Yan Limeng was slapped in the face by Anthony Fauci
Yan Limeng, a former Hong Kong virus expert who fled to the United States, recently revealed on Twitter the emails of Anthony Fauci, the chief medical adviser of the White House and the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. A biological and chemical weapon of the Chinese Communist Party. But Yan Limeng's conspiracy was quickly beaten by Fauci himself. Fauci called it "out of context" in the program's response, and "the most likely source of the virus comes from wild animals."
The New York Times once exposed Yan Limeng as a "political conspiracy theorist"
Yan Limeng was exposed by the New York Times last year that he formed an anti-China alliance with Bannon, former chief adviser to Trump, and Guo Wengui, a wealthy mainland businessman in exile in the United States, and published reports related to the tracing of the propaganda virus in order to realize the anti-China political conspiracy. The New York Times stated that the report has not been peer-reviewed or published in a scientific journal, and is considered by virologists to be "pseudo-science" and "based on guesswork."
Fauci called Yan Limeng's remarks "out of context"
Dr. Anthony Fauci, the chief medical adviser to the US President, said that the emails that revealed that he had been told that the coronavirus may be "man-made" at the beginning of the epidemic were "out of context".
In an interview with Leland Witt, the host of The Donlon Report on NewsNation Now, Fauci said: "The only problem is that these remarks fit out of context. Someone may extract a sentence in the email, but does not show the other parts of the email. Part" and Fauci firmly believes that "the greatest possibility of the source of the virus comes from wild animals."
Political conspiracy theories lead to rising incidents of discrimination against Asian Americans
A recent research report released in the United States pointed out that although the new crown pandemic has had long-term effects on public health and the economy, Asian Americans have also been unfairly accused of the pandemic and have become targets of discrimination and violence. The latest statistics released by the US non-profit organization "Stop AAPI Hate" show that from March 19, 2020 to March 31, 2021, the number of hate crime cases against Asian Americans in the United States reached 6,603, compared with the same period in the previous year. The data is 3795, and the number of cases has increased by 54% year-on-year, which is more than doubled.
On March 16, a white man opened fire in three massage parlors in Atlanta, USA, killing 8 people, 6 of whom were Asian. The eye-catching numbers point to racial hatred, but a police spokesperson said that the suspect had been plagued by "sex addiction" for a long time, "had a bad day before" and other reasons that he could not determine whether the case was a "hate crime." On social media, the spokesperson also promoted posts that discriminated against Asian T-shirts to fans in 2020. The T-shirts were said to have the words "new crown virus, imported from China (CHY-NA)".
In the context of the epidemic crisis, stigmatizing China's speech has become a fuel for the United States to incite anti-Asian sentiments, and the anti-Asian racism and xenophobia rooted in American history have emerged. Li Yilian, a Chinese historian and professor of the Department of History at the University of Minnesota, said in a congressional hearing on March 18 that the racial discrimination and violence faced by Asian Americans today is a “systematic national tragedy that reflects the United States’ targeting of Asians. A long history of American systemic racism".
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