From Jonathan Turley.
JT is on target.
Note how many of the people JT mentions as trying to limit
free speech also falsely accused their political opponents of doing it.
Here is JT’s comment.
Dr. Jay’s Slam Dunk:
Blacklisted Scientist Receives Prestigious Award for “Intellectual Freedom”
Below is my column in the New York Post on the prestigious
award given to Stanford Professor Dr. Jay Bhattacharya last week and what it
has to say about those who censored, blacklisted, and vilified him for the last
four years. In celebrating his fight for “intellectual freedom,” the National
Academy effectively condemned those who joined the mob against him as well as
the many professors who stayed silent as he and others were targeted.
Here is the column:
Few in the media seemed eager to attend a ceremony last week
in Washington, D.C., where the prestigious American Academy of Sciences and
Letters was awarding its top intellectual freedom award.
The problem may have been the recipient: Stanford Professor
Dr. Jay Bhattacharya.
Bhattacharya has spent years being vilified by the media
over his dissenting views on the pandemic. As one of the signatories of the
2020 Great Barrington Declaration, he was canceled, censored, and even received
death threats.
That open letter called on government officials and
public health authorities to rethink the mandatory lockdowns and other extreme
measures in light of past pandemics.
All the signatories became targets of an orthodoxy enforced
by an alliance of political, corporate, media, and academic groups. Most were
blocked on social media despite being accomplished scientists with expertise in
this area.
It did not matter that positions once denounced as
“conspiracy theories” have been recognized or embraced by many.
Some argued that there was no need to shut down schools,
which has led to a crisis in mental illness among the young and the loss of
critical years of education. Other nations heeded such advice with more limited
shutdowns (including keeping schools open) and did not experience our losses.
Others argued that the virus’s origin was likely the Chinese
research lab in Wuhan. That position was denounced by the Washington Post as a
“debunked” coronavirus “conspiracy theory.” The New York
Times Science and Health reporter Apoorva Mandavilli called any mention of the lab theory “racist.”
Federal agencies now support the lab theory as the most
likely based on the scientific evidence.
Likewise, many questioned the efficacy of those blue
surgical masks and supported natural immunity to the virus — both positions
were later recognized by the government.
Others questioned the six-foot rule used to shut down many
businesses as unsupported by science. In congressional testimony, Dr. Anthony
Fauci recently admitted that the 6-foot rule “sort of just appeared” and
“wasn’t based on data.” Yet not only did the rule result in heavily enforced
rules (and meltdowns) in public areas, the media further ostracized dissenting
critics.
Again, Fauci and other scientists did little to stand up for
these scientists or call for free speech to be protected. As I discuss in my
new book, “The Indispensable Right,” the result is that we
never really had a national debate on many of these issues and the result of
massive social and economic costs.
I spoke at the University of Chicago with Bhattacharya and
other dissenting scientists in the front row a couple of years ago. After the
event, I asked them how many had been welcomed back to their faculties or
associations since the recognition of some of their positions.
They all said that they were still treated as pariahs for
challenging the groupthink culture.
Now the scientific community is recognizing the courage
shown by Bhattacharya and others with its annual Robert J. Zimmer Medal for
Intellectual Freedom.
So what about all of those in government, academia, and the
media who spent years hounding these scientists?
Biden Administration officials and Democratic members
targeted Bhattacharya and demanded his censorship. For example, Rep. Raja
Krishnamoorthi (D-Ill.) attacked Bhattacharya and others who challenged
the official narrative during the pandemic. Krishnamoorthi expressed
outrage that the scientists were even allowed to testify as “a purveyor of
COVID-19 misinformation.”
Journalists and columnists also supported the censorship and
blacklisting of these scientists. In the Los Angeles Times, columnist Michael
Hiltzik decried how “we’re living in an upside-down world” because Stanford
allowed these scientists to speak at a scientific forum. He was outraged that,
while “Bhattacharya’s name doesn’t appear in the event announcement,” he was an
event organizer. Hiltzik also wrote a column titled “The COVID lab leak claim isn’t just an attack on science, but a
threat to public health.”
Then there are those lionized censors at Twitter who
shadow-banned Bhattacharya. As former CEO Parag Agrawal generally explained,
the “focus [was] less on thinking about free speech … [but[ who can be heard.”
None of this means that Bhattacharya or others were right in
all of their views. Instead, many of the most influential voices in the media,
government, and academia worked to prevent this discussion from occurring when
it was most needed.
There is still a debate over Bhattacharya’s “herd immunity”
theories, but there is little debate over the herd mentality used to cancel
him.
The Academy was right to honor Bhattacharya. It is equally
right to condemn all those who sought to silence a scientist who is now being
praised for resisting their campaign to silence him and others.
No comments:
Post a Comment