
It raises a lot of big issues, which are complicated.
Maybe you've listened to Sam Harris's interview with Charles Murray, and then that spawned
kind of a whole industry of debate.
So first, just the background of IQ,
and it's from the early 20th century,
and there was the idea that we can measure people's
general intelligence,
and there are so many different kinds of intelligence.
This was measuring a specific thing.
So my feeling is that IQ doesn't is not a perfect measure of intelligence. This was measuring a specific thing. So it's my feeling is that IQ doesn't
is not a perfect measure of intelligence, but it's a perfect measure of IQ, like it's measuring
what it's measuring. But that thing is correlates to a lot of things which are rewarded in our society.
So the every study of IQ has shown that people with higher IQs, they make more money,
they live longer, they have more stable relationships. I mean, that could be something in the testing,
but as Sam Harris has talked about a lot, you could line up all of these kind of IQ and
IQ-like tests correlate with each other. So the people who score high on one, score high on all of them,
and people think that IQ tests are like, you know, a thing like,
you know, the Earl of Doorchester is coming for dinner.
Does he have two forks or three forks or something like that?
It's not that.
A lot of them are things that I think a lot of us would recognize
are relevant just like how much stuff can you memorize if you see some shapes? How can you position them and
and things like that? And so I cue, I mean, it really hit it stride and certainly in the second
world war when we were just our governments were processing a lot of people and trying to figure out
who to put in what in what in what job. So that's the starting point.
Let me start first with the negatives that are societies that when we talk about diversity
in Darwinian terms, it's not like diversity is from Darwinian terms.
Oh, wouldn't it be nice if we have, you know, some moths of different colors because it'll
be really fun to have different colored moths,
diversity is the sole survival strategy of our species
and of every species.
And it's impossible to predict which,
what diversity is going to be rewarded.
And I've said this before, if you went down
and you had, if you spoke T-Rex
and you spoke to the dinosaurs and said, hey, if you went down and you had, if you spoke T-Rex and you spoke
to the dinosaurs and said, hey, you can select your kids what criteria do you want?
And they say, oh, yeah, yeah, you sharp teeth, cruel things, roar, whatever it is that
makes you a great T-Rex.
But the answer from an evolutionary perspective, from an Earth perspective was always much better
to be like a cockroach or an alligator
or some little nothing or a little shrew
because the dinosaurs are gonna get wiped out
when the asteroid hits.
And so there's no better or worse in evolution.
There's just better or worse suited for a given environment.
And when that environment changes,
the best suited person from the old system
could be the worst suited person for the new one.
So if we start selecting for the things
that we value the most, including things like IQ,
but even disease resistance.
I mean, this is well known,
but if you, people who are recessive carrier of
of sickle cell disease have increased resistance to malaria, which is the biggest reason why
that that trade has hasn't just disappeared
given how deadly sickle cell disease is
Biology is incredibly complex. We understand such a tiny
The biology is incredibly complex. We understand such a tiny percentage of it that we need to have in your words, just a
level of humility.
There are huge equity issues, as you are articulate.
Let's just say that it is the case that in our society, IQ and IQ-like traits are highly
rewarded.
There isn't an equity issue, but it works in both ways.
Because my guess is,
let's just say that we had a society
where we were doing genome sequencing of everybody
who was born and we had some predictive model
to predict IQ and we had decided as a society
that IQ was going to be what we were going to select for.
We were going to put the highest IQ people
in these different roles.
I guarantee you the people in those roles
would not be the people who are legacy admissions to Harvard.
They would very likely be people who are born in slums,
people who are born with no opportunity
or in refugee camps who are just wasting away
because we've thrown them away.
And so it's an easy,
like it's the idea of just being able to look under the hood
of our humanity is really scary for everybody.
And it should be.
I mean, I'm also an Ashkenazi Jew.
My father was born in Austria.
My father and grandparents came here as refugees
after the war.
Most of that side of the family was killed.
So I get what it means to be on the other enemies
that you're reading mine, come on the other side
of the story when someone said,
well, here's what's good and you're not good.
And therefore, so I totally get that.
Having said that, I do believe that we're moving toward
a new way of procreating.
And we're going to have to decide what are the values
that we would like to realize through that process.
Is it randomness, which is what we currently have now,
which is not totally random
because we have a sort of mating through colleges
and other things.
But is it?
We're mating through what?
Colleges?
Like if you go, if you go to Harvard or wherever,
and your wife also goes to Harvard,
it's like, it's not.
To a location based mating.
Well, it's not location, it's selection. It's like there it's not- Just location-based mating. Well, it's not location, it's selection.
It's like there are selections that are made about who gets to a certain place.
And when, like, it's like Harvard admissions is a filter.
So we're going to have to decide what are the values that we want to realize through
this process, because diversity has just baked into our biology.
We're the first species ever that has the opportunity
to make choices about things that were otherwise
baked into our biology.
And there's a real danger that if we make bad choices
even with good intentions, it could even drive us
toward extinction and certainly undermine our humanity.
And that's why I always say, and like I said,
I'm deeply involved with WHO and other things, that these aren't conversations about science. Their conversation,
science brings us to the conversation, but the conversation is about values and ethics.
As you described, that world is wide open. It's not even a subtly different world. That
world is fundamentally different from anything we understand about life on earth because natural selection, this random process, is
so fundamental how we think about life. Being able to program, I mean, it has a
chance to, I mean, it'll probably make my question about the ethical concerns around IQ based selection
Just meaningless because it'll change the nature of identity
It's possible it will dissolve identity
Because we take so much pride in all the different characteristics that make us who we are
we take so much pride in all the different characteristics that make us who we are.
Whenever you have some control over those characteristics,
those characteristics start losing meaning.
And what may start gaining meaning
is the ideas inside our heads, for example,
versus like the details of like,
is that a Commodore 64, is it a PC, is it a Mac, it's going to be less
important than the software that runs on it. So we can more and more be operating in the
digital space and the identity could be something that borrows multiple bodies. Like the
legacy of our ideas may become more important than the details of our physical embodiment. I mean, I'm
saying perhaps ridiculous sounding things, but the point is it will bring up so many new
ethical concerns that our narrow mind is thinking about the current ethical concerns will
not apply. But it's important to think about all this kind of stuff like actively.
What are the right conversations they'd be having now?
Because it feels like it's not going conversation.
Then continually evolves like within NIH involved.
Like do you do experiments with animals?
Do you build these brain organoids?
Do you start look through that process you describe,
but the stem cells, do you experiment with a bunch of organisms
to see how genetic material,
what form that actually takes,
how to minimize the chance of cancer,
and all those kinds of things?
What are the negative consequences of that?
What are the positive consequences?
Yeah, it's a fascinating world.
It's a really fascinating world.
Yeah, and then but those conversations are just so essential. Like we have to be talking about ethics
and then that raises the question of who is the we and coming back to your conversation about
science communication. Maybe there was a time earlier when these conversations needed to be
were were held among a small number
of experts who made decisions on behalf of everybody else.
But what we're talking about here is really the future of our species.
And I think that conversation is too important to be left just to experts and government
officials.
So I mentioned that I'm a member.
We just ended our work after two
years of the World Health Organization Expert Advisory Committee on Human Genome editing.
And my big push in that process was to have education, engagement, and empowerment of the
broad public to bring, not just bring people into the conversation with the tools to be able to
not just bring people into the conversation with the tools to be able to engage, but also into the decision-making process. And that's a real shift. And there are countries that are doing it
better than others. I mean, Denmark is obviously a much smaller country than the United States.
