One doctor’s campaign to stop a covid-19 vaccine being rushed through before Election Day

October 19, 2020

https://www.technologyreview.com/2020/10/19/1010646/campaign-stop-covid-19-vaccine-trump-election-day/

by Antonio Regalado

CCP’BioWeapons

COVID-19(2020-11月13日)

世界5306萬人確診。130.0萬人死亡

美國1087.3萬人確診。  24.8585萬人死亡

《日德蘭郵報》刊登武漢肺炎諷刺漫畫。(圖片擷取自《日德蘭郵報》網站)

=====================================================

vaccine october surprise

Ms Tech | Unsplash, Getty

 

One doctor’s campaign to stop a covid-19 vaccine being rushed through before Election Day

====================================================

How heart doctor Eric Topol used his social-media account

to kill off Trump’s October surprise.

After being released from Walter Reed National Military Medical Center on October 5, US President Donald Trump praised the doctors who treated him for covid-19 and promised that the public would soon have a vaccine against the deadly coronavirus.

 “We have the best medicines in the world, and very shortly they are all getting approved, and the vaccines are coming momentarily,” he said in a video statement shared with millions of Twitter followers.

Across the country, in California, a doctor named Eric Topol was responding in real time on social media.

He questioned the president’s health, his doctors’ actions, and even his mental status.

By that point Topol, a heart expert and researcher with a huge Twitter following of his own, was already weeks into a personal campaign to make sure the administration could not rush a covid-19 vaccine through regulatory authorization before Election Day on November 3.

An editorial in the New York Times had raised the possibility of an “October surprise” vaccine back in June, and warned that a vaccine approval could turn into a “campaign stunt.” Topol, who works at the Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla and is one of the country’s most prominent doctors, aimed to prevent Trump from greenlighting a vaccine before scientists could prove it to be safe and effective.

To Topol, developing an effective vaccine against covid-19 is “the biggest event in our generation” and one that should be evaluated on the basis of scientific data, not political implications.

If Trump badgered the US Food and Drug Administration into prematurely releasing a vaccine that wasn’t effective, or even caused harm, it could shake the public’s trust in any covid-19 vaccine.

And if we are to achieve wide immunity against SARS-CoV-2, we’ll need to vaccinate more people than the number that get flu shots each year. Releasing a vaccine that people are afraid of could do more harm than good.

To prevent such a scenario, Topol led online calls for FDA commissioner Steve Hahn to resign after his agency was criticized for cowing to political pressure—and then phoned Hahn a number of times to urge him to resist Trump’s influence.

Topol also targeted Pfizer, the only pharmaceutical company likely to seek approval of its vaccine before Election Day, which eventually set up a meeting for him with its vaccine team.

On October 16, Topol and his allies were able to claim success: Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla said the company would not be able to seek emergency approval for its vaccine before the third week in November, owing to safety standards that had been put in place by the FDA.

Those standards had been issued against Trump’s wishes, but at the urging of Topol and other advocates.

We were on a path for a vaccine emergency authorization (EUA) before November 3rd. Thanks to the FDA, Trump’s plan was disrupted. That won’t happen.
First real sign of the independence of FDA since the pandemic started. And that’s important.
https://t.co/Taxb2iL4db

— Eric Topol (@EricTopol) October 10, 2020

Political pressure

Since the outbreak started, the White House has been at odds with its science agencies and has sometimes steamrolled them in key decisions. For instance, political appointees have changed advice from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention about testing and opening schools. The FDA, which oversees vaccines, is one of the strongest agencies in Washington. But during the pandemic it has come under pressure to make new covid-19 drugs available, even those with little evidence to back them up.

Evaluating a new drug or vaccine is typically a long process. But after the 9/11 attacks, Congress introduced a fast-track option called “emergency use authorization.” The idea was that in the event of, say, a nuclear attack, the usual rules could be set aside. Instead of proof that a treatment works, the emergency standard requires only a “reasonable” belief that the treatment “may be effective.”

