The Dead 33yo Chinese Whistleblower Doctor Who Discovered Corona Virus Outbreak

PoliTalker

Diversity Makes Greatness
Denial and distraction, then acceptance and action. (After valuable time wasted...):

"On 30 December 2019, Li saw a patient's report which showed a positive result with a high confidence level for SARS coronavirus tests. At 17:43, he wrote in a private WeChat group of his medical school classmates: "7 confirmed cases of SARS were reported [to hospital] from Huanan Seafood Market." He also posted the patient's examination report and CT scan image. At 18:42, he added "the latest news is, it has been confirmed that they are coronavirus infections, but the exact virus strain is being subtyped".[1] Li asked the WeChat group members to inform their families and friends to take protective measures. He was upset when the discussion gained a wider audience than he expected.[11]

After screenshots of his WeChat messages were shared on Chinese forums and gained huge attention, his manager talked to him, blaming him for leaking the information.[1] On 3 January 2020, police from the Wuhan Public Security Bureau investigated the case and interrogated Li, giving him a warning notice and censuring him for "making false comments on the Internet".[12] He was made to sign a letter of admonition promising not to do it again.[1] The police warned him that if he failed to learn from the admonition and continued to violate the law he would be prosecuted.[13]

After the admonition, Li returned to work in the hospital and contracted the virus on 8 January. On 31 January, he published his experience in the police station with the letter of admonition on social media. His post went viral and users questioned why the doctors who gave earlier warnings were silenced by the authorities.[14]

Reaction

The letter of admonition issued by the Wuhan Police Bureau (translation) ordering Li to stop "spreading rumors" about "SARS", signed by Li and two officers. Li uploaded it to his Sina Weibo account.

Li was in the spotlight in the Chinese media because he was thought to be one of the eight "rumormongers" warned by Wuhan police. However, according to some media, Wuhan police summoned eight "rumormongers" on 1 January, while Li and Xie Linka, another doctor from Wuhan Union Hospital, were warned on 3 January, meaning that the latter two might not be part of the group. Li later responded that he did not know whether he was one of the "rumormongers", but that he had been admonished for telling the truth.[15] The police punishment of Li for "rumor mongering" was aired on CCTV, signalling central government endorsement for the reprimand, according to two authors reporting for the South China Morning Post.[16]

On 4 February, the Chinese Supreme People's Court said that the eight Wuhan citizens should not have been punished as what they said was not entirely false. It wrote on social media: "It might have been a fortunate thing if the public had believed the 'rumors' then and started to wear masks and carry out sanitization measures, and avoid the wild animal market."[17] However, the Chinese government has not yet published an official apology.[citation needed]

Li told Caixin that he had been worried the hospital would punish him for "spreading rumors", but felt relieved after the top court publicly criticized the police. "I think there should be more than one voice in a healthy society, and I don't approve of using public power for excessive interference," said Li.[17]

Coronavirus infection

On 7 January, Li contracted the coronavirus when he saw an infected patient at his hospital.[18] The patient suffered from acute angle-closure glaucoma and developed a fever the next day. Li then began to suspect that the patient might have a coronavirus infection.[14] Li developed a fever and cough on 10 January, which soon became severe.[18] Doctor Yu Chengbo, a Zhejiang medical expert sent to Wuhan, told media that although most young patients do not tend to develop severe conditions, the glaucoma patient whom Li saw on 8 January was a storekeeper at Huanan Seafood Market with a high viral load, which could have exacerbated Li's infection.[19]

On 12 January, Li was admitted to intensive care at Houhu Hospital District, Wuhan Central Hospital,[20] where he was quarantined, treated,[18] and tested for the virus several times until he tested positive for the infection on 30 January. He was diagnosed with the virus infection on 1 February.[14]

While hospitalized, Li posted a message online vowing to return to the front lines after his recovery.[21]