But they have a really well-developed infrastructure for public engagement around really complicated scientific issues.
And I just think that we have to, like, it's great that we have Twitter and all these other things.
We need structured conversations where we can really bring people together and listen to each other,
which feels like it's harder than ever.
But even now in this process where all these people
are shouting at each other,
at least there are a bunch of people
who are in the conversation.
So we have a foundation,
but we just really need to do more work.
And again and again and again,
it's about ethics and values
because we're at an age,
and this has become a cliche of exponential technological change and so the rate of change is
faster going forward than it has been in the past so in our minds we underappreciate how quickly things are changing and
and will change and if we're not careful if we don't know who we are and what our values are, we're
going to get lost.
And we don't have to know technology.
We have to know who we are.
I mean, our values are hard one over thousands of years, no matter how new the technology
is, we shouldn't and can't jettison our values because that is our primary navigational
tool. I'm sorry question because we were saying that sexual reproduction is not the best way
to define the offspring.
You think there'll be a day when humans stop having sex?
I don't think we'll stop having sex because it's so enjoyable.
But we may significantly stop having sex for reproduction.
Even today, most human sex is not for making babies.
It's for other things, whether it's pleasure
or love or pair bonding or whatever.
Intimacy.
Intimacy.
It may mean some people do it for intimacy.
Some people do it for pleasure with strangers.
I feel like the people that do it for pleasure, I feel like there will be better ways to achieve
that same chemical pleasure, right?
You know, there's just so many different kinds of people.
I just saw this on television, but there are people who put on those big, bunny outfits
and go and have sex with you.
I mean, there's just like an unlimited number of different kinds of people.
I think they're called, so unlimited number of different kinds of people.
I think they're called,
so I remember hearing about this,
I think Dan Savage is a podcast.
I think they're called Furries.
Furries.
Like furry parties.
Yeah, exactly.
So, I love people.
Yeah.
You know, that's like the thing.
It's like whenever you hear these sorts of humans,
I'll probably think of next.
So, but I do think that,
and I write about this in Hacking Darwin,
that as people come to believe
that having, that making children
through the application of science
is safer and more beneficial
than having children through sex.
We'll start to see a shift over time toward reproduction through science.
We'll still have sex for all the same great reasons that we do it now.
It's just reproduction less and less through the act of sex.
Man, it's such a fascinating future.
Because as somebody I value flaws.
I think it's the goodwill hunting.
That's the good stuff.
The flaws, the weird quirks of humans, that's what makes us who we are, the weird.
The weird is the beautiful, and there's a fear of optimization that I...
You should have it. I mean, it's very healthy. And I think that's the danger of all of this
selection is that we make selections just based on social norms that are so deeply internal
social norms that are so deeply internal, that they feel like they're eternal truths. And so we talked about selecting for IQ. What about selecting for a kind heart? Like there
are lots of you, me talked about Hitler and mine comp, Hitler, certainly had a high IQ.
And I guess is higher than average IQ, if we just select,
I mean, that's why I was saying before,
diversity is baked into our biology,
but the key lesson, and I've said this many times
before, the key lesson of this moment in our history
is that after nearly four billion years of evolution,
our one species suddenly has the unique
and increasing ability to read, write, and hack the code of life.
And so as we apply these God-like powers
that we've now assumed for ourselves,
we better be pretty careful
because it's so easy to make mistakes,
particularly mistakes that are guided
by our best intentions.
The jump briefly back onto Lab Lake,
and I swear there's a reason for that.
What did you think about the John Stewart,
this moment, I think it went on was maybe a few months ago,
in the summer I think of 2021,
where he went on a Colbert Report,
or not the Col-bear report. Sorry, the Stephen
co-bear is one of his show is. But again, John Stewart reminded us how valuable his wit
and brilliance within the humor was for our culture. And so he did this whole bit that
highlighted the common sense nature about what was the metaphor he used
about the Hershey factory in Pennsylvania. So what do you think about that whole bit?
I loved it. And so not to be overly self-referential, but it's hard not to be overly self-referential
when you're doing whatever however long we are five hour interview about yourself,
which it reminds like when you had Brett Weinstein
on, he said, I have no ego,
but these 57 people have screwed me over here
and I just are credit.
So yeah, no, so I am a person I will confess.
I, it's enjoyable.
Some people feel different.
I kind of like talking about all this stuff
and talking. Period.
So for me, in the earliest, I remember those early days of in the pandemic start, I was just
sitting down, it was late January or early February 2020, and I just was laying out all of
the evidence just as I, that I could collect trying to say, make sense of where does this
come from.
And it just, it was just logic.
I mean, it was all the things that John Stewart said,
which in some overly wordy form,
were all at that time on my website.
Like, what are the odds of having this outbreak
of a bad coronavirus, more than 1,000 miles away
from where these bats have their natural habitat, where they have the largest collection of these bad coronaviruses in the world, and
they're doing all these very aggressive research projects to make them more aggressive.
And then you have the outbreak of a virus that's primed for human to human transmission.
It was just logic was my first step and I kept gathering the information.
But John Stuart distilled that in a way that just everybody got.
And I think that, like, I loved it.
And I just think that there's a way of reaching people.
It's the reason why I write science fiction
in addition to thinking and writing about the science,
is that we kind of have to reach people where they are.
And I just thought it was just,
there was a lot of depth, I thought,
and maybe that's to self-serving,
but like in the analysis, but he captured that into
those things about, it's like the, whatever, the outbreak of chewy goodness near the
Hershey factory I wonder where that came from.
Yeah, the humor, there's metaphor. Also, the like sticking with the joke when the audience is...
The audience is Steven Cobraire. He was like resisting it.
He was very uncomfortable with it. Maybe that was part of the bit. I'm not sure, but it didn't look like it.
So Steven in that moment kind of represented the discomfort of the scientific community. I think it's kind of interesting, that whole dynamic.
And I think that was a pivotal moment.
I mean, it just could highlight the value of comedy,
the value of, like when Joe Rogan says,
I'm just a comedian.
I mean, that's such a funny thing to say.
It's like saying, I'm just a podcaster or I'm just a writer.
I'm just a, you know, that ability in so few words
to express what everybody else is thinking.
It's so refreshing.
And I wish the scientific communicators would do that too.
A little humor, a little humor.
I mean, that's why I love Elon Musk very much.
So like the way he communicates is like,
it's so refreshing for a CEO of a major company,
several major companies,
they just have a sense of humor
and say ridiculous shit every once in a while.
That's so, there's something to that.
Like it shakes up the whole conversation
to where it gives you freedom to like think publicly.
If you're always trying to say the proper thing,
you lose the freedom to think,
to reason out, to be authentic and genuine.
When you say, when you allow yourself the freedom
to regularly say stupid shit, have fun, make
fun of yourself. I think you give yourself freedom to really be a great scientist with
a good. Honestly, I think scientists have a lot to learn from comedians.
Well, for sure, we all do about just distilling and communicating in ways that people can
hear. Like a lot of us say things and people just can't hear them,
either because of the way we're saying them
or where they are.
But, and like I said before,
I'm a big fan of Joe Rogan.
I've been on his show twice and whatever
that would Francis Collins was in his conversation with you,
he said, which I think makes sense is that when somebody has
that kind of platform and people rightly or wrongly
who follow them and look to them for guidance,
I do think that there is some responsibility
for people in those roles to make whatever judgment
that they make and to share that.
And as I mentioned to you when
we are off-mic, Sanjay Gupta is a very close friend of mine. We've been friends for many
years. And I fully supported Sanjay's instinct to go on the Joe Rogan show. I thought it was
great. At the end of that whole conversation,
Joe said, well, I'm just a comedian.