The flexible process also allows political decision makers to take control as they did in August, when the FDA announced an EUA for convalescent plasma therapy (pdf), a treatment involving blood serum donated by covid-19 survivors. Just a day before the agency allowed wider use of the treatment, Trump accused it in a tweet of deliberately postponing the decision until after the election.

The deep state, or whoever, over at the FDA is making it very difficult for drug companies to get people in order to test the vaccines and therapeutics. Obviously, they are hoping to delay the answer until after November 3rd. Must focus on speed, and saving lives! @SteveFDA

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) August 22, 2020

While there was incomplete evidence to show the treatments worked, most people agreed the transfusions could meet the loose “may be effective” standard. But during a White House press conference, officials departed from the evidence to tout the treatment as a “major advance.” And an FDA press release headlined “Another achievement in administration’s fight against pandemic” was oddly triumphant for an agency whose communications are normally dry and technical. Clearly, someone other than agency scientists was now writing the script.

What alarmed Topol and other critics is that Hahn played along and badly misrepresented the facts, saying plasma transfusions would save 35 out of 100 covid-19 patients. In reality, no evidence for that claim existed. The therapy’s benefit remained uncertain.

“That was the moment I decided, it’s time to become an activist,” says Topol.

“I got very upset. I said he should resign or tell the truth.

There was just this complete subservience to Trump.”

Topol began loudly calling on Hahn to confess or step down. Others joined the campaign.

“Eric has courage, no question about that—he’s not afraid to stand up for things,” says Holden Thorp, editor of the journal Science.

“He has a huge amount of credibility scientifically, combined with an enormous platform.”

In an editorial in Science Translational Medicine entitled “We’re on our own,” Thorp weighed in too, saying Hahn’s distortions of science meant he could no longer be trusted to handle a vaccine.

“The administration knows that Hahn caved … after it pressured him,” Thorp wrote. “So why not try it again.”

Hahn later apologized, but his error gave critics leverage.

“That event was fundamental,” says Topol.

“I think [the FDA was] sensitive to external pressure that this cannot be tolerated with a vaccine.”

I have been criticized for remarks I made Sunday night about the benefits of convalescent plasma. The criticism is entirely justified. What I should have said better is that the data show a relative risk reduction not an absolute risk reduction.

— Dr. Stephen M. Hahn (@SteveFDA) August 25, 2020

Topol says he and Hahn had several private phone conversations in the weeks following the debacle.

What they said is confidential, but all signs indicate that Topol urged Hahn to defy the White House effort to deliver a vaccine by Election Day.

“I came to respect him,” says Topol.

“I was convinced he’d do the right thing.”

An FDA spokesperson declined to comment on the phone calls.

 
A “choke point”

To stop rush authorization of a vaccine before the election, Topol also began working on another front.

The US has poured billions into Operation Warp Speed, which includes funding for a half-dozen trials to study potential covid-19 vaccines.

Those trials won’t have efficacy data on the vaccines until late in the year, at the earliest.

But one company—Pfizer

—never joined the federal program and has been running ahead of the companies that did.

Its CEO, Bourla, had boldly said for months that its study of a genetic vaccine would have early efficacy results in October.

If Trump could anoint any vaccine as the winner, it would have to be Pfizer’s.

On the other hand, if no company actually applied for authorization before November 3, then no announcement could be made.

Pfizer was the “choke point,” Topol believed.

So the choke point here is that a company has to apply for an EUA. @realDonaldTrump @SecAzar cannot get a vaccine approved unless that happens. So our attention turns to Pfizer since it has been outspoken about its intent and timetable. 7/

— Eric Topol (@EricTopol) September 26, 2020

On September 25, Topol joined 60 other experts in sending a letter to Pfizer’s CEO, asking that the company not apply for an EUA before late November, when there would be more safety data. Topol says he also peppered some of Pfizer’s board members with his concerns. The company later reached out to him, arranging an early October Zoom meeting with Kathrin Jansen, its vaccine chief, and her team. Pfizer confirmed the meeting, saying its staff regularly meets with “key opinion leaders.”