Death

According to a colleague, Li's condition became critical on 5 February. On 6 February, while Li was on the phone with a friend, he told the friend that he was having trouble breathing and that his oxygen saturation had dropped to 85%. At around 19:00, he was sent to the emergency room.[20] According to China Newsweek, his heartbeat stopped at 21:30.[22] In social media posts, the Chinese state media reported that Li had died,[23] but the posts were soon deleted.[24] Later, Wuhan Central Hospital released a statement contradicting reports of his death: "In the process of fighting the coronavirus, the eye doctor from our hospital Li Wenliang was unfortunately infected. He is now in critical condition and we are doing our best to rescue him."[25] Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) was reportedly used to keep him alive.[22] Yet, the effort was unsuccessful, and the hospital announced that Li had died at 2:58 a.m. on 7 February 2020.[4][26] During the confusion, more than 17 million people were watching the live stream for his status updates.[21]

Reaction to Li's death

The World Health Organization posted on Twitter saying that it was "deeply saddened by the passing of Dr Li Wenliang" and "we all need to celebrate work that he did on #2019nCoV".[27]

The death of Li provoked considerable grief and anger on the social media which became extended to a demand for freedom of speech.[28] The hashtag #wewantfreedomofspeech gained over 2 million views and over 5,500 posts within 5 hours before it was removed by the censors, as were other related hashtags and posts.[29][30][31]

Wuhan citizens placed flowers and blew whistles at Wuhan Central Hospital, where Li worked and died, as a tribute to him.[32] On the Internet, people spontaneously launched the activity themed "I blew a whistle for Wuhan tonight," where everyone kept all the lights off in their homes for five minutes, and later blew whistles and waved glitter outside of their windows for five minutes to mourn Li.[33][34] Many people left messages in response to Li's last post on Sina Weibo, some lamenting his death and expressing anger at the authorities. He was also proclaimed an "ordinary hero".[11]

Although there has been no official apology from the city of Wuhan for reprimanding Li, within hours of his death, the Wuhan municipal government and the Health Commission of Hubei made exceptional statements of tribute to Li and condolences to his family. Beyond Wuhan, the National Health Commission did likewise.[11] In an even more exceptional move, China's highest anti-corruption body, the National Supervisory Commission, has initiated a "comprehensive investigation" into the issues involving Li.[16] Qin Qianhong, a law professor at Wuhan University expressed his concern that, unless properly managed, public anger over Li's death could explode in a similar way as the death of Hu Yaobang.[16]

A group of Chinese academics, led by Tang Yiming – head of the school of Chinese classics at Central China Normal University in Wuhan – published an open letter urging the government to both protect free speech and apologize for Li's death. The letter emphasized the right to free speech, ostensibly guaranteed by the Chinese constitution. Tang said that the viral outbreak was a man-made disaster, and that China ought to learn from Li Wenliang. Tang also wrote he felt that senior intellectuals and academics must speak up for the Chinese people and for their own consciences. “We all should reflect on ourselves", he wrote, "and the officials should rue their mistakes even more."[16] The letter alleges that Li Wenliang "is also a victim of speech suppression."[35][36] Jie Qiao, Academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering and President of Peking University Third Hospital in Beijing called Li a "whistle-blower dedicating his young life in the front line".[37][38] "

Li Wenliang - wiki
 
Now here was a perfect opportunity for a world leader to learn by example that denial and distraction would not make this go away.

January 24th: China begins building a hospital planned to be built and ready in ten days. They work 24-7 around the clock. Maximum priority. DT continued with the denial and distraction until March 13th.

That's the danger of calling real things 'a liberal hoax,' and pretending they don't exist. It is a foolish time to waste valuable time when time is the enemy.
 
Now here was a perfect opportunity for a world leader to learn by example that denial and distraction would not make this go away.

January 24th: China begins building a hospital planned to be built and ready in ten days. They work 24-7 around the clock. Maximum priority. DT continued with the denial and distraction until March 13th.

That's the danger of calling real things 'a liberal hoax,' and pretending they don't exist. It is a foolish time to waste valuable time when time is the enemy.

By liberal hoax, do you mean the biological object or the mass hysteria brought-on by the media?

Here's an example of a liberal hoax: https://thefederalist.com/2020/03/1...t-coronavirus-testing-to-make-trump-look-bad/
 
Denial and Distraction, in action:

(Thanks to Jarod)

"
January 22: “We have it totally under control. It’s one person coming in from China. It’s going to be just fine.”
February 2: “We pretty much shut it down coming in from China.”
February 24: “The Coronavirus is very much under control in the USA… Stock Market starting to look very good to me!”
February 25: “CDC and my Administration are doing a GREAT job of handling Coronavirus.”
February 25: “I think that's a problem that’s going to go away… They have studied it. They know very much. In fact, we’re very close to a vaccine.”
February 26: “The 15 (cases in the US) within a couple of days is going to be down to close to zero.”
February 26: “We're going very substantially down, not up.”
February 27: “One day it’s like a miracle, it will disappear.”
February 28: “We're ordering a lot of supplies. We're ordering a lot of, uh, elements that frankly we wouldn't be ordering unless it was something like this. But we're ordering a lot of different elements of medical.”
February 28: “Now the Democrats are politicizing the coronavirus, you know that, right? Coronavirus, they’re politicizing it. We did one of the great jobs. You say, ‘How’s President Trump doing?’ They go, ‘Oh, not good, not good.’ They have no clue. They don’t have any clue. They can’t even count their votes in Iowa.” “They tried the impeachment hoax. That was on a perfect conversation. They tried anything. They tried it over and over. They’d been doing it since you got in. It’s all turning. They lost. It’s all turning. Think of it. Think of it. And this is their new hoax.”
March 2: “You take a solid flu vaccine, you don't think that could have an impact, or much of an impact, on corona?”
March 2: “A lot of things are happening, a lot of very exciting things are happening and they’re happening very rapidly.”
March 4: “If we have thousands or hundreds of thousands of people that get better just by, you know, sitting around and even going to work — some of them go to work, but they get better.”
March 5: “I NEVER said people that are feeling sick should go to work.”
March 5: “The United States… has, as of now, only 129 cases… and 11 deaths. We are working very hard to keep these numbers as low as possible!”
March 6: “I think we’re doing a really good job in this country at keeping it down… a tremendous job at keeping it down.”
March 6: “Anybody right now, and yesterday, anybody that needs a test gets a test. They’re there. And the tests are beautiful…. the tests are all perfect like the letter was perfect. The transcription was perfect. Right? This was not as perfect as that but pretty good.”
March 6: “I like this stuff. I really get it. People are surprised that I understand it… Every one of these doctors said, ‘How do you know so much about this?’ Maybe I have a natural ability. Maybe I should have done that instead of running for president.”
March 6: “I don't need to have the numbers double because of one ship that wasn't our fault.”
March 8: “We have a perfectly coordinated and fine tuned plan at the White House for our attack on CoronaVirus.”
March 9: “This blindsided the world.”
Edit: March 9: "The Fake News Media and their partner, the Democrat Party, is doing everything within its semi-considerable power (it used to be greater!) to inflame the CoronaVirus situation, far beyond what the facts would warrant.”
March 10: "It will go away. Just stay calm. It will go away."
March 13: National Emergency Declaration
March 13: “I don't take responsibility at all”
March 15: "TODAY IS A NATIONAL DAY OF PRAYER. GOD BLESS EVERYONE!"
March 16: "I give myself a 10 out of 10"
"

March 19: "People are dying that never died before."
 
He was detained for like one day by out of line local officials who were later disciplined by the national party. The cover up in America was much larger than the one in China.
 
Does anyone, with or without common sense, believe a single word that the Wuhan Health Organization broadcasts?[video=twitter;1217043229427761152]http://www.twitter.com/WHO/status/1217043229427761152[/twitter]

Common sense is literally an emperors new clothes type of argument. Just retarded. The WHO is right and American officials are lying and can't be trusted. I am with China and the international community against the fascist American empire.
 