What do I know?
And I just felt that, yes, Joe Rogan is a comedian.
I wouldn't say just a comedian among other things.
But I also felt that he had a responsibility
for just saying whatever he believed,
even if he believed, or believed, as I think is the case,
that Iver Mechden should be studied more,
which I certainly agree.
And that healthy people shouldn't get vaccinated,
healthy young people, which I don't agree.
I just felt at the end of that conversation to say,
well, I'm just a comedian, what do I know?
I feel like it didn't fully integrate the power
that a person like Joe Rogan has to set the agenda.
So I think the reason he says I'm just a comedian
is the same reason I say I'm an idiot,
which I truly believe.
I could explain exactly what I mean by that,
but it's more for him, or in this case for me,
to just keep yourself humble. You know, because I think it's a slippery slope when you think
you have a responsibility to then think you actually have an authority, because a lot of people
listen to you, you think you have an authority to actually speak to those people and you have
the enough authority to know what the hell you're talking about.
And I think there's just a humility to just kind of make it funny yourself that's extremely
valuable and saying, I'm just a comedian.
I think it's a reminder to himself that, you know, he's often full of shit.
So are all of us. And so that's a really powerful way
for himself to keep himself humble. I mean, I think that's really useful to, in some
kind of way, for people in general to, yeah, make fun of themselves a little bit, in
whatever way that means. And saying, I'm just a comedian, it's just one way to do that.
Now that, that couple that with the responsibility of doing the research and really having your mind and all those kinds of stuff.
I think that's something Joe does really well on a lot of topics but he can't do that and everything and so that.
It's up to the people to decide how well he does it on certain topics and not others.
But how do you think Sanjay did in that conversation?
So I know I'm gonna get myself into trouble here
because Sanjay is a very close friend.
Joe, my personal interaction with him has been our two interviews,
but it's like my interview with now.
Sit down with somebody for four hours.
It's a lot and great and then private communication. So I am personally more sympathetic
to the arguments that Sanjay was making or trying to make. I believe that the threat of
the virus is greater than the threat of the vaccine. That doesn't mean that we can guarantee 100% safety for the vaccine, but
these are really well tolerated vaccines.
And we know for all the reasons we've been talking about this, this is a really scary
virus.
And particularly the mRNA vaccines, what they're basically doing is getting your body to replicate
a tiny little piece of the virus, the spike protein, and then your body responds
to that. And so that's a much less, much less of an insult to your body than being infected by
the virus. So I'm, I'm more sympathetic to the people who say, well, everybody should get
vaccinated. But people who've already been infected, we should study whether they
need to be vaccinated or not.
Having said all of that, I felt that Joe Rogan won the debate.
It was, and the reason that I felt that he won the debate was they were kind of, they
had two different categories of arguments.
So Sanjay, what he was trying to do, which I totally respect, was saying there's so much animosity
between the on these different sides. Let's lower the temperature. Let's, let's model that we can
have a respectful dialogue with each other where we can actually listen. And Sanjay, again, I've known him for many years, he's a very empathic, humble,
just all around wonderful human being.
And I really love him.
And so he was making cases that were based on
kind of averages, studies, and things like that.
And Joe was saying, well, I know a guy
whose sister's cousin had this experience.
And I'm sure that it's all true in the sense that we have millions of people
who are getting vaccinated and different things.
And what Sanjay should have said was, I know that's anecdote.
Here's another anecdote of, like when Francis Collins was with you,
and he talked about the world wrestling guy who
was like six six and a big mussely guy and then he got COVID and he was anti-vaxxed and then
he got COVID and almost died and he said I'm gonna.
By the way, I don't know if you know this part.
No.
Oh, this is funny.
Joe's gonna listen to this.
He's gonna be laughing.
Does Joe listen like to the four hours of this in addition to the three hours of his
interviews every day? No, not every day, but he listens to the three hours of his interviews every day.
No, not every day, but he listened to a lot of these.
And we talk about it.
I love it.
We argue about it.
Hi, Joe.
Hi, Joe.
We love you, Joe.
But he, so that particular case, I don't know why Francis said what he said there, but that's
not accurate.
Oh, really?
So the rest there
Never he didn't almost die. He was no big deal at all for him. He said that to him. I think
I'm not sure I think something got mixed up in Francis's memory
He there's another case. He might have been like because I don't imagine he would bring that case up and just like make it up
You know because like why?
But he that was not at all. Like that's a pretty public case. He had an interview with him
that that wrestler he was just fine. So that anecdotal case. I mean, Francis should not have done that. So if I have any, so I have a bunch of criticism of how that went. People who criticize that interview, I feel
like don't give enough respect to the full range of things that Francis Collins has done
in his career. He has an incredible scientist. And I also think a really good human being.
But yes, that conversation was flawed. In many ways, and one of them was why when you're trying to present some kind
of critical, like, criticized Joe Rogan, why bring up anecdotal evidence at all? And
if you do bring up anecdotal evidence, which is not scientific, if your scientists should
not be using anecdotal evidence, if you do bring it up, why bring
up one that's not true?
And you know it's not true.
I remember.
So I know that pretend you don't know it's not true.
So yes, that would find another case where exactly.
So the basic thing coming back to Sanjay and Joe's conversation was that Sanjay was trying to use
statistical evidence and Joe was using anecdotal evidence. And so I think that for Sanjay,
and there are all kinds of things where there are debates where often the person who's better
at debating wins the debate regardless of the topic. So I think what Sanjay could have done, and Sanjay's such a smart guy, is to say,
well, that's an anecdote.
Here's another anecdote, and there are lots of different anecdotes, and there certainly
are people who have taken the vaccine, and have had problems that could reasonably be
traced to the vaccines.
And there are certainly lots of people I would argue more people
who've not had the vaccine, but who've gotten COVID
and have either died or our hospitals are now full of people
who weren't vaccinated. In many ways, our emergency rooms are full of
unvaccinated people here in the United States.
So I think what Sanjay could have done,
but there was a conflict between wanting to kind of win the debate
and wanting to take the temperature down.
And what he could have done is to say,
well, here's an anecdote, I have a counter-annect note
and we can go on all day,
but here's what the statistics show.
And I think that was the things. I think it's
a healthy conversation. We can't, I mean, there are a lot of people who are afraid of the
vaccine. There are a lot of people who don't trust the scientific establishment. And lots
of them have good reason. I mean, it's not just people think of like Trump Republicans.
There are lots of people in the African-American community who've had a historical,
terrible experience with the Tuskegee
and all sorts of things so they don't trust the messages
that were being delivered up, I live in New York City
and they had a piece in the New York Times
where in the earliest days of the vaccines,
there was this big movement,
let's make sure that the poorest people in the city have first access of the vaccines, there was this big movement. Let's make sure that the poorest
people in the city have first access to the vaccines because they're the ones they have higher
density in their homes, they're relying on public transport. So there was this whole liberal
effort. Let's, and then in the black community in New York, according to the New York Times,
there was very low acceptance of the vaccines. and they interviewed people in that article, and they said, well, if the white people want us to have it first, there must
be something wrong with it.
They must be doing some exchange.
And so we have to listen to each other.
Like I would never, I have a, just respect for everybody.
And if somebody is cautious about the vaccine for themselves or for
their children, we have to listen to that. At the same time, public health is about creating
public health. And there's no doubt. I think Joe was absolutely right that older people, obese people
that older people, obese people are at greater risk
for being harmed or killed by COVID-19 than young healthy people.
