We all judge messages by the messenger. If our trust (or lack of it) is grounded in experience, this pattern is rational: we would be foolish to trust someone who in the past has repeatedly misled us, been mistaken or given us bad advice. We wouldn’t go back to a doctor who had misdiagnosed a serious disease or a car mechanic who had cheated us. We wouldn’t stick with a financial adviser whose stock tips had consistently proved wrong.
To be clear, most scientists think animal spillover is the most likely explanation because that’s where most new diseases come from. True, the source animal has not yet been identified, but it took decades to determine that HIV was derived from primates. True, there is a lab in Wuhan that studies bat viruses, but it’s typical for scientists to study viruses endemic to their regions. And blaming humans for disease is as old as disease itself.
But what do we do when evidence suggests that a claim might be right, even if the person making it has been repeatedly wrong? Here it’s helpful to distinguish between two forms of the lab-leak theory: the malevolent and the accidental. The malevolent version holds that China deliberately released the virus. I know of no credible scientists who embrace that idea, and it strikes me as unlikely because politicians with even the most meager understanding of pandemics would realize that any deliberately released virus would affect China as much as or more than the countries to which they hoped to spread it.
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