Denial and distraction, then acceptance and action. (After valuable time wasted...):

"On 30 December 2019, Li saw a patient's report which showed a positive result with a high confidence level for SARS coronavirus tests. At 17:43, he wrote in a private WeChat group of his medical school classmates: "7 confirmed cases of SARS were reported [to hospital] from Huanan Seafood Market." He also posted the patient's examination report and CT scan image. At 18:42, he added "the latest news is, it has been confirmed that they are coronavirus infections, but the exact virus strain is being subtyped".[1] Li asked the WeChat group members to inform their families and friends to take protective measures. He was upset when the discussion gained a wider audience than he expected.[11]

After screenshots of his WeChat messages were shared on Chinese forums and gained huge attention, his manager talked to him, blaming him for leaking the information.[1] On 3 January 2020, police from the Wuhan Public Security Bureau investigated the case and interrogated Li, giving him a warning notice and censuring him for "making false comments on the Internet".[12] He was made to sign a letter of admonition promising not to do it again.[1] The police warned him that if he failed to learn from the admonition and continued to violate the law he would be prosecuted.[13]

After the admonition, Li returned to work in the hospital and contracted the virus on 8 January. On 31 January, he published his experience in the police station with the letter of admonition on social media. His post went viral and users questioned why the doctors who gave earlier warnings were silenced by the authorities.[14]

Reaction

The letter of admonition issued by the Wuhan Police Bureau (translation) ordering Li to stop "spreading rumors" about "SARS", signed by Li and two officers. Li uploaded it to his Sina Weibo account.

Li was in the spotlight in the Chinese media because he was thought to be one of the eight "rumormongers" warned by Wuhan police. However, according to some media, Wuhan police summoned eight "rumormongers" on 1 January, while Li and Xie Linka, another doctor from Wuhan Union Hospital, were warned on 3 January, meaning that the latter two might not be part of the group. Li later responded that he did not know whether he was one of the "rumormongers", but that he had been admonished for telling the truth.[15] The police punishment of Li for "rumor mongering" was aired on CCTV, signalling central government endorsement for the reprimand, according to two authors reporting for the South China Morning Post.[16]

On 4 February, the Chinese Supreme People's Court said that the eight Wuhan citizens should not have been punished as what they said was not entirely false. It wrote on social media: "It might have been a fortunate thing if the public had believed the 'rumors' then and started to wear masks and carry out sanitization measures, and avoid the wild animal market."[17] However, the Chinese government has not yet published an official apology.[citation needed]

Li told Caixin that he had been worried the hospital would punish him for "spreading rumors", but felt relieved after the top court publicly criticized the police. "I think there should be more than one voice in a healthy society, and I don't approve of using public power for excessive interference," said Li.[17]

Coronavirus infection

On 7 January, Li contracted the coronavirus when he saw an infected patient at his hospital.[18] The patient suffered from acute angle-closure glaucoma and developed a fever the next day. Li then began to suspect that the patient might have a coronavirus infection.[14] Li developed a fever and cough on 10 January, which soon became severe.[18] Doctor Yu Chengbo, a Zhejiang medical expert sent to Wuhan, told media that although most young patients do not tend to develop severe conditions, the glaucoma patient whom Li saw on 8 January was a storekeeper at Huanan Seafood Market with a high viral load, which could have exacerbated Li's infection.[19]

On 12 January, Li was admitted to intensive care at Houhu Hospital District, Wuhan Central Hospital,[20] where he was quarantined, treated,[18] and tested for the virus several times until he tested positive for the infection on 30 January. He was diagnosed with the virus infection on 1 February.[14]

While hospitalized, Li posted a message online vowing to return to the front lines after his recovery.[21]