But by everybody getting vaccinated,
we reduce the risk to everybody else.
And so I feel like with everything,
there's the individual benefit argument
and then there's the community
argument. And I absolutely think that.
But expressing that clearly that there's a difference between the individual health
and freedoms and the community health and freedoms and still manning each side of this.
So this is one of the problems that people don't do enough of is be able to, so how do
you still man an argument?
You describe that argument the best possible way
You have to first understand that argument. Let's go to the non-controversial thing like flat earth
Like most people most colleagues am I not MIT
don't even
Read about
Like the full argument that the flat
authors make. I feel it's disingenuous for people in the
physics community to roll their eyes at flat
authors. If they haven't read their arguments, you should
you should feel bad that you didn't read their arguments. And
like that it's the rolling of the eyes.
That's a big problem.
You haven't read it.
Your intuition says that these are a bunch of crazy people.
Okay, but you haven't earned the right to roll your eyes.
You've earned your right to maybe not read it,
but then don't have an opinion.
Don't roll your eyes.
Don't do any of that dismissive stuff.
And the same thing in the scientific community around COVID and so on, there's often this
kind of saying, oh, cut, that's conspiracy theories, that's misinformation without actually looking
into what they're saying.
If you haven't looked into what they're saying, they don't talk about it.
Like if you're a scientific leader and the communicator, you need to look into it.
It's not that much effort. I totally agree. And I think that humility, it's a constant theme of
your podcast, and I love that. And so after the conversation debate, whatever it was,
between Sanjay and Joe, I reached out on Twitter to someone I've never met in person, but I'm in touch privately to a guy named Daniel Griffin,
who's a professor at Columbia Medical School,
and just so smart.
He gives regular updates on COVID-19
on a thing called TWIV, this week in Verology.
I'm a critic of TWIV for its coverage of endemic origins.
But on this issue, I'm just having regular updates.
Daniel is great.
And so I said to him, I said, why don't we have an honest process to get the people who
are raising concerns about the vaccines in their own words to raise what are their concerns.
And then let's do our best job of saying,
well, here are these concerns.
And then here is our evidence making a counter claim
and here are links to if you want to look at the studies
upon which these claims are made, here they are.
And Daniel, who's incredibly busy,
I mean, he reads every, I mean, he reads
every, it seems every paper that comes out every week and it's unbelievable. So, but he sent
me a link to the CDC Q&A page on the CDC website. And it wasn't that. It was people who were, I mean, it was written by people, like me, who were convinced in the benefit of these,
of these vaccines.
So the questions were framed,
they were kind of like,
they weren't really the framing of the people
with the concerns, they were framing of people
who were just kind of imagining something else.
I mean, you always talk about kind of humility
and active listening.
I know you don't mean, and it doesn't mean that we don't stand for something. Like, I certainly
am a strong proponent of vaccines and masks and all of those things. But if we don't hear
the other people, we don't let them hear their voice in the conversation. If it's just saying what you may think this and
here's why it's wrong, the argument may be right. It'll just never break through.
By the way, my interpretation of Joe and Sanjay, I listened to that conversation without looking
at Twitter or the internet and I thought that was a great conversation and I thought Sanjay actually
really succeeded at bringing the temperature down. To me, the goal was bringing the temperature down.
I didn't even think of it as a debate.
I was like, oh, cool.
This isn't gonna be some weird.
It's like too friendly people talking.
And then I look at the internet,
and then the internet says,
Joe Rogan slammed such, like,
like as if it was a heated debate that Joe won.
And it's like, all right,
it's really the temperature being brought
down. Real conversation with you to humans. That wasn't really a debate. It was just a conversation.
Yeah, I definitely think it was a success, but I also felt that a takeaway,
that a takeaway, and again, this isn't because this is something that I don't agree with, even though I have, as I've said, respect for Joe, I think a reasonable person listening
to that conversation would come away with the conclusion that all in all these vaccines
are a good thing.
But if you're young and healthy, you probably don't need it. And I just felt that
there was a stronger case to be made. Even though Sanjay made it, it wasn't that Sanjay didn't
make it. It was just that in the flow of that conversation, I felt that the case for the vaccines.
And the vaccines, both as an choice. And then certainly, again,
as I said before, I think that while people can be afraid of the vaccines, the virus itself is
much scarier. And we're just, we're seeing it now in real time with these variations and variants.
I just felt that that was kind of the rough takeaway from that conversation.
And I felt that that Sanjay, again, whom I love, I felt it could have made his case a little
bit simpler.
Yeah.
So the way the thing he succeeded is he didn't come off as like a science expert looking
down at everybody, talking down to everybody.
So, he succeeded in that, which is very respectful.
But I also think making the case for taking a vaccine when you're a young healthy person,
when you're sitting across from Joe Rogan is like a high difficulty on the video game level.
For sure.
So, it's not difficult to do.
Yeah.
It's difficult to do.
And also it's difficult to do because it's not like,
it's not as simple as like look at the data.
There's a lot of data to go through here.
And there's also a lot of non-data stuff,
like the fact that first of all, questioning
the sources of the data, the quality of the data, there's also disappointing about COVID
is the quality of the data is not great.
But also questioning all the motivations of the different parties involved, whether it's
major organizations that developed the vaccine, whether it's major institutions like NIH or NIA
that are sort of communicating to us about the vaccine,
whether it's the CDC and the WHO,
whether it's the Biden or the Trump administration,
whether it's China and all those kinds of things,
you have to, that's part of the conversation here.
I mean, vaccination is not just a public health tool. It's also a tool for
a government to gain more control over the populace. Like, there's a lot of truth to that too.
Things that have a lot of benefit can also be used as a Trojan horse to increase bureaucracy
and control. But those that has to be on the table for conversation.
I think it has to be on the conversation. But I mean, your parents, when they were in the
Soviet Union and here in the United States, and actually it was a big collaboration between
US and Soviet Union, when the polio vaccine came out, there were people all around the world
who had a different life trajectory,
no longer living in fear, and all of these people who were paralyzed or killed from polio,
smallpox has been eradicated. It was one of the great successes in human history.
And well, for sure, it's true that you could imagine some kind of fraudulent
in some kind of fraudulent vaccination effort. But here, I genuinely think, I mean, whatever the number, 15 million, 16 million is the
economist number of dead from COVID-19.
Many, many, many more people would be dead but for these vaccines.
And so I get that any activity that needs to be coordinated by a central government has the potential
to increase bureaucracy and increase control.
But there are certain things that central governments do
like the development, particularly these mRNA vaccines,
which it's purely a US government victory.
I mean, it was huge, DARPA funding,
and then the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Disease,
NIH funding.
I mean, this was a public-private partnership throughout,
and that we got a working vaccine
in 11 months was a miracle.
So, it's not purely a victory.
Again, you have to be open-minded.
I'm with you here playing a bit of devil's advocate, but the people who discuss any viral
drugs that have armectin and other alternatives would say that the extreme focus on the vaccine
distracted us from considering other possibilities.
And saying that this is purely a success is distracting from the story that there could have been other
solutions. So yes, it's a huge success that vaccine was developed so quickly. And surprisingly
way more effective than it was hoped for. But there could have been other solutions. And
they completely distracted from us from that. In fact,
it distracted us from looking into a bunch of things like the Lableek. So it's not a
pure victory. And there's a lot of people that criticize the overreach of government
and all of this. One of the things that makes the United States great is the individualism and the hesitancy to ideas and mandates. Even if the mandates
unmask will have a positive, even strongly positive result, the Americans, many Americans
will still say no. Because in the long arc of history, saying no in that moment will actually lead to a better
country and a better world. So that's a messed up aspect of America, but it's also a beautiful
part. We're skeptical even about good things.
