*The Sun's headline is as incoherent as it is dishonest. (Event 201 has not
been*
*"falsely linked to conspiracy theories," but truly is the subject of such
"theories.")*

*This shot of blather is an obvious (and futile) effort to explain away the*
*patent suspiciousness of Event 201, which—like Moderna's patent
application*
*the previous March (noting the possibility of a "deliberate release" of
COVID-19), *
*and Bill Gates' negotiation, with Rep. Bobby Rush (D-IL), **of HR 6666,
for a $100-*
*billion **federal contact tracing program in June—suggests*
* foreknowledge **of the *
*COVID crisis. So does **Dr. Fauci's prophecy, in 2017, that **a "surprise"
outbreak *
*of a respiratory virus **would take place during Trump's term. **(If he
knew it was *
*coming, it wasn't **a surprise to him.)*

*The good news here is that Johns Hopkins, and, no doubt, the syndicate of*
*which it's part, are worried enough about the growing mass suspicion of*
*their doings to get the Baltimore Sun to vent this propaganda.*

*MCM*
A 2019 Hopkins exercise explored effects of a coronavirus pandemic. It’s
falsely been linked to conspiracy theories.
https://www.baltimoresun.com/coronavirus/bs-pr-md-johns-hopkins-tabletop-exercise-20201013-vdr5rdy735d4voghvbvz2xclry-story.html
By HALLIE MILLER
<https://www.baltimoresun.com/bal-hallie-miller-20180828-staff.html#nt=byline>
BALTIMORE SUN |
OCT 13, 2020 AT 5:00 AM
<?subject=A%202019%20Hopkins%20exercise%20explored%20effects%20of%20a%20coronavirus%20pandemic.%20It%E2%80%99s%20falsely%20been%20linked%20to%20conspiracy%20theories.&body=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.baltimoresun.com%2Fcoronavirus%2Fbs-pr-md-johns-hopkins-tabletop-exercise-20201013-vdr5rdy735d4voghvbvz2xclry-story.html>

The virus started in pigs — hypothetically — spreading silently within
herds and then to farmers.

It manifested as a mild flu in some and developed into a severe respiratory
illness in others, with cases leading to pneumonia. Infections fanned out
worldwide with densely populated and impoverished areas faring especially
poorly. After 18 months, 65 million people had died in the mock exercise.
Economies buckled and some countries banned travel. Global gross domestic
product plummeted 11%. Scarce medical resources needed rationing.

This was the scenario presented by the Johns Hopkins Center for Health
Security a year ago to a group of global business leaders, government
officials and public health professionals gathered in New York City for an
event meant to prepare top executives and officials for a deadly pandemic
and explore how to prop up the economy.

Two months later, a real novel coronavirus emerged and began spreading
around the world. Since then, some have falsely linked the event to a
broader conspiracy theory about COVID-19′s origins, saying the event’s
planners knew there would be a pandemic before the first case emerged in
Wuhan, China — and might have even caused it to enrich themselves or assert
control over the population.
Kevin Roose column: Why conspiracy theories are so addictive right now »
<https://www.baltimoresun.com/coronavirus/sns-nyt-op-trump-conspiracy-theories-20201008-py3f2vu4u5eftbmmg2r73jsfvm-story.html#nt=interstitial-manual>

Participants of “Event 201,” co-organized by the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation and the World Economic Forum, included representatives from the
United Nations and other agencies as well as executives from Johnson &
Johnson, UPS, Marriott and other companies.

Organizers dubbed the October 2019 exercise Event 201
<https://www.centerforhealthsecurity.org/event201/photos.html> because the
World Health Organization responds to about 200 epidemic events each year —
but, as a YouTube video released by Hopkins states
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AoLw-Q8X174>, “we need to prepare for the
event that becomes a pandemic.”

The name provides further justification for anonymous web users who believe
the organizers influenced or even caused what happened later.

“The people behind this plandemic need to be arrested starting with
megalomaniac front man Bill Gates,” one YouTuber commented on a Hopkins
video that provides a sweeping overview of the exercise.

“So the conference was in October of 2019 ...and by December the world gets
this coronavirus pandemic... oh ok... what an amazing coincidence!" wrote
another. “Anyone else feels we are being played?”
[image: Some YouTubers have flocked to videos highlighting the 2019 Johns
Hopkins tabletop exercise to malign the event as "predictive" of the
coronavirus pandemic.]
Some YouTubers have flocked to videos highlighting the 2019 Johns Hopkins
tabletop exercise to malign the event as "predictive" of the coronavirus
pandemic. (Screenshot)

Hopkins turned off comments on some of the other videos showcasing clips
from the event.

The term “plandemic” refers to a set of videos released in May that
describe a hidden agenda behind COVID-19, alleging that the sickness itself
is a bioweapon that was spread to get as many people as possible vaccinated
with drugs that cause medical harm. Much of the videos' claims have been
debunked as false, misleading or inaccurate — or, more plainly, as
conspiracy theories.