“Whether you are Pfizer, Johnson & Johnson, or Moderna, you want to win the race. But that is a different motivation than Trump has. He’s in a different contest,” says Topol. “Trump wants to win, but we need all the companies to win, because none can make enough vaccine [on] their own.”

 

Any push to rush through a vaccine approval, in other words, would be motivated politically more than medically. Even though the pandemic is killing more than 600 people a day in the US, Topol doesn’t believe very much can be gained by declaring success a few weeks early. “We’re still going to be physical distancing and wearing masks after a vaccine. It’s not magic,” he says. “It’s more important that we get it right.”

Still, many experts say there’s no reason the EUA mechanism can’t apply to a vaccine. A military vaccine for inhalation anthrax—impossible to test because hardly anyone gets that disease—was cleared in that way.

“I don’t think that EUA is a bad idea.

To me the question is, how good is the evidence?”

says Alison Bateman-House, a professor and health policy researcher at NYU Langone Medical Center.

“In the US, there is a lot of pressure to bring something forward, but in the biopharma industry, there is also a lot of pressure to play by the book.”

In fact, though Trump had accused “deep state” players at the FDA of delaying the approval of plasma therapy, the connections between doctors, drug companies, and health agencies run even deeper than he probably realized. All are heavily invested in evidence-based drug approval. “The fact is that drug corporations are composed of a lot of scientists,” says Thorp. “It makes it harder for Trump to paint the entire group into his ʹdeep state’ enemies category.”

“Bureaucratic jujitsu”

By the time Trump left Walter Reed and said vaccines could appear “momentarily,” the chance that any vaccine would be approved before the election was actually about to disappear.

The White House had been holding up publication of an FDA recommendation that companies developing any covid-19 vaccine should search for side effects for at least two months in half their trial patients.

If that guideline were followed, it would make an EUA in October essentially impossible, even for Pfizer.

  • day of Trump’s discharge, the FDA transmitted its recommendation to a key vaccine advisory committee, in what outside observers viewed as an end run past the White House. An FDA spokesperson said that nothing out of the ordinary had occurred. But Topol believes Hahn and his deputies “stood up to Trump for the first time” and executed a “masterful” tactical maneuver. “Bureaucratic jujitsu,” Thorp calls it. By the next day, the Wall Street Journal reported, the White House had “cast aside” its objection to the rules, allowing the FDA to publish them in full.

The import of the maneuver wasn’t lost on Trump, either.

New FDA Rules make it more difficult for them to speed up vaccines for approval before Election Day. Just another political hit job! @SteveFDA

— Donald J. Trump (@realDonaldTrump) October 7, 2020

A week later, on Friday, October 16, Pfizer

—citing the FDA recommendations

—finally said it would not seek an EUA until after the election,

even if the company thought its vaccine was working.

Daniel Littman, a board member at Pfizer, says Topol never contacted him, but he agrees that the company found itself in a difficult position.

“My guess is that this reflects Albert Bourla’s response to the general politicization of the process, and the reaction by members of the scientific and medical community, not only Topol,”

says Littman.

“I’m glad that there was further clarification from Pfizer.”

Pfizer has never discussed @US_FDA’s #COVID19 vaccine guidelines with the White House and will never do so as it could undermine the agency’s independence.

— AlbertBourla (@AlbertBourla) October 6, 2020

While a vaccine approval before November 3 may now be out of the question, other medical developments in the fight against covid-19 could still come into play during the countdown to the vote.

During his stay at Walter Reed, Trump received a cutting-edge experimental antibody treatment developed by the biotech company Regeneron.

A similar drug, which blocks the virus, is being tested by Eli Lilly. Although neither company has published scientific results of its drug tests, Trump touted the drugs as “cures” for covid-19 when he was released from the hospital.