I agree. And certainly, we should all be cautious about government overreach.
Absolutely, and it happens in all kinds of scenarios with incarceration, with a thousand things.
And we also should be afraid of government underreach that if there is a problem,
that could be solved by governments, and that's why we have governments in the first place,
is that there's just certain things that individuals
can't do on their own.
And that's why we pull our resources.
And in some ways, sacrifice our rights
for this common thing.
And that's why we don't have, hopefully, people,
murderers, marauding, or people driving 200 miles
down the street.
We have a process for arriving at a set of common rules.
And so, well, I fully agree that we need to respect and we need to listen.
We need to find that right balance. And you've raised the magic i word, Ivermectin.
And so, when Ivermectin, like my view, has always been, Ivermectin could be effective,
it could not be effective.
Let's study it through a full process.
And when you had Francis Collins with you,
even while he was making up stories about this,
this wrestler, he was saying,
yeah, exactly.
But he was saying that they're going to do
a full randomized, highest level trial of Ivermectin.
And if Ivermectin works, then that's another tool in our toolbox.
And I think we should.
And I think that in that Sanjay was absolutely correct to concede the point to Joe that
it was disingenuous for people, including people on CNN, to say that I've remected is for livestock.
And so I definitely think that we have to have some kind of process that allows us to come together.
And I totally agree that the great strength of America is that we empower individuals.
It's the history of our frontier mentality in our country. So we, I 100% agree
that we have to allow that even if sometimes it creates messy processes and uncomfortable
feelings and all those sorts of things.
You are an ultra marathon runner. Yes. What, what, what, what are you running from? No.
It's the right thing.
It's the funny thing is, so I'm an ultra marathoner, and I've done 13 Ironmans.
And people say, oh my God, that's amazing.
13 Ironmans.
And what I always say, no, one Ironman is impressive.
13 Ironmans, there's something effing wrong with you.
We just need to figure out what it is.
Yeah, there's some demons you've tried to work through. I mean, what you're doing
the work though, most people just kind of let the demons sit in the attic. No, what have
you learned about yourself, about your mind, about your body, about life, from, you know,
taking, taking your body to limit that kind of way to running those kinds of distances?
Well, it's a great question.
I know that you are also kind of exploring
the limits of the physical.
And so for me, in doing the Iron Man's
and the Ultramarathons, it's always the same kind of lesson,
which is just when you think you have nothing left,
you actually have a ton left.
There are a lot of resources that are there you have nothing left. You actually have a ton left.
There are a lot of resources that are there
if you call on them and the ability to call on them
has to be cultivated.
It really, and so for me, especially in the Iron Man,
and Iron Man in many ways is harder than the Ultra Marathons.
I mean, it's 140 miles,
I'll be at 100 mile 120,
having done the swim and then the bike
and I'll be whatever, six miles into the run.
And I'll think, I feel like shit.
I have nothing left.
How am I possibly gonna run 20 miles more?
But there's always more.
And I think that for me, these extreme sports
are my process of exploring what's possible.
And I feel like it applies in so many different areas
of life where you're kind of pushing and it feels like the limit and
and one of my friend of mine who I just have so much respect for who actually be a great guest if
you haven't already interviewed him is Charlie Angle and Charlie he was a drug addict he was in
prison his life was total shit somehow, and I can't remember
the full store, he just started running around the prison yard. And it was like four
scum. And he just kept running and running. And then he got out of prison and he kept
running. And he started doing ultra marathons, started inspiring all these other people.
Now he's written all these books.
As a matter of fact, we just spoke a few months ago that he's planning on running from the
Dead Sea to somehow to the top of Mount Everest from the lowest point to the highest point
on Earth.
And I said, well, why are you stopping there?
Why don't you get whatever camera in and go down
to the lowest part of the ocean?
Go to the lowest part of the ocean.
And then talk to Elon Musk or Jeff Bezos
and go to the kind of the highest place
than the stratosphere you can get.
But it's this thing of possibility.
And I just feel like so many of us and myself included,
we get stuck in a sense of what we think is our range.
And if we're not careful, that can become our range.
And that's why for me in all of life,
it's all about like we've been talking about,
challenging the limits, challenging assumptions,
challenging ourselves.
And hopefully, we do it in a way that kind of doesn't hurt anybody.
I, you know, and I'm at the Iron Man,
they have all these little kids and these little shirts,
and it'll say like, my dad is a hero,
and have the little Iron Man logo.
And I want to say, it's like, no, your dad is actually
a narcissistic dick who goes on eight mile bike rides every Sunday rather
than spend time with you.
And so we shouldn't hurt anybody.
But for me, I, I, and I also, I just find it very enjoyable.
And I hope I'm not disclosing too much about our conversation before we went live where
you're doing so many different things with running and your martial arts.
And I encouraged you to do ultra-marathons because there's so many great ones in Texas.
It's actually surprisingly a very enjoyable way to spend a day.
How would you recommend, so for people who might not know, I've never actually even run a marathon. I run 22 miles in one time at most.
I did a four by four by 48 challenge
with David Goggins where you run four miles every four hours.
This is a different,
as less to do with the distance,
the more to do with the sleep deprivation.
What advice would you give to a first time ultra marathon
or like me trying to run 50 or more miles
or for anybody else interested
in this kind of exploration of the range.
What I always tell is the same advice is register.
Pick your timeline of when you think you can be ready.
Depending on where you are now, make it six months, make a year, and then register for
the race.
And then once you're registered, just work back from there, what's it going to take?
But one of the things for people who are just getting going,
you really do need to make sure that your body is ready for it.
And so particularly, and particularly as we get older,
strengthening is really important.
So I'll do a plug for my brother Jordan Metzel.
He's a doctor at hospital for special surgery,
but his whole thing is functional strength.
And so, and people know about,
and you can actually even go to his website,
you can just Google Jordan Metzel, Iron Strength,
but it's all about like burpees
and just building your muscular strength
so that you don't get injured as you increase.
And then just increase your mileage
with, you know, in some steady way,
make sure that you take rest days and listen to your body because people like you who are
just very kind of mind over matter, like you were telling me before about you have an
injury, but you kind of run a little bit differently. And you know, we need to listen to our
bodies because our bodies are communicating.
But I think it was kind of little by little magic is possible.
And what I will say is, and I also do, I've done lots and lots of marathons, and I always
tell people that the ultra marathon is at least the ones that I do.
And I shouldn't misrepresent myself.
I mean, there are people who do 500 mile races. The ones that I do are 50k mountain trail runs,
which is 32 miles, so I do the kind of the easier side of ultra-res.
But it's actually much easier than a marathon,
because the mountain one's sometimes it's so steep
that you have to walk it, because walking is faster than running in every four or five miles
in the supported races you stop and eat blinces and foil potatoes.
It's actually quite enjoyable.
But as I started to tell you,
before we went live,
so I've done for lots of years,
these 50K mountain trail runs,
and I was going to Taiwan a number of years ago for something else. And I thought, well, wouldn't it be fun to do an ultra marathon
in Taiwan? I looked and that the weekend after my visit, there was a marathon. It was called
the, I mean, ultra marathon, it was called the Taiwan Beast. And I figured, oh, beasts,
what are they talking about? It's 50K mountain trail, and I've done a million of them.
And then I went to register, and then as part of registration,
they said, you need to have all of this equipment.
