American Researcher Finds Damning Evidence That Seems To Point To A Chinese Cover-Up
The Biden Administration decided to do a 90-day review into the origins of COVID. They likely finally realized that Trump and Mike Pompeo were probably right about it being leaked from a lab in Wuhan. So far they have not found any smoking guns. But an American Scientists hs noticed something interesting that could point to a blatant cover-up on China's part. Dr. Jesse Bloom claims the Chinese deleted their original COVID sequence data from the National Institute of Health, and you have to get special permission to have them delete entries.
"An American scientist recovered the deleted data from cloud storage and published his analysis Tuesday. The paper, "Recovery of deleted deep sequencing data sheds more light on the early Wuhan SARS-CoV-2 epidemic," suggests that early virus samples from the Wuhan seafood market that until now have been the focus of most studies on the origins of the pandemic "are not fully representative of the viruses actually present in Wuhan at that time."
The paper is not yet peer-reviewed, and its findings should not yet be considered conclusive. The recovered virus samples do not support either the "lab leak" hypothesis or the "natural origins" hypothesis of the origins of SARS-CoV-2, according to scientists who have examined the paper. But these scientists say it does suggest the virus was spreading in Wuhan earlier than the Chinese government claimed, and the paper's author, Dr. Jesse Bloom, says his findings should reinforce skepticism that China has fully shared all relevant data on COVID-19.
The SARS-CoV-2 sequences obtained by the Chinese researchers were uploaded to the NIH's Sequence Read Archive (SRA), a database for storing what are essentially maps of how viruses are built. These sequences can help scientists study how a virus originated and evolved over time, and such a study may lead to knowledge that can prevent the next pandemic.
But when Bloom went to the SRA to examine the Chinese sequences, he found the data had been deleted. He explained in his paper that the SRA "is designed as a permanent archive of deep sequencing data." The only circumstances under which data can be removed is if the original researchers make an email request to have it deleted, provide reasons for doing so, and have that request approved by SRA staff.
Bloom attempted to contact the Wuhan University researchers asking why they requested the data be deleted but did not receive a response. He noted in his paper that "there is no plausible scientific reason for the deletion" and suggested, "it, therefore, seems likely the sequences were deleted to obscure their existence."
This is why you strike when the iron is hot. We should have been investigating China last year when this Pandemic started. But instead, because of the MSM and Liberals claiming it was xenophobic to accuse China, we did nothing. So now the communist country has had plenty of time to thoroughly destroy any trace of their involvement. This deleted record may be the last sign of their cover-up attempt.