Within days, both companies filed for emergency use.

Those authorizations could still come before Election Day.

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[  CCP_Virus    vaccine ,  Pfizer                ]

 

One doctor’s campaign to stop a covid-19 vaccine

being rushed through before Election Day

 

 

 

 [ 相關 ]stop covid-19 vaccine rushed through before Election Day[ ]

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scytl servers

Dominion 

HAMMER”& “Scorecard” 

=====================================================

[ 武漢肺炎是超限戰生物武器, CCP’s BioWeapons  ]

 

現有的數據與文獻進行深入分析後,

發現這些病毒在自然界中並不存在,它們的基因序列是被製造出來的,

報告認為這場「科學欺詐」的規模,

足以彰顯國際學術研究和公共衛生領域的腐敗程度,

由於這種腐敗, 科學界的聲譽和全球社會的福祉都受到了損害。

 

中共病毒符合解放軍規定的生物武器標準,

但其影響遠遠超過典型生物武器,有記錄顯示,

這種武器化病原體的釋放應該是有意而非偶然的。

 

 [ 相關 ] 2020閻麗夢報告!武漢肺炎是「超限戰生物武器」[  ]

===================================================

[    covid-19,  CCP’s Bioweapon           ]

 

川普週五確診武漢肺炎後,

美國海軍的「E-6B水星」通信中繼機在美國東岸、西岸升空,

該軍機有「核末日軍機」之稱,是五角大廈的「機載核戰指揮所」,

帶有特殊的通信系統和機組人員,

負責指揮美國海軍的俄亥俄級核彈潛艦。

艾克斯表示,美國海軍共有16架「E-6B水星」通信中繼機,

能在核戰當中,向俄亥俄級核彈潛艦傳遞指示,

幫助艦載人員瞄準敵方城市和軍事基地,

以發射「三叉戟」飛彈(Trident)或潛射彈道飛彈 (SLBM),

在川普宣布確診的幾小時內,

「E-6B水星」通信中繼機出現在美國東岸、西岸絕非偶然。

 

[ 相關 ] 2020宣布川普染疫後,「核末日軍機」美東西岸升空[ ]

======================================================

2020日本學者參與中國千人計劃,對遭謾罵感到困惑

 

2020-10-19

https://tchina.kyodonews.net/news/2020/10/197bb754deb7.html

參與中國千人計劃的日本學者對遭謾罵感到困惑

==================================

  【共同社上海10月20日電】

參與中國政府海外人才支援項目“千人計劃”的日本研究人員,

對在網上等被罵是“間諜”“賣國奴”等感到十分困惑。

 

因“日本學術會議”推薦的會員被拒絕任命問題,該計劃受到關注,

網上謾罵與此相關。

 

研究人員氣憤地稱“不講道理”,

強調“不基於事實的討論將阻礙日本科學技術的發展”。

 

  據分析,自民黨稅制調查會甘利明在博客發文稱,

該學術會議為千人計劃提供合作,其研究成果有可能被中國用於軍事。

 

這成為學者遭謾罵的契機。

 

  在中國沿海地區某大學從事基礎科學研究的一名日本男士,

據稱在網上被批評參與武器研究、被當作間諜,

他表示“遭到無端指責,精神上很痛苦”。

 

另一名在北京某大學從事研究的日本學者稱

“甚至被日本的親屬當成‘賣國賊’”。

 

  兩人均否定為軍事研究提供合作,

強調“研究成果全部寫進論文並公開,

對論文的評價對研究者而言是一切”,

並指出“在保密性很高的軍事研究方面,

僱用外國人對中國政府而言並無好處”。

 

  據稱從千人計劃獲得的研究費為3到5年,

各總計5000萬日元左右(約合人民幣316萬元),

他們強調“和美國比起來更低,是極其理所當然的金額”,

並稱“在有些領域中國領先,

‘被好待遇邀請赴華、使日本技術外流’之類的批評不符合實際”。

 