And there was all this wilderness survival equipment,
and I was thinking, got these Taiwanese,
but what a bunch of women.
What a dramatic.
You have to carry, give me a break, 50K Mountain Trail.
So I get there, and the race starts at like 4.30
in the morning, in the middle of nowhere,
and you have to wear headlamps, and's carrying all this stuff and you kind of go running
out into the rain forest.
It was the hardest thing I've ever done to my.
It took 19 hours.
There were maybe 15 cliff faces, like a real cliff and somebody had dangled like a little
piece of string and say had to hold on to the string with one hand. While it was in the pouring rain, climb up these cliffs,
there were maybe 20 river crossings,
but not just like a little stream,
like a torrential river.
There were some things where it was so steep
that everyone was just climbing up
and then you'd slide all the way down and climb up.
And there were people who I met on the way out there
who were saying, oh yeah, I did the Sahara 500 kilometer race and those people were just sprawled out. A lot of
them didn't finish. So that was the hardest thing I've ever had. So how do you get through something
like that? You just once up at a time? Was there? Did you remember? Is there, yeah, the, is there dark moments or is it kind of all spread out?
Yeah, you know,
it wasn't really dark moments.
I mean, there was one thing where I'd been running so long.
I thought, well, I must almost be done.
And then I found out I have like 15 miles more.
But, you know, I guess with all of these things, it's the messages that we tell ourselves.
And so for me, it's like the message I always tell myself is quitting isn't an option.
I mean, once in a while, you kind of have to quit, like listen to the universe, whatever
you're going to kill yourself for something.
But for me, it was just, you know, whatever it takes, there's no way I'm stopping. And I have to go up this muddy hill 20 times,
because I keep sliding. I'm sure there's, there's a way. It's probably a personality flaw.
What is your love for chocolate come from? Oh, it's a great question. And in my, both of my Joe
Rogan interviews, that's the first question that he asks.
I'm glad that we've gotten to that.
So one, I've always loved chocolate.
And I call it like a secret.
But now that I keep telling,
if you keep telling the same secret,
it's actually no longer a secret.
But I have a secret, which is not secret,
because I'm telling you on a podcast,
life as a chocolate shaman.
And so when I give keynotes at tech conference,
I say I'm happy to give a keynote,
but I want to lead a sacred cacao ceremony in the night.
I'm actually, believe it or not,
the official chocolate shaman
of what used to be called exponential medicine,
which is part of singularity university.
Now my friend Daniel Kraft, who runs it, it's going to be called exponential medicine, which is part of singularity university. Now, my friend Daniel Kraft, who runs it,
it's going to be called next med.
And so, but I'll have to go back
as I was going to Berlin a lot of years ago,
and I've always loved chocolate,
but I was going to Berlin to give a keynote
at a big conference called Toa, tech open air.
And so when I got there, the first night,
I was supposed to give a talk,
but there had been some mix-up they'd forgotten
to reserve the room.
And so the talk got canceled.
And in the brochure, they had all these different events
around Berlin that you could go to.
And one of them was a cow ceremony.
And so I went there and actually met somebody,
Viviana, who is still a friend,
I met going in there and there was this cacao ceremony.
There were these kind of hippie dudes
and then everybody got the cacao.
And then they said, all right,
as they talked a little bit about the process
and then they said, all right,
everyone just stand and kind of,
we're gonna spin around in a circle for 45 minutes.
And so I spun around in the circle for like 10 minutes,
but then I had to leave because I had to go to something else.
And so I thought that was that.
But then I saw Viviana the next day,
and I said, how did the cacao ceremony go?
And she showed me these pictures of all these people
mostly naked, like turned into chaos.
And it was like, oh, and so let me get this straight. People drank chocolate, then they spun
around in a circle and something else happened. And anyway, so then two days later, I was invited
to another cacao ceremony, which was also actually part of this toa. And that was kind of more structured and it was more sane because it was part of this
thing.
And at the end of that, I had this, I thought, one, how the greatest thing ever, sacred
cacao ceremony, like you drink chocolate milk and everybody's free.
And I love that idea because I've never done drugs, I don't drink.
But just part of it is because I think whatever,
like I was saying with the ultra-running,
all of the possibilities are within us
if we can get out of our own way.
And then I thought, I think I can do a better job
than what I experienced in Berlin.
So I came back and I thought, all right,
I'm gonna get accredited as a cow shaman.
And this will shock you.
Because I know if you're gonna be like a rabbi or a priest
or something, there's some process.
But shockingly, there's no official process.
It's a shockingly.
It's a shock like a chocolate shaman.
And so I thought, all right, well,
you know, I'm just gonna train myself and went on ready.
I'm gonna declare my chocolate shamanism.
So I started studying different things.
And when I was ready, I just said,
now I'm a chocolate shaman, self-declared.
Yeah, self-declared.
And so, but I do these ceremonies.
And I've done them at tech conferences.
I did one in Soho House in New York.
I've done it at a place, Rancho Lup Huerta in Mexico.
And every time it's the same thing.
Cause if people are given a license to be free,
it doesn't matter.
And what I always say is, you're here for a sacred cacao ceremony,
but the truth is there's no such thing as sacred cacao.
And there's no sacred mountains, and there's no sacred people,
and there's no sacred plans, because nothing is sacred
if we don't attribute a scribe sacredness to it.
But if we recognize that everything is sacred, then we'll live different lives.
And for the purpose of this ceremony, we're just going to say, all right, we're going to
focus on this cacao, which actually has been used ceremonially for 5,000 years.
It has all these wonderful properties.
But is this people who get that license?
And then they're just free and people are dancing and all sorts of stuff.
Is the goal to celebrate life in general?
Is it to celebrate the senses like taste?
Is it to celebrate yourself each other?
What is there?
I think the core is gratitude and just appreciation and all the experiences and
light. Yeah, just of being alive, of just living in this sacred world where we have all these things
that we don't even pay any attention to. My friend AJ Jacobs, he had a wonderful book that I
used the spirit of it in the ceremonies, not the exactly, but he was in a restaurant
in New York coffee shop, and his child said, where does the coffee come from?
And he's like a wonderful big thinker.
And he started really answering that question.
Well, here's where the beans come from, but how did the beans get here and who painted the
yellow line on the street so the truck didn't crash
and who made the cup. And he spent a year making a full spreadsheet of all of the people who,
in one way or another, played some role in that one cup of coffee. And he traveled all around
the world thanking them. Like, it's like, thank you for painting the yellow line on the road.
Yeah. And so for me with the cacao, part of when I do these ceremonies is just to say, like, you're drinking this cacao.
But there's a person who planted the seed, there's a person who watered the plant, there's
a person. And I just think that level of awareness, and it's true with anything like you
have in front of you a stuffed hedgehog. So somebody made that.
I love it. It's great. But like if you if we just said,
where does this stuffed hedgehog come from?
We would have a full story of globalization, of the interconnection of people all around the world,
doing all sorts of things of human imagination.
It's beyond our capacity and our daily, we'd go insane
if every day, like we're speaking into a microphone, well, you know, what are the hundreds of
years of technology that make this possible?
But if you just once in a while, we just focus on one thing and say, this thing is sacred.
And because I'm recognizing that and I'm having an appreciation for the world around me,
it just kind of makes my life feel more sacred.
It makes me recognize my connection to others.
So that's the gist of it.
Yeah, it's funny, I often look at things in this world
in moments and just, I mean, awe of the full universe that brought that to be. In a similar way as you're saying, but I
don't as often think about exactly what you're saying, which is the number of people behind
every little thing we get to enjoy. I mean, yeah, this hedgehog, this microphone, is like directly like thousands of people involved.