Death

According to a colleague, Li's condition became critical on 5 February. On 6 February, while Li was on the phone with a friend, he told the friend that he was having trouble breathing and that his oxygen saturation had dropped to 85%. At around 19:00, he was sent to the emergency room.[20] According to China Newsweek, his heartbeat stopped at 21:30.[22] In social media posts, the Chinese state media reported that Li had died,[23] but the posts were soon deleted.[24] Later, Wuhan Central Hospital released a statement contradicting reports of his death: "In the process of fighting the coronavirus, the eye doctor from our hospital Li Wenliang was unfortunately infected. He is now in critical condition and we are doing our best to rescue him."[25] Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) was reportedly used to keep him alive.[22] Yet, the effort was unsuccessful, and the hospital announced that Li had died at 2:58 a.m. on 7 February 2020.[4][26] During the confusion, more than 17 million people were watching the live stream for his status updates.[21]

Reaction to Li's death

The World Health Organization posted on Twitter saying that it was "deeply saddened by the passing of Dr Li Wenliang" and "we all need to celebrate work that he did on #2019nCoV".[27]

The death of Li provoked considerable grief and anger on the social media which became extended to a demand for freedom of speech.[28] The hashtag #wewantfreedomofspeech gained over 2 million views and over 5,500 posts within 5 hours before it was removed by the censors, as were other related hashtags and posts.[29][30][31]

Wuhan citizens placed flowers and blew whistles at Wuhan Central Hospital, where Li worked and died, as a tribute to him.[32] On the Internet, people spontaneously launched the activity themed "I blew a whistle for Wuhan tonight," where everyone kept all the lights off in their homes for five minutes, and later blew whistles and waved glitter outside of their windows for five minutes to mourn Li.[33][34] Many people left messages in response to Li's last post on Sina Weibo, some lamenting his death and expressing anger at the authorities. He was also proclaimed an "ordinary hero".[11]

Although there has been no official apology from the city of Wuhan for reprimanding Li, within hours of his death, the Wuhan municipal government and the Health Commission of Hubei made exceptional statements of tribute to Li and condolences to his family. Beyond Wuhan, the National Health Commission did likewise.[11] In an even more exceptional move, China's highest anti-corruption body, the National Supervisory Commission, has initiated a "comprehensive investigation" into the issues involving Li.[16] Qin Qianhong, a law professor at Wuhan University expressed his concern that, unless properly managed, public anger over Li's death could explode in a similar way as the death of Hu Yaobang.[16]

A group of Chinese academics, led by Tang Yiming – head of the school of Chinese classics at Central China Normal University in Wuhan – published an open letter urging the government to both protect free speech and apologize for Li's death. The letter emphasized the right to free speech, ostensibly guaranteed by the Chinese constitution. Tang said that the viral outbreak was a man-made disaster, and that China ought to learn from Li Wenliang. Tang also wrote he felt that senior intellectuals and academics must speak up for the Chinese people and for their own consciences. “We all should reflect on ourselves", he wrote, "and the officials should rue their mistakes even more."[16] The letter alleges that Li Wenliang "is also a victim of speech suppression."[35][36] Jie Qiao, Academician of the Chinese Academy of Engineering and President of Peking University Third Hospital in Beijing called Li a "whistle-blower dedicating his young life in the front line".[37][38] "

Li Wenliang - wiki

I thought it didn't start in China
 
He was detained for like one day by out of line local officials who were later disciplined by the national party. The cover up in America was much larger than the one in China.

Actually, China sat on this for weeks, wasting valuable time.

That was the time window when , if they had taken it seriously, it might have been completely contained.

But instead, they did the denial thing (similar to what DT did) and it was allowed to get loose.
 
Actually, China sat on this for weeks, wasting valuable time.

That was the time window when , if they had taken it seriously, it might have been completely contained.

But instead, they did the denial thing (similar to what DT did) and it was allowed to get loose.

nO, the president sopped all travel from China early on.
 
This is the Chernobyl of the Chinese CP. Except that, at least Chernobyl was an accident on the part of the USSR. Engineering a strain of coronavirus and unleashing it upon your own people is just so... Marxist.

It was engineered by the US Army, but China succeeded in containing it anyway. And it blew back on the imperialist running dogs anyway. :)
 
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