Anonymous ID: f5e5cb May 12, 2021, 7:36 a.m. No.13643743   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Mistake? The "PLANDEMIC" worked just the way it was designed. OBAMA / BIDEN Pandemic lock down EO, along with the Gates 10 yr Vax plan… DUH!!

 

Expert panel says mistakes led to coronavirus pandemic, but stops short of holding countries, leaders to account

 

About a year ago, the director general of the World Health Organization asked a group of experts to assess an urgent question: How did we get into this pandemic mess?

 

On Wednesday, the 13-member group, known as the Independent Panel for Pandemic Preparedness and Response, delivered a lengthy, significant, but ultimately evasive answer.

 

The panel reconstructs how early-warning systems failed and agencies faltered, giving the virus time to spread from the central Chinese heartland to the rest of the world, humbling empires and killing millions as it went.

 

The experts conclude that the rules on emerging infectious threats are inadequate, that the WHO could have acted faster and that many governments ignored warnings - with disastrous results. They call for the creation of a new global health threat council, reforms to the WHO, updates to the rules governing emerging health threats and action on vaccine equity.

 

"The current system failed to protect us from the COVID-19 pandemic. And if we do not act to change it now, it will not protect us from the next pandemic threat," panel co-chair Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, the former president of Liberia, said in a statement released with the reports.

 

Although the panel presents what is arguably the most authoritative reconstruction of what happened at a global level, its account often stops short of holding powerful actors to account, undercutting its own findings and raising questions about the feasibility of its calls for reform.

 

Here is our guide to what the panel says about what happened - and what is left unsaid.

 

  • What happened in Wuhan?

 

One of the panel's most notable contributions is tucked away in background materials: an hour-by-hour, day-by-day reconstruction of what happened in Wuhan, China, from December 2019 through January 2020.

 

Through interviews with officials, a review of WHO documents and a close read of relevant reporting and research, we are reminded, for instance, that Chinese labs started sequencing the new virus before the WHO was even aware that an outbreak was underway.

 

We see clearly and painfully how potentially lifesaving information emerged on social media and through Chinese-language press reports rather than through official channels designed to identify precisely this kind of threat.

 

In footnotes to the timeline, the panel cites Washington Post reporting about how officials silenced whistleblowers and encouraged residents to keep attending public events despite risks. It also cites an Associated Press series that suggested China's top leaders, including President Xi Jinping, were involved in the response.

 

But the main report, for the most part, does not dwell on the reasons for the "delay, hesitation and denial" it identifies. It does not consider which officials are to blame, nor does it address in detail how its proposed reforms would get around obfuscation the next time around. A news release for the panel does not use the word "China" at all.

 

"The intention of the Panel in examining in detail the steps taken to respond to COVID-19 is not to assign blame," the panel writes, "but rather to understand what took place and what, if anything, could be done differently if similar circumstances arise again."

 

  • Evaluating the WHO response:

 

Though the panel treads carefully on the topic of China, it takes a slightly more confident stance evaluating the WHO, spotlighting shortcomings but stopping short of calling out specific leaders.

 

The panel paints a picture of an agency that tried to act quickly but was constrained by an outdated set of rules known as the International Health Regulations, or IHR, for the most part arguing that the agency's hands were tied, rather than dissecting what it could have done better.

 

"In this pandemic, the efforts of its leadership and staff have been unstinting but structural problems have been exposed," the report says.

 

On two key issues in particular - the WHO's early guidance on human-to-human transmission and the delay in declaring an emergency - the panel identifies deficiencies but declines to name names.

 

more

https://www.yahoo.com/news/expert-panel-says-mistakes-led-104533531.html

Anonymous ID: f5e5cb May 12, 2021, 7:49 a.m. No.13643831   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3844 >>3847 >>3869

Do your EYES deceive you…

SOYa

KEK

 

Female biker was a 50-year-old man using FaceApp. After he confessed, his followers liked him even more.

 

Soya no Sohi attracted tens of thousands of Twitter followers as a pretty, young motorcycle enthusiast burning up the scenic roadways of northern Japan, posting daily photos as she journeyed across mountains and beaches on her classic Yamaha sport bikes.

 

Then in March, the social media darling came clean: Soya was actually Yasuo Nakajima, a 50-year-old man who had used the iPhone app FaceApp to transform his face in every shot. The more than 300 selfies he had posted since last summer - the ones with the dewy skin and the perfect smile - were all computer-generated fakes.

 

His revelation ignited a Japanese media sensation: the "ultimate catfish" who had fooled the Internet into adoring an imaginary woman. Nakajima told a variety show that he'd adopted the persona because no one wants to read what a normal middle-age man posts.

 

Then something unusual happened: His follower count soared. His fans did not voice betrayal or alarm over the year-long fraud; many said they had cared more about his personality than his face. "This beautiful woman only exists within Soya-san," one Twitter account said, attaching a genderless Japanese title connoting respect. Said another: "I've come to like you even more."

 

With a few taps, Nakajima had capitalized on a popular kind of artificial intelligence with a strange power to warp the world. Millions have used such "facial filters" to erase their wrinkles, revamp their hairstyles and "enhance" their appearance in photos - mostly so they could post them on social media, where they could be tagged, analyzed and ranked by shares and likes.

 

But Nakajima had pushed the technology to its natural conclusion: He had not just refined his face, he'd invented a new one. With it, he had gained the trust and affection of a bunch of strangers who had no clue who he really was. And since his unmasking, he's been posting more than ever as smiling Soya, carrying on the fantasy.

 

To Nakajima and his fans, Soya's fame illustrated a simple truth: that social media is less a reflection of who we are, and more a performance of who we want to be. In a video call with The Washington Post one Saturday night last month from his home in Japan, his first international interview, Nakajima said the charade had helped him express a side of his personality he'd been afraid to show the world.

 

"The only thing I'm creating is, basically, my appearance. Everything else is me," he said.

 

https://www.yahoo.com/lifestyle/female-biker-50-old-man-223952911.html