Millions?
And then indirectly, millions, like...
And they're all, like, this microphone,
that there's like artists essentially,
like people who made it their life's work,
all the cross-like from the factories, to the manufacture,
there's families, that the cross-like from the factories, the manufacturer, there's families that the
production of this microphone and this hedgehog are fed because of the skill of this human
that helped contribute to that development.
Yeah, it's like Isaac Newton and John Vaughn Newman are in this microphone.
They're standing on the shoulders of giants. We're standing on their shoulders.
And somebody will be standing on ours. Yeah.
You mentioned one shared world. Yeah. What is it? Well, thanks for asking. And by the way, what I will say is the people who are listening, this is so incredible. And I'm so thrilled to have this kind of long conversation
and just, yeah.
A little person who's listening past the five hour mark.
Thanks, mom.
The, yeah.
I salute you.
Yeah.
Somebody that was like sleeping for the first four hours
and just woke up.
It's like, now's the good stuff.
I've been saving it.
But, and I have to say, so much of our lives is forced into these short bursts that
I'm just so appreciative to have the chance to have this conversation.
So thank you for that.
Some people would say five hours is short.
So you know, let's let's go.
And yeah, that's it.
That's what my girlfriend says.
Like if if I was like captured and tortured and they were going to interrogate me
It's like at the end they'd say all right
So background on on one shared world I mentioned I'm on a faculty for singularity university and the earliest days of the
Pandemic I was invited to give a talk on whether the tools of the genetics and biotech revolutions were a match for the outbreak.
And my view was then, as now, that the answer to that question is yes.
But I woke up that morning, and I felt that that wasn't the most important talk that I could give.
There was something else that was more pressing for me.
And that was the realization.
We were asking the question, well, why weren't we prepared for this pandemic? Because we could
have been, we weren't. And why can't, and because of that, why can't we respond adequately
to this outbreak? And then there was the thing, well, if we, even if we respond somehow miraculously overcome
this pandemic, it's a peer victory if we have, if we don't prepare ourselves to respond
to the broader category of pandemics, particularly as we enter the age of synthetic biology.
But if somehow miraculously we solve that problem, but we don't solve the problem of climate
change, well, kind of who cares?
We didn't have a pandemic,
but we wiped everybody out from climate change.
And let's just say, you get where this is going,
that we organize ourselves and we solve climate change.
And then we have a nuclear war
because everybody's particularly China now,
but the US, the former Soviet Union
are building all of these nuclear weapons.
Who cares that we solve climate change because we're all gone anyway?
And the meta category, bringing all those things together, was this mismatch between the increasingly
global and shared nature of the biggest challenges that we face and our inability to solve
that entire category of problems.
And there's a historical issue, which is that prior to the 30 years war in the 17th century,
we had all these different kinds of sovereignty and religious and different kinds of organizational
principles.
And everybody got in this war and in this series of treaties that together are called the
piece of Westphalia, the framework for the modern, well, you now understand as the modern
nation state was late.
And then through colonialism and other means that idea of a state is what it is today,
spread throughout the world. Then, through particularly the late 19th and early 20th century,
we realized how unstable that system was because you always had these jockeying between sovereign states
and some were rising and some were falling and you ended up in more.
And that was the genius of the generations who came together in 1945 in San Francisco
and the planning had even started before then, who said, well, we can't just have that world.
We need to have an overlay.
And we talked about the UN and the WHO of systems where are which transcend our national
sovereignty.
They don't get rid of them, but they transcend them so we can solve this category of problems.
But we're now reaching a point where our reach as humans, even individually,
but collectively, is so great that there's a mismatch between, as I said, the nature of the problems
and the ability to solve those problems. And unless we can address that broader global
collective action problem, we're going to extinct ourselves. And we see these different,
what I call verticals,
whether it's climate change or trying to prevent nuclear weapons, proliferation, or anything
else. But none of those can succeed. And frankly, it doesn't even matter if one succeeds
because all of them have the potential to lead to extinction level events.
So, anyway, so I gave that talk. and that talk went viral. I stayed up all night
the next night and I drafted. I think I was like an insanity, but I think a lot of us were manic
in those early days of the pandemic is wanting to do something. And so I stayed up all night and I
drafted what I called a declaration of global interdependence. And I posted that on my website, myjaneemessel.com,
it's still there.
And that went viral.
And so then I called a meeting just on the people
on my personal email list.
And so we had people from 25 countries.
There were all of these people who were having the same thing.
There's something wrong in the world.
They wanted to be part of a process of fixing it.
And so it was a crazy 35 days where we broke into eight different working groups.
We had an amazing team that helped redraft what became the declaration of interdependence,
which is now in 20 languages.
We laid out a work plan.
We founded this organization called OneSharedWorld.
The URL is OneShared.World.
And it's been this incredible journey.
We now have people who are participating in one way or another from 120 different countries.
We have our public events exploring these issues,
get millions of viewers.
We have world leaders who are participating.
So the vision, the vision is to work on some of these big problems, arbitrary number of problems
that present themselves in the world that face all of human civilization and to be able to work
together. Well, that is, but there's a there's a macro meta problem, which is the global collective
action problem. And so the idea is even if we just focus on the verticals,
on the manifestations of the global collective action problem,
there'll be an infinite number of those things.
So while we work on those things,
like climate change pandemics, WMD, and other things,
we also have to ask the bigger questions
of why can't we solve this category of problems?
And the idea is, at least from my observation, is that whenever big decisions are being made,
our national leaders and corporate leaders are doing exactly what we've hired them to do.
They're maximizing for national interest, even or corporate interest, even at the expense
of everybody. And so it's not that we want to get rid of states, states at the expense of everybody.
And so it's not that we wanna get rid of states,
states are essential in our world.
System is not we wanna undermine the UN,
which is also essential, but massively underperforming.
What we wanna do is to create an empowered global constituency
of people who are demanding that their leaders at all levels
just do a better job of balancing broader and narrower interests.
I see. So this is more like a
make it more symmetric in terms of power. It's
holding accountable
the the nations the leaders. The problem is nations are powerful. We talked about China quite a bit. How do you have
an organization of citizens of earth? They can solve this collective problem that holds China
accountable? It's difficult because you can say a lot of things, but to call it effective is hard.
to call it effective is hard. The internet almost is a kind of representation of a collective force that holds nations accountable,
not to give Twitter to which credit, but social networks broadly speaking.
So you have hope that this possible to build such organizations such Collections of humans that resist China
Not necessarily resist China, but human I mean our cultures change over time
I mean the idea of the modern nation state
Would it would not have made sense to people in the 13th or 14th century the idea of that became the United Nations
13th or 14th century. The idea that became the United Nations,
I mean, it had its earliest days
and the philosophies of Kant.
It took a long time for these ideas to be realized.
And so the idea, and we're far from successful.
When we've had little minor successes,
which we're very proud of,
we got the G20 leaders to incorporate the language that we provided on addressing the needs of the
world's most vulnerable populations into the final summit communicate from the G20 summit in Riyadh.
This year, we're just on the verge of having our language pat on the same issue, ensuring
everyone Earth has access to safe water, basic sanitation, and hygiene, and essential pandemic protection by 2030,
passed as part of a resolution in the United Nations General Assembly. And it's, we're primarily,
I mean, it's young people all around the world. And when I told them in the beginning of this year,
this is our goal. We're going to get the UN General Assembly to pass a resolution with our language in it.
