Surgeon General Vivek Murthy Refuses To Acknowledge the Government's Misrepresentation of Mask Research
Recent comments by former COVID-19 adviser Anthony Fauci contradict what public health officials told us during the pandemic.

In a recent interview with The New York Times, former White House COVID-19 adviser Anthony Fauci conceded that face masks had, at best, a modest overall impact on coronavirus transmission during the pandemic. "From a broad public-health standpoint, at the population level, masks work at the margins—maybe 10 percent," he said. "But for an individual who religiously wears a mask, a well-fitted KN95 or N95, it's not at the margin. It really does work."
This week CNN's Erin Burnett asked Surgeon General Vivek Murthy about Fauci's gloss, which she said might be perceived as "an extremely significant statement," because "we were told it didn't matter what kind of mask [we wore]." She also noted that children were required to wear masks in schools and day care centers, adding that "none of them wore them the right way." The contrast between that frequently mandatory advice and what Fauci is saying now, Burnett suggested, is "upsetting to a lot of people."
Murthy's response illustrates the persistent difficulty that public health officials have in speaking honestly about this subject. He conceded that shifting government health advice "can be disconcerting" but said "sometimes guidance does evolve over time as you learn more." He also allowed that the pandemic "has been incredibly hard for a lot of people, especially kids and parents." And he mentioned "greater loneliness and isolation" as one consequence of the pandemic, saying the Biden administration is working on "a national strategy to address loneliness."
The one thing Murthy did not address was the substance of Burnett's question. Fauci's current summary of the evidence, she noted, contradicts what public health officials told us during the pandemic. "Do you understand," Burnett asked, why people might view that contradiction as "extremely significant" and "upsetting"? Murthy evidently does not understand that, even though it goes to the heart of the government's credibility when it purports to tell us what science says about the effectiveness of disease control measures.
Murthy's claim that the government's repeatedly revised mask guidance was driven by compelling new evidence is hard to take seriously. There was no such new evidence when the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), after dismissing the value of general masking early in the pandemic, decided it was "the most important, powerful public health tool we have." There was no such evidence when the CDC belatedly acknowledged that N95s were superior to cloth masks. Or when the CDC belatedly decided it was time to lift mask mandates in schools.
For most of the pandemic, the CDC drew no distinction between the "well-fitted KN95 or N95" that Fauci says "really does work" and the cloth masks that people commonly wore in response to mandates. Based on shaky evidence, the CDC made extravagant claims about the general effectiveness of masks in reducing the risk of infection. And it never conceded what Fauci now admits: that there is a big difference between the individual benefits for someone who consistently and correctly wears the best kind of mask and the benefits that can be detected "at the population level" among people who typically don't.
That point, which is crucial in evaluating the merits of mask mandates, was highlighted by the recent Cochrane Library review of 18 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that aimed to measure the effectiveness of surgical masks in reducing the spread of respiratory viruses. Judging from those studies, the Cochrane review found, masking in public places "probably makes little or no difference" in the number of infections. The review said that conclusion was based on "moderate-certainty evidence."
The authors suggested several possible explanations for the results of their meta-analysis, including "poor study design," weak statistical power "arising from low viral circulation in some studies," "lack of protection from eye exposure," inconsistent or improper mask use, "self-contamination of the mask by hands," "saturation of masks with saliva," and increased risk taking based on "an exaggerated sense of security." It is possible that some subjects in these studies did derive a benefit from wearing masks, but that effect was washed out by the behavior of other subjects who did not follow protocol, especially if those subjects took more risks than they otherwise would have because masks gave them "an exaggerated sense of security."
When Fauci said general masking can reduce infections "at the margins" by "maybe 10 percent," he seemed to have in mind the Bangladesh RCT that his interviewer, David Wallace-Wells, had just mentioned. "In what was probably our best study, from Bangladesh, in places where mask use tripled, positive tests were reduced by less than 10 percent," Wallace-Wells said.
The authors of the Cochrane review noted several weaknesses in the Bangladesh RCT, including "baseline imbalance, subjective outcome assessment and incomplete follow-up across the groups." But that study accounted for a large share of the data in the meta-analysis and did not change the overall results, which indicated "little or no effect of mask use."
Does the Cochrane review show that masks are useless? No. Laboratory studies provide reason to believe that masks, especially N95s, can protect both the wearer and the people he encounters. But those studies were conducted in stylized conditions that bear little resemblance to the real world. And the observational studies touted by the CDC, unlike the RCTs, were not designed to control for all the variables that might independently affect the risