Dr. Robert W. Malone
The
World Socialist Website (WSWS) is a communist advocacy organization
whose articles are frequently republished by Google News. One might
wonder why Google News considers the WSWS newsworthy, given that the
Trotskyist movement is a branch of Marxist socialism based on the ideas
of Leon Trotsky. From their website:
The
WSWS is the online publication of the world Trotskyist movement, the
International Committee of the Fourth International, and its affiliated
sections in the Socialist Equality Parties around the world.
The
standpoint of this website (WSWS) is one of revolutionary opposition to
the capitalist market system. Its aim is the establishment of world
socialism. It maintains that the vehicle for this transformation is the
international working class, and that in the 21st century the fate of
working people, and ultimately mankind as a whole, depends upon the
success of the socialist revolution.
Their
recent article, based on an interview with the infamous Peter Daszak of
EcoHealth Alliance and an analysis of COVID origins , titled “The Wuhan “lab leak” fraud and the institutionalization of anti-science: An interview with Dr. Peter Daszak”, does
not constitute an analysis. It is advocacy dressed up as certainty. It
does not persuade by evidence. It persuades by smear tactics, omission,
framing, and repetition of claims that no longer hold up against the
current public record.
The author identifies as a
physician but has no bio or according to PubMed, any peer-reviewed
publications. He does not list his education or workplaces. His writing
often reflects his anti-American ideology and relies on selectively
presented facts rather than balanced public health assessments.
Start
with the foundation of the article. It presents Daszak as a persecuted
scientist, “censored” and cast out without cause. That is simply not
true. He was formally debarred by the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services for five years after a documented process and a
two-year-long Congressional investigation into his wrongdoings. He was
given multiple opportunities to respond. His submissions were reviewed.
You cannot erase the very well-researched Congressional report and call
it arbitrary. This is an example of dishonest narrative construction.
Otherwise known as a lie, based on propaganda.
From there, the
article builds a familiar story: the lab-leak hypothesis is a fraud, the
science is settled, and dissenters are cranks or political actors. That
story might have held in early 2020. It does not hold in 2026.
The
most basic problem is that the article ignores where the U.S.
government has actually moved. The intelligence community remains
formally divided, but that is only part of the picture. The FBI and
Department of Energy have leaned heavily toward a lab origin. The CIA
has now shifted in that direction. A House Select Subcommittee, after a
two-year investigation, concluded that a laboratory origin is the most
likely explanation. The White House itself now states plainly that
COVID-19 likely arose from a lab-related incident tied to research in
Wuhan.
The WSWS hit piece on Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, Director of the
NIH and Acting Director of the CDC, waves away the entire body of
recent U.S. government assessments and replaces it with the claim that
the lab-leak hypothesis is “devoid of evidence.” That is not a serious
position. It is willful blindness.
The second premise is more
subtle and more misleading. The article places significant weight on the
WHO and the 2021 WHO-convened origins study, as if that settles the
matter. But even the WHO does not make those claims now.
The early
WHO reporting on the origins of COVID-19 was not neutral science. It
was shaped, constrained, and in key ways compromised by conflicts of
interest, limited access, and political reality. The conclusions were
never as clean or as authoritative as they were presented.
Start
with the structure of the investigation itself. The WHO did not walk
into Wuhan as an independent body with full access. It negotiated its
entry with the Chinese government, operated under jointly agreed terms,
and relied heavily on data, interviews, and site visits controlled by
Chinese authorities. Even the majority of the scientists tasked with
the investigations were from China. That alone should have imposed
caution on any firm conclusion.
The WSWS article presents “weight
of evidence” as if it means “case closed.” It does not. That missing
information from China is not a minor detail. It is the entire problem.
Which
brings us to the third and most glaring omission: China’s role. The
article treats the evidentiary record as if it were complete and
transparent. It is neither. WHO has repeatedly stated that China has not
provided critical early data, including genetic sequences,
animal-sampling details, and information on work and biosafety
conditions at the Wuhan Institute of Virology. The U.S. intelligence
community has said the same in its own language: Beijing has hindered
the investigation and resisted sharing information. If China were truly
innocent, don’t you think they would have been glad to cooperate with
the WHO or other nations to discover the truth?
Any honest
discussion of origins in 2026 has to start there. We are not arguing
over a clean dataset. We are arguing over a partial record shaped by
systematic non-cooperation. The WSWS piece cites an early WHO report as
an authority while quietly ignoring WHO’s own more recent statements
about missing data and early selective reporting. This is structurally
misleading.