  隨著日本削減研究預算,大學等就業崗位減少,很多學者前往海外。

擔憂日本人理科研究生減少的聲音也十分強烈,

普遍認為“日本的基礎研究處於危機狀況”。

 

  上述兩人強調

“網上沒有明確根據的討論,對誰都沒有好處,

只會損害日本的國家利益”。

(完)

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[中國千人計劃 , 支那日本人,日本二戰後教育迷途,                    ]

參與中國政府海外人才支援項目“千人計劃”的日本研究人員,

對在網上等被罵是“間諜”“賣國奴”等感到十分困惑。

 

因“日本學術會議”推薦的會員被拒絕任命問題,該計劃受到關注,

網上謾罵與此相關。

 

研究人員氣憤地稱“不講道理”,

強調“不基於事實的討論將阻礙日本科學技術的發展”。

 

  據分析,自民黨稅制調查會甘利明在博客發文稱,

該學術會議為千人計劃提供合作,其研究成果有可能被中國用於軍事。

 

這成為學者遭謾罵的契機。

 

[ 相關 ]  2020日本學者參與中國千人計劃,對遭謾罵感到困惑[共同社]

====================================================

COVID-19(2020-10月21日)

世界4098萬人確診。112.9萬人死亡

美國852.0萬人確診。  22.6149萬人死亡

《日德蘭郵報》刊登武漢肺炎諷刺漫畫。(圖片擷取自《日德蘭郵報》網站)

=====================================================

[ 日本年輕人,不識「民主的價值」,被「中國理論」籠絡    ]

 

沖繩中國少數民族的事例

民主的日本現在,單方面的「同化」是不可能的

 

中國少數民族的文化被尊重、優遇政策實施得很好,

究竟是從誰那裡聽到而做出的判斷呢?

 

學生們推出的極端單純化的邏輯,沒有反映複雜的現實,

在那裡打造解決問題的模式,在現實中行不通。

 

日本學生們並沒有認識到,戰後日本構築的民主和言論自由的價值。

 

日本的高材生們這樣, 日本在外交和國際舞台,陷入不能積極地進行主張,

而缺乏存在感嗎?

 

參加討論會的日本學生中,有的已經考入中央省廳工作。做為大學教員,

如實感到危機,覺得需要重新審視大學教育的應有方式

 

 [ 相關 ]

2018不認「民主的價值」,被「中國理論」籠絡的日本年輕人[阿古智子]

=====================================================

日本大學提到留學生就不得不依賴中國人 ]

 

日本政府與民間合作,積極吸引留學生推動本國大學全球化。

 

就目前來看,很多大學提到留學生就不得不依賴中國人。

 

日本教育一線質疑:「這樣下去算得上全球化嗎?」

 

日本大學的國際地位下滑已是不爭的事實。

 

但在為了眼前的就業

而追求仍未褪色的日本名牌大學的中國留學生,

與不得不依賴他們推進全球化的日本大學之間,

同床異夢的中日留學熱潮或將不斷升溫。

 

[ 相關 ]

在日本一流大學「復活」的中國留學生[日經,古山和弘]

================================================

[     日本和平憲法, 日本教育基本法                             ] 

 

歷史事實普及協會” 會長,茂木弘道認為:

因為日本戰敗了,勝利者說都是日本的錯。

我們要駁斥這種說法。”

 

他聲稱,

每個國家都有權按照自己的方式思考本國歷史“。

 

 [ 相關 ]

  日本民族主義教科書 灌輸不同歷史觀[  德國之聲,Julian Ryall ]

=================================================

[   日本新版高中教科書                            ]

 

寫入 竹島(韓國稱獨島)

尖閣諸島(中國稱釣魚島) 是日本“固有領土”

 

的修改後的“學習指導要領”解說書宗旨的

新教科書相關內容增至現行教材的約1.6倍。

 

中國外交部也主張

對尖閣諸島“享有固有的主權,這一點是無可爭辯的”。

 

 [ 相關 ]   日本新版高中教科書政府色彩濃厚[  共同社  ]

====================================================

[ 日本社會現狀:「戰後體制」以隱匿的形式延續擴大 ]

日本能真正地終結「戰後」嗎?

