How False Narratives Are Protected
The experts and journalists tell us we are ‘dopes’ and should remain silent.
In my research into “early spread,” one oddity that’s jumped out at me is how some people with antibody evidence of early infection seem to intuitively know this information is taboo or controversial. Some people clearly sense when they’re saying something that “goes against the narrative” … and this makes them very nervous.
On one level, this has always bothered me. What’s wrong with simply telling the truth? For an investigative journalist, it’s frustrating that some people with important information won’t go on the record and provide such information.
On the other hand, I get why some people would prefer to remain anonymous or not be mentioned in any story at all. Fear rules the thinking of just-about everyone (a maxim that also explains how those who create said fear effectively rule the world).
Many people with important information clearly fear some type of reprisals even if they are simply telling the truth. The disturbing point is that many of these people aren’t being paranoid. They probably would suffer some kind of negative blowback if they told the truth. This could be as extreme as losing a job or as prosaic as having friends or family members treat them differently because they said something others don’t agree with.
The story of ‘Jean’ from Washington state ….
I started thinking about this topic when I went back and re-read a couple of stories published by The Seattle Times that document two residents of Snohomish County who almost certainly had Covid in December 2019.
One of these two residents was not named. However, the other resident did exhibit some level of courage by allowing a reporter to interview her. But the lady was only identified in the story by her middle name. So “Jean,” a 64-year-old retired nurse from a rural area of Washington state, thinks she had Covid.
My hunch is Jean intuitively knew her story might upset some powerful people - people who did not want to “confirm” any evidence that Americans were coming down with this illness before the Wuhan Outbreak in China.
Or maybe Jean thought her claims might bother some of her friends and neighbors, friends who always trust the experts and authorities and don’t like it when anyone goes against, say, the pronouncements of Anthony Fauci … or CNN.
For whatever reason, Jean settled on a compromise. She’d share her story, but she wouldn’t use her full name.
And the example of Mayor Michael Melham ….
After researching the case of another “early spread” candidate, I understand why Jean might have wanted to be identified only by her middle name.
Michael Melham happens to be the mayor of Belleville, New Jersey. Along with Jean and the other unknown person from Washington, Melham is among the 17 Americans I’ve identified in previous articles as Americans who almost certainly had Covid weeks or months before the virus was supposed to be circulating in our country.
Michael Melham did go public with his story. Among the news organizations covering his claim was NJ.com.
The headline from the “straight news” piece makes this news organization’s point, as well as my point:
“N.J. mayor makes unfounded claim that he had coronavirus in November.”
One piece of yellow journalism apparently wasn’t enough so the news organization also published a scathing opinion column the next day.
Wrote columnist Jeremy Schneider:
“It needs to be said. Again. This is not the time for voluntary stupidity. If you have something to say about the coronavirus that is not supported by proven truths presented by experts, you should really, really just keep it to yourself. People are dying and you are almost certainly not an epidemiologist. Be quiet and listen.”
Schneider also called the people who suspect they may have had Covid before the experts said was possible, “a sub-sect of well-meaning dopes on social media.”
And although readers had already gotten the author’s unsubtle point - our official guidance - the writer made it again in the smear piece he was happy to pen: “Stay safe, listen to the experts.”
Basically, Schneider is calling Mayor Melham, and anyone else who believes they had Covid before mid-January 2020, idiots. It never occurs to the author he might be the real idiot. Nor does it occur to him that the experts he thinks are infallible may be using people like himself to advance their misery-producing agendas.
Why don’t more people come forward? Well …
Why don’t more people come forward as whistleblowers? Here we probably have part of our answer.
But the sociology and psychology component that really fascinates me is how so many people quickly accept the authorized “narrative” and then have a visceral reaction to people who do not happen to subscribe to this thinking.
This evidence of mass “groupthink” can also be seen from reading the 1,600 reader comments that followed a Fox News story on Michael Melham’s claim.
As I was doing my “due diligence” on early spread, I think I read every one of these comments. I would say that 95 percent of commenters thought Melham was simply wrong in thinking he had Covid or, like the NJ.com columnist, were angered the mayor had the temerity to share his own story and personal opinions.
What I’m really trying to understand is why so many people are so quick to share their disgust with individuals who don’t think like they do.
People with important information like Jean who are afraid to use their full name (or those who won’t come forward at all) must conclude that the potential wrath of their peers is not worth the benefits … and/or that there are no benefits from going against the narrative.