The article also leans heavily on the claim that
certain features of the outbreak, such as multiple early lineages linked
to the Huanan market, make a lab origin essentially impossible. That is
rhetoric, not science.
And then there is the fallback: attack
the messengers. Dr. Bhattacharya is dismissed as someone who “played
epidemiologist.” Ridley is reduced to a caricature of class and
background. This is not accidental. When an argument relies on
discrediting people rather than engaging with evidence, it signals
weakness. The irony is that this tactic is used to avoid confronting the
uncomfortable reality that official institutions, not just “fringe
voices,” have moved toward the lab-leak hypothesis. Read what the WSWS
writes about Dr. Bhattacharya and fume, as I did:
Bhattacharya, a physician and health economist who played
epidemiologist during the pandemic to promote mass infection, and
Ridley, a coal baron with a history of climate change denial, are not
Galileo. They are the inquisitors—backed by the power of the state and
the Trump administration’s dismantling of public health. As Morris
concludes: “These are not the heirs of Galileo. …
The difference is that this time, the Inquisition has the keys to the NIH.”
For
the record, Jay Bhattacharya is a physician, economist, and, for many
years, a professor at Stanford University. Trained in both medicine and
economics, he focuses his research on public health policy, infectious
disease epidemiology, and the economics of healthcare. Bhattacharya has
also studied population health, aging, and government responses to
health crises. He has a strong publication record in all of these
topics.
Matt Ridley is a British science writer, journalist,
and member of the House of Lords. He is the author of several popular
science books, including The Rational Optimist and Genome,
which explore evolution, innovation, and human progress. Ridley has
written extensively on genetics, economics, and the origins of COVID-19,
and has been a prominent voice arguing that a laboratory-related origin
of the virus is plausible.
There is also the issue of
Peter Daszak’s statement in the written interview. What comes through
most clearly from Daszak’s own statements in that article is a pattern
of overreach and omission. He leans heavily on absolutes, claiming there
is “zero evidence” the Wuhan Institute of Virology had a progenitor
virus and treating the lab-leak hypothesis as if it has no credible
scientific basis, when even U.S. intelligence agencies now lean in that
direction. He inflates supporting evidence for zoonotic spillover into
certainty, arguing that market-linked lineages make a lab origin
effectively impossible, which goes well beyond what the data actually
show.
At the same time, Dr. Daszak recasts the scrutiny of his
own work as a “fabricated controversy,” omitting the fact that he was
formally debarred after a documented review process, not simply targeted
at random. Perhaps most telling is what he leaves out: no
acknowledgment of his direct ties to the Wuhan Institute of Virology and
its gain-of-function research program, no recognition of missing data
from China, and no engagement with the shift in U.S. government
assessments. The result is not a balanced defense, but a narrative built
on falsehoods.
Finally, the article collapses multiple distinct questions into one. It treats the absence of proof of a genetically engineered bioweapon
as proof that all laboratory-associated scenarios are disproved. These
are not the same thing. A lab-associated incident could involve a
naturally occurring virus, field sampling, or adaptation work, including
gain-of-function, and not be a bioweapon. Blurring those distinctions
allows the author to claim victory on one front and declare the entire
debate over.
Put all of this together, and the pattern is
clear. The article dismisses Daszak’s debarment and malfeasance, ignores
the shift in U.S. government assessments, launders the WHO’s qualified
statements into false certainty, and soft-pedals the central problem of
Chinese non-transparency. The author and Daszak then smear those who are
working to investigate the true origins. It replaces a complex
scientific issue that leans heavily towards a laboratory leak with a
fabricated, clean ideological story. A storyline that exonerates the
CCP.
There is credible, well-founded data, grounded in
intelligence and congressional investigations, to conclude that a
laboratory-associated origin is the most likely explanation. And the
absence of key data is not incidental. It is the defining feature of the
problem.
That is the honest state of play. The WSWS article does
not reflect that reality. It tries to close the case by force of
rhetoric. In doing so, it reveals more about its own commitments and
conflicts of interest than about the origin of COVID-19.
The WSWS
operates from a rigid anti-imperialist, communist lens. In practice,
that means reflexive and exaggerated skepticism as well as a hatred
toward U.S. intelligence, Western institutions, and even America itself,
combined with a tendency to frame global conflicts as narratives driven
by American power.
And when you run that framework through
questions like the origins of COVID, something predictable happens. The
conclusions often land in the same place as CCP messaging. Similar
ideologies, different motivations, same endpoint.
My question is, why does Google continue to publicize this communist propaganda rag?