I mean, first, I think they all thought it was insane, but they were too young and inexperienced
to know how insane it was.
And now these young people are just so excited that it's actually happening.
So what we're trying to do is really to create a movement which we don't feel that we need to do from scratch.
Because there are a lot of movements. Like right now we just had the Glasgow G20,
I mean I'm sorry, the Glasgow climate change, COP26, and then Greta Thunberg, who has a huge following,
and who is an amazing young woman, but I was kind of disappointed in what she said afterwards.
It became like a meme on Twitter, which was blah, blah, blah.
And basically it was like blah, blah, blah.
These old people are just screwing around
and it's a waste of time.
And definitely the critique is merited.
But young people have never been more empowered,
educated, connected than they are now.
And so that's what we've had a process with one shared world,
where we partnered with the Model United Nations,
the AgaCon Foundation, the India Sanitation Coalition,
and what we did is say, all right, we have this goal,
water sanitation, hygiene, and pandemic protection
for everyone on Earth by 2030.
And we had debates and consultations using the model UN Framework all around the world
in multiple languages.
And we said, come up with a plan for how this could be achieved.
And these brilliant young people in every country, not every country, most countries, they
all contributed.
Then we had a plan.
Then I recruited friends
of mine, like my friend Hans Carell and Sweden, who's the former chief counsel of the whole
United Nations, and asked him and others to work with these young people, and to represent
to turn that into what looks exactly like a UN resolution. It's just written by a bunch
of kids all around the world.
We then sent that to every permanent representative,
every government represented at the UN.
And that was why working with the German and Spanish
governments, why the language is centralized
from that document, is about to pass the UN.
And that doesn't mean that just passing a UN General
Assembly resolution changes anything.
But we think that there's a model of engaging people, just like you're talking about with these people who are outside
of the traditional power structures and who want to have a voice, but I think we need to
give a little bit of structure because just going, I'm a big fan of global citizen, but
just going to a global citizen concert and waving your iPhone back and forth
and tweeting about it isn't enough to drive the kind of change that's required. We need to come
together even in untraditional ways and articulate the change we want and build popular movements to
make that happen. And popular means scale and movements of scale that actually like were at the individual level do something and that
That's then magnified with the scale to actually have a significant impact. I mean
At its best you hear a lot of folks talk about the various
Cryptocurrencies as possibly helping you have young people get involved in
Challenging the power structures
by challenging the monetary system. Some of it is number go up, people get excited when
they can make a little bit of money. But that's actually almost like a entry point because
you almost feel empowered. And because of that that you start to think about some of these philosophical ideas that I as a young person
have the power to change the world. All of these senior folks in the position of power, they were like, first of all, they were once young and powerless like me. And I could be part of the next generation
that makes a change. Well, the things I see that are wrong with the world, I can make
it better. And it's very true that the overly powerful nations of the world could be
a relic of the past. That could be a 20th century and before idea that was tried create a lot of benefit, but
we also saw the problems with that kind of world, extreme nationalism.
We see the benefits and the problems of the Cold War, arguably Cold War got us to the
moon, but there could be a lot of other different mechanisms that inspired
competition, especially friendly competition between nations versus adversarial competition that
resulted in the response to COVID, for example, with China, the United States, and Russia, and
the secrecy, the censorship. Yeah, and all the things that are basically against the spirit of science and
resulted in the loss of trillions of dollars in the cost of countless lives.
What gives you hope about the future, Jamie? Well, one of the things you mentioned
cryptocurrency, and then as you know better than most, there's cryptocurrency.
And then underneath the cryptocurrency there's the blockchain and the distributed ledger.
And then like we talked about, there are all these young people who are able to connect
with each other, to organize in new ways.
And I work with these young people every single day through one shared world primarily,
but also other things.
And there's so much optimism, there's so much hope
that I just have a lot of faith
that we're going to figure something out of them.
I'm an optimist by nature.
And that doesn't mean that we need to be blind to the dangers.
There are very, very real dangers, but just given half the chance, people want to be good,
people want to do the right thing.
And I do believe that there's a role, I mean, there's a role for the, at least near term for
governments, but there's always a role for leadership.
And I guess like a
Gramscian in the sense that I think that we need to create frameworks and
structures that allow leaders to emerge. And we need to build norms so that the
leaders who emerge are leaders who call on us inspire our best instincts
and not drive us toward our worst.
But I really see a lot of hope.
And when you say this all the time in your podcast,
and you may even be more optimistic to me
because you look at the darkest moments of human history
and see hope, but we're kind of a crazy, wonderful species. I mean,
yes, we figured out ways to slaughter each other at scale. But we've come up with these wonderful
philosophies about love and all of those things. And yeah, maybe the bonobos have some love in
their cultures. But this we're kind of a wonderful wonderful magical species. And if we just can create enough of an infrastructure, it doesn't need to be and shouldn't be controlling just enough
of an infrastructure so that people are stakeholders, feel like they're stakeholders in contributing
to a positive story. I just really feel that this guy is the limit.
So if there's somebody who is young right now, somebody in high school, somebody in college listening to you, you've done a lot of incredible things. You're respected
by a lot of the elites you're respected by the people. So you're both able to sort of,
you know, speak to all groups, walk through the fire.
Like you mentioned with this lab leak,
what advice would you give to young kids today
that are inspired by your story?
Well, thank you.
I mean, I think there's one, there's lots of,
I'm honored if anybody is inspired.
But it's the same thing as I said with the science that it's all about values,
the core of everything is knowing who you are. And so yes, I mean, there's the broader thing of
follow your passions, a creative mind, and an inquisitive mind is the core of everything because
the knowledge base is constantly sharing, so learning how to learn. is the core of everything because the knowledge base is constantly sharing,
so learning how to learn.
But the core of everything is investing in knowing
who you are and what you stand for.
Because that's the way, that's the path
to leading a meaningful life, to contributing,
to not feeling alienated from your life as you get older.
And just like you live, it's an ongoing process.
And we all make mistakes and we all kind of travel down wrong paths and just have some
love for yourself and recognize that just at every like I was saying with the Iron Man,
just when you think there's
no possibility that you can go on, there's a 100% possibility that you can go on.
And just when you think that nothing better will happen to you, there's a 100% chance
that something better will happen to you.
You just got to keep going.
Jamie, this has been a fan of yours. I think first heard
you're on your Rogen experience, but you've been following your work. Your bold, fearless
work with the speaking about the lab leak and everything you represent from your brilliance,
your kindness and the fact that you've spent your value of talent with me today, and now I officially
made you miss your flight. And the fact that you said that whether you were being nice or not,
I don't know that you will be okay with that means the world to me. And I'm really honored
that you have spent your talent with me today. Well, really, it's been such a great pleasure.
And then thank you for creating a forum to have these kinds of long
conversations. So I really enjoyed it and thank you and if anybody has now listened for what's
it been five and a half hours. Yeah. Thank you for listening. Five hour club. Exactly.
Thank you, Jamie. Thanks, Lex. Thanks for listening to this conversation with Jamie Metzel.
To support this podcast, please check out our sponsors in the description. And now let me leave you
some words from Richard Feynman about science and religion, which I think also applies to science
and geopolitics. Because I believe scientists have the responsibility to think broadly about the world, so that they may understand the bigger impact of their inventions.
The quote goes like this.
In this age of specialization, men who thoroughly know one field are often incompetent to discuss
another.
The old problems, such as the relation of science and religion, are still with us, and I believe present as difficult dilemmas as ever,
but they are not often publicly discussed because of the limitations of specialization.
Thank you.