 

日本的「戰後」以一種奇妙的形式得以延續,

這就是當下的社會現狀。

 

[ 相關 ] 

「戰後」何時結束?——探索未來的年輕人們 [古市憲壽]

=================================================

  日本佔領軍代理人  [ 日本戰後斯德哥爾摩症候群世代 ]

=================================================

  [ 日本佔領軍代理人 – 戰勝國的日本人  ]

「躺在納稅人血汗錢上的寄生蟲。」

這是我的父親鄙夷日本天皇的用語。

 

那時候,我們的天皇是裕仁(Hirohito),

而我父親對他的反感在日本知識分子當中很普遍。

 

在我成長的過程中,一直認為越早把天皇趕到街上越好。

 

然而,隨著時間的推移,

看著現任天皇明仁 (Akihito)兢兢業業地履行自己的象徵性職責,

年復一年,不知疲倦地向公眾致意、探訪受災者,

我的態度軟化了。

 

我開始喜歡他,甚至開始同情這位說話柔聲細語的天皇。

 

這與許多同胞的想法一樣,

不管他們是保守派還是自由派。

 

天皇的日程毫無鬆懈的餘地,他這份工作誰都不想乾。

 

 [ 相關 ]  誰還願意嫁給天皇?[ 紐約時報,水村美苗 ]

=================================================

[  日本二戰後名存實亡72年 ] 吉田茂路線(Yoshida Doctrine)

 

大量「不好說」的回答,不意味着他們沒答案,而是反映出

日本人至今看待「那場戰爭」的心態依舊複雜

 

日本普通民眾國家的關係上來理解。

 

在日本上小學、中學期間,有些師生望着國旗「國歌齊唱」的時候,

都會覺得很尷尬,甚至難受。

 

不少日本國民看來國旗國歌軍國主義者發動戰爭的象徵,

不僅給他國人民造成了傷害,還迫使日本陷入崩潰

 

由於這段歷史,媒體、學者、百姓心裡始終存有疑問:

國家政府憑什麼不會犯錯誤呢?

「國」字是值得高度警惕的。

 

日本修憲派的最大阻力,不是來自中國、韓國的外交壓力,

是來自日本國內對「國家主義」的厭煩和警惕

 

二戰結束近70年,戰後日本拿着「和平憲法」,在美國「核保護傘」下走

「重經濟、輕安保」的吉田茂路線(Yoshida Doctrine)。

 

日本社會迄今依然走在這條路上,卻顯出疲態。

 

日本泡沫經濟崩潰後「失落的二十年」

中國崛起的大時代背景令日本人感到擔憂:

「我們這樣下去,經濟影響力下降,政治無話語權,

會不會被孤立,被邊緣化,最終變成全球化時代的孤兒呢?

 

[ 相關 ]日本倒向「右翼」了嗎?[加藤嘉一,紐約時報]

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[ 歐巴馬立場搖擺造成新總統無法阻止中國南海擴張 ]

 

奧巴馬政府在南海議題上立場搖擺,

未來美國新總統也無法阻止中國在南海擴張。

 

喬治華盛頓大學

中國問題專家沙特(Robert Sutter)表示,

奧巴馬政府對中國的政策十分反覆,

尤其在對兩國都嚴重的南海問題上,

美國無法阻止中國在南海的擴張。

 

而未來南海問題還將繼續,新總統也無法阻止中國。

 

[ 相關 ]

阻止中國南海擴張? 美國新總統可能也力不從心[ RFI ]

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[ 相關 ]

日本報導李登輝死訊的觀點,與戰後75年台灣的中國難民問題[野島剛]

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