Due to this dynamic, the public is unlikely to learn important, narrative-changing information. The only thing that might change some harmful and false narratives is if people did come forward and expose this. However, in the “home of the brave” very few people are bold enough to do this.
And as we saw above, even when people like Mayor Melham do come forward, their revelations are dismissed or ridiculed by the people who matter - the watchdog press and authorities. That is, everything works to “protect the narrative.”
The real villain remains the AWOL ‘watchdog’ press
Which leads me to my final depressing point: If 99 percent of the people posting in Reader Comments sections happen to be dead wrong, this wouldn’t matter if, say, 10 percent of the country’s journalists were real skeptics and did the job of real journalists.
If this was the case, truth-seeking journalists would write important stories that might influence the 90 percent of the population who’ve been sold a bill of goods. That is, journalists - if they did their most important job - could maybe change a few bogus or dubious narratives.
But this isn’t going to happen because, at least regarding Covid narratives, the group think is 100 percent.
So what we have is some kind of “Catch-22” self-protecting loop of WrongThink. In such a world, the probability any taboo truths could break through the barricades erected by our “gatekeepers of the news” is probably zero. No false narratives will ever be de-bunked.
The journalists who are supposed to challenge narratives won’t do it because they always believe authorities and experts. As most people get their information from mainstream journalists, it’s a case of the dumb leading the …. ah, non-critical thinkers.
Anyway, all of this probably explains, at least in part, why so many would-be whistleblowers are afraid to blow any whistles.
In summary, many people intuitively sense when they posses information that contradicts the official narrative. This Sixth Sense makes many people leery of coming forward or attaching their name to revelations that go against conventional wisdom .
While this is a small observation, the implications which flow from it are probably large. For example, the quality of life of our children and grandchildren will be lower because important truths were not previously acknowledged, because rotten leaders were not previously exposed.
It might be counter-intuitive, but it’s not the false opinions of the masses that matter. It’s the views of a very small minority of truth-revealing contrarians, a group that’s too often afraid to come forward and reveal what they know.
Those who smear, bully or dismiss such people know not what they do … nor the harm they are really causing.
There is a happy post-script to this story. It was clear that Mayor Melham was not popular with NJ.com journalists or even readers of the Fox News web page back in May 2020. However, I did read that Mayor Melham won re-election in a landslide. So apparently the people who know him best in his town (population 39,000) either admire him for saying what he believes or don't care one way or the other.
I was happy to see he won as I admire anyone who says what they think and can cite reasons for their opinions. Mayor Melham did this because he thought it could help others. That is, he doesn't think he was the only local resident who had Covid. These people should be getting medical attention and follow-up care as well, the Mayor believes.
Mayor Melham wasn't worried about being politically correct, he seems to be interested in finding the truth in the cause of real science. And he has never wavered in his conviction. He's not putting his finger into the air to check the wind currents like many other politicians.
And he quickly answered several of my emailed questions. So I'm a fan. Those juvenile columns attacking him didn't seem to affect him at all. I also bet a lot more people now believe him.
In the headline, NJ.com labels the mayor’s claim as “unfounded” which means: “having no foundation or basis in fact.”
The “foundation” of Mayor Melham’s claim would be that he had definite symptoms in November 2019 and then got not one but two positive antibody test results. Also, I don’t think NJ.com ever reported the fact that Mayor Melham later got another positive antibody result. I broke that news from my computer in Troy, Alabama (by simply emailing a question to the mayor), questions he quickly answered - unlike NJ public health officials and people in the governor’s office who don't answer legit questions.
But journalist Jennings actually did find a quote from one expert, who actually completely contradicted the “unfounded” headline:
From the story: “Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Association, told USA Today in March that “we will probably find that this disease was here earlier than we thought.”
My comment: So - per Mayor Melham’s claim and evidence - we just found what that expert said we would probably find.
“Benjamin also said, though, that it is “plausible but not likely” that the coronavirus arrived as early as November and December ..”
My comment: The expert you quoted said it was “plausible” that someone could have Covid in November. But still you and your colleague attack Mayor Melham for telling a giant fib. Please look up the definition of the word “plausible” - it is is not the same as “unfounded.”
Continuing with the expert's quote: “.. And even then, early cases would have likely been linked to travel to China and not widespread, he said.
My comment: This sounds like another “expert” protecting the narrative or just regurgitating whatever groupthink line he’d been fed - i.e. This virus came from China and it didn’t leave China until January 2020. That expert looks like a dumb ass today. Read my stories about all the Americans who got Covid in November and December who’d never been out of the country. I guess another journalist could quote my stories ... or maybe my journalism doesn't count.