Both public and private sector agencies commonly stage tabletop exercises
as a means of emergency and disaster planning. In Maryland, for example,
Gov. Larry Hogan has organized such events to prepare for severe weather,
bringing together a team of experts from different industries and fields to
talk through how the state should respond and which resources to mobilize.

If anything, the similarities of Event 201 and COVID-19 show the validity
of Hopkins' research methods and the challenges that underlie all public
health crises, said Crystal Watson, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins
Center for Health Security, who helped stage it.

“Event 201 was about economic impact because we felt that was an area that
had little discussion in public health emergency planning,” Watson said.
“We wanted to highlight the private-public partnerships that would be
needed, the supply chain impacts and industry fallout including travel.”

Tom Inglesby, director of the Center for Health Security, moderated the
exercise, and guided “players” through a series of escalating conditions.
First, he challenged participants to envision how businesses and
governments should collaborate to mitigate the emergency. Then, he posed
that an antiviral treatment had been developed and vetted, and asked how
drugs and other medical supplies should be allocated.
How the falsehood-filled ‘Plandemic’ movie spread widely online on YouTube,
Facebook »
<https://www.baltimoresun.com/coronavirus/ct-cb-nw-nyt-plandemic-movie-20200520-2mn3cfnv5fhanckvbkgwqe3ote-story.html#nt=interstitial-manual>

“How should national leaders, businesses and international organizations
balance the risk of worsening disease that will be caused by the continued
movement of people around the world," Inglesby posed, "against the risks of
profound economic consequence of travel and trade bans?”

“How should financial resources be prioritized? We don’t have money to pay
for all of these urgent problems,” he asked later.

The planning group spent months on the event, Watson said, implementing
decades' worth of public health research and real mathematical modeling.
They also led a similar exercise in 2018 and another one about a decade
earlier, she said.

Planners opted to base the exercise around a coronavirus pandemic due to
the prevalence over the last two decades of such contagions as SARS and
MERS, for which no vaccine exists.

“The exercise was in no way predicting the pandemic; we did not know it was
coming, specifically," Watson said. "We spent an enormous amount of time
thinking about what the realistic policy problems and situations are that
would occur in a severe pandemic, so it makes sense that in a real-life
scenario, those problems are coming up.”

Despite the resemblances of Event 201 to COVID-19, much of today’s pandemic
was not reflected in the mock exercise. The players made no mention of
non-pharmaceutical intervention tools, such as social distancing, mask
wearing or hand washing. It also did not address what could happen if state
leaders took vastly different approaches, or what might happen if lawmakers
in the same country or jurisdiction disagreed on protocol and methodology.

“One thing we presumed was competent leadership would be focused on
responding effectively, and we’ve seen that’s not always the case,” Watson
said. “That can make or break a response, so I think it’s something to plan
for going forward.”

Still, once the coronavirus outbreak ramped up in January, Hopkins released
a statement responding to some of the questions about Event 201, making
clear that the exercise did not forecast the facts on the ground.

“We are not now predicting that the nCoV-2019 outbreak will kill 65 million
people,” the statement read. “Although our tabletop exercise included a
mock novel coronavirus, the inputs we used for modeling the potential
impact of that fictional virus are not similar to nCoV-2019.”

In fact, COVID-19 has not been nearly as virulent as the Event 201 virus.
It took nine months for deaths to cross the 1 million mark, according
to Hopkins'
Coronavirus Resource Center <https://coronavirus.jhu.edu/map.html>.
Breaking News Alerts Newsletter
As it happens
------------------------------
Get updates on the coronavirus pandemic and other news as it happens with
our free breaking news email alerts.

Watson said the statement provided an additional layer of transparency to
Hopkins' intentions and acknowledged the institution’s responsibility to
push back on false information.

Hopkins can do little to change the minds of those who want to believe in
conspiracies, said Joe Uscinski, co-author of 2014′s “American Conspiracy
Theories.”

“There are people who have a worldview in which everything is a conspiracy
and contrived by malicious actors, and they’ll find information that
comports with that worldview,” said Uscinski, also a professor of political
science at the University of Miami. “You do what you can to make sure you
have the right information out there, but if someone has already adopted a
conspiracy theory, saying ‘I’m not conspiratorial’ is not going to change
anyone’s mind.”

Uscinski said Hopkins did nothing wrong in releasing the clarification
statement.

Hopkins planners, in fact, modeled the exercise knowing the challenges that
come with communicating threats to public health accurately in the digital
age. The WHO has coined the term “infodemic” to shed light on the dangers
of proliferating false or misleading information, which spreads faster than
any disease.

“It’s particularly damaging when leaders undermine the data and give mixed
messages as to what the public should do to keep themselves safe,” Watson
said. “Hopefully, we’re not caught as unprepared again, because there
certainly will be a ‘next’ pandemic."
---

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