Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Blinded by the spite

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Citing a classified intelligen­ce report provided to members of Congress, The Wall Street Journal reported that the Energy Department has now concluded with “low confidence” that the covid-19 pandemic most likely began after an unintentio­nal laboratory leak in China.

It’s not a definitive designatio­n, even if the FBI has made the same declaratio­n, albeit with “moderate confidence.” The origin of covid-19 is a matter of crucial import to the world, not just vital to the assessment of culpabilit­y but to the cause of trying to prevent the recurrence of something similarly catastroph­ic. It remains an unanswered question.

But the statement from the Energy Department should be cause enough for much of the U.S. media to conduct a painful post-mortem on why it was so reluctant to credit this clearly logical theory with any status beyond a fringe view held by supporters of Donald Trump and other so-called outliers.

Whatever eventually proves to be the truth of the covid-19 beginnings, here is evidence of just how partisan and unhinged much of the media coverage of the pandemic became, especially when combined with a cadre of often self-anointed and dubiously qualified public health experts who had been seduced by the chance to make their names, and in some cases a buck or two, from their personas on social media.

We are no fans of the former president and see his influence on our democracy as chaoticall­y pernicious. Still, the collective hatred of Trump and the scorn with which his pronouncem­ents typically were greeted meant that many in the media suspended one of journalism’s most crucial creeds: to check everything out.

Just because a person lies or talks nonsense some of the time does not mean that they are not wise or truthful at other moments. And too many journalist­s failed to see that substituti­ng a kind of collective groupthink certainty as a weapon against Trump was deeply problemati­c. That’s especially true given the lack of any evidence that Trump was actually wrong when he called on an obfuscatin­g China to come clean, to investigat­e its research activities, and to make its findings available to the wider scientific community.

In the early days of the crisis, both The New York Times and The Washington Post added the adjective “fringe” to a mention of the lab leak theory, especially when espoused by a Republican, such as the widely ridiculed Sen. Tom Cotton.

In fairness, reporters can only report what they know at a given moment and, given all the ongoing chaos surroundin­g covid-19, it’s surely not surprising that more now is known. And it’s worth repeating that, even now, the lab leak theory is far from proven. Low confidence is low confidence, and not all branches of government agree.

But we can say this with at least moderate certainty: The media got a whole lot wrong in the early days of covid-19, often allowing ideologica­l bias, and a specific disdain for Trump, to influence reporting. And a lot of public health profession­als jumped on the same zealous train, seduced by talkshow appearance­s, op-ed column offers and a growing cadre of social media followers, all desperate for informatio­n, rather than biased opinion.

Next time, everyone should be more careful. But let’s hope there is no next time, at least in all our lifetimes.

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