Undoubtedly he gave this order so that his network would not give any air to any Trump statement, and so CNN could not blunder and inadvertently wind up reporting that Trump was right.
Best not to do any journalism at all, decided the "journalists."
CNN's then-president Jeff Zucker told his staffers not to investigate the "lab leak theory" behind the origins of COVID-19 because he thought it was a "Trump talking point," according to a report.
A "well-placed" CNN insider told Fox News Digital on Monday that Zucker gave the order in the early months of the coronavirus pandemic.
"People are slowly waking up from the fog," the insider told Fox News Digital. "It is kind of crazy that we didn't chase it harder."
One of Zucker's charges who followed through on his boss's reported edict was Oliver Darcy, the network's media reporter, who wrote an item in the initial days of the pandemic titled: "Here's how to debunk coronavirus misinformation and conspiracy theories from friends and family."
"While the coronavirus pandemic has isolated family and friends inside their homes, it has in many cases increased online or over-the-phone communication with loved ones," Darcy wrote on March 28, 2020.
"But, in some cases, relatives and friends share poor information -- whether it is bad science related to how to prevent the virus, debunked rumors about cities being put on lockdown, or conspiracy theories about the origins of Covid-19," he wrote.
"While any strain of misinformation is not ideal, misinformation related to a public health crisis has an especially dangerous element to it." Fareed Zakaria, the host of CNN's "Fareed Zakaria GPS," said during a broadcast that "the far right has now found its own virus conspiracy theory" when discussing the lab leak.
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