Lab Origin Theory Behind The Covid Plandemic!
- Greg Rauscher
- Oct 23, 2024
- 3 min read
Updated: Jan 30
Before we delve into lab origin, we should make one thing clear: Whether the COVID-19 virus came from the Wuhan lab or not, the lab’s history of risky and unethical research—which operates under the Chinese Communist Party (CCP)—is a root problem that needs to be dealt with.
The COVID-19 outbreak originated in a city where the world’s most advanced laboratory research on SARS-like viruses has been conducted. This is the main reason the lab-origin scenario was considered.
Risky Research and the Lab Origin Theory
In the Wuhan lab, virologists have used bat coronaviruses to manipulate SARS-like viruses for at least a decade.
In 2010, for the first time, Wuhan virologists discovered that coronaviruses use the spike protein as a key to bind to ACE2 receptors, which are widely distributed on the surface of the cells of the body’s vital organs.
In 2013, they isolated a specific bat coronavirus (WIV1) that bore a type of spike protein that can bind to human ACE2.
In 2015, they edited the genes of natural viruses and engineered a new SARS-like virus that can infect human cells and jump from animals to humans which again validates the lab Origin Theory.
A leaked NIH report reported that WIV created novel SARS-like viruses that can reproduce up to 10,000 times more copies of the original virus in genetically engineered mice expressing human ACE2 receptors, mimicking the human infection.
Apart from the naturally occurring bat virus (WIV1), the other coronaviruses found to bind to human ACE2 receptors are the SARS virus, COVID-19 virus, and the purported four created by the WIV through GOF studies—the three viruses mentioned in the above leaked NIH report and the SHC014-MA15 virus reported in the 2015 Nature Medicine study.
In 2021, The Intercept released a leaked research proposal called DEFUSE, submitted in 2018. This proposal contained a gain-of-function research plan to insert the specific cleavage site—FURIN—into the virus genes.
Though the viruses engineered by WIV have not been proven to be the same as those of COVID-19 viruses, WIV intends to alter and enhance the functions of bat coronaviruses.
Some argue that research conducted by WIV was done to better understand natural coronaviruses and their transmission with no surreptitious motives.
Eventful Period: October Through November 2019
CCP reported that the first case of COVID-19 occurred on Dec. 1, 2019, with the Wuhan Huanan Seafood Market as ground zero.
Multiple investigative reports have revealed that a severe, mysterious infection had already silently emerged in Wuhan at least two months before.
1. A group of U.S. scientific researchers, mainly from the University of California San Diego, examined the genomic data from the first cases of COVID-19 and used a scientific model to determine when the virus started infecting people. Their study suggests infection began in Hubei Province, China, between mid-October and mid-November 2019.
It should be noted that this and other genomic studies were retrospective and can’t definitively confirm transmission, although these findings point to the possibility.
2. According to the China surveillance data of Wuhan influenza-like-illness (ILI) presented to the World Health Organization (WHO), a steep increase (Fig. 1) appeared in the last week of November 2019 (Nov. 24–30), rapidly exceeding the trend across 2016–2018.
If that week’s ILI cases were caused by COVID-19 infection, considering an incubation period of two to 14 days, the infection-occurring period would fall into the week of Nov. 16 or earlier—the same time frame as reported by the above-mentioned U.S. genomic study report.
Moreover, the WHO report also highlighted an unexplained increase (Fig. 2C) in lab test-negative ILI cases in Wuhan in mid-November 2019. Meanwhile, a 2022 published study indicates that those influenza-negative ILI cases may have served as potential COVID-19 transmission.
3. Diplomats stationed at the U.S. Consulate General in Wuhan attested valuable first-hand experience of an unusual, mysterious outbreak in Wuhan in October 2019. Subsequently, U.S. personnel decamped from China.
The deputy consular chief at the U.S. Consulate in China, Russell J. Westergard, later wrote in State Magazine:
“By mid-October 2019, the dedicated team at the U.S. Consulate General in Wuhan knew that the city had been struck by what was thought to be an unusually vicious flu season. The disease worsened in November. When city officials began to close public schools in mid-December to control the spread of the disease, the team passed the word to Embassy Beijing and continued monitoring.”
4. A surveillance report on sewage by the Italian Department of Environment, Health, and Nutrition, and Veterinary Public Health indicates that traces of the COVID-19 virus had been found in wastewater samples from Italy as early as Dec. 18, 2019.

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