You clearly know more about the Koch brothers than I do, so I won't argue on this point, but what I will say is that this brings our top universities into disrepute. These institutions are supposed to be at the forefront of science and knowledge, but more importantly, they have to show a level of integrity that others aspire towards. This surely tarnishes the reputation of the many esteemed professors and doctors who are involved? How can we know who to trust if people are so easily bought? If it works one way then life has taught me that it most certainly works the other as well. This is fast becoming a political minefield and disaster.I don't disagree that we're in crazy uncertain times where it's hard to know what to follow, but in this specific case I am very happy to dismiss it out of hand because every piece of Koch-backed "science" in the last 40 years has led to regressive policies, environmental destruction and worker suffering.
Who has the ultimate right to judge what should be censored and what shouldn't? Surely, we either have free speech or we don't? I can understand censoring certain content that's clearly just hate-speech or whatnot, but I feel it's wrong in this instance. I don't see why Google and other big tech companies should have the ultimate right to control what we have access to, even though we know the dissemination of information is highly manipulated nowadays. It could be the dumbest document of all time, but rather than pretend it doesn't exist, it should be openly rebutted and discussed in the public domain, in my opinion.
You mentioned that Alphabet was part of AIER's group above, so it seems rather odd for them to censor their own document.
The decision making in the UK lately is all over the place and I feel we're heading towards a potential disaster with no ones hand firmly on the wheel to guide us.
I agree about the markets. The CEO of MicroStrategy put $425m of their cash reserve into Bitcoin stating that their money was analogous to a pile of melting ice cubes. I can see more and more billionaires going into Bitcoin and cryptocurrencies to hedge against inflation which is sure to go above 10%, that's if it isn't that already.That's just my read from the ground, but, look at what tech (for instance) is doing -- huge verticals are doing massively well during COVID and profiting tremendously. Usually, when this happens it's an opportunity to grow, expand, etc -- but what we're seeing is that people are just pocketing money and maintaining larger than usual cash reserves. That's a pretty obvious set of tea leaves, no?
I think we agree that limiting the number of lost lives is the best way forward and that's really all that matters. It's knowing how to achieve this without making the collateral damage more of a problem than the virus. As you once stated, governments will start to put a price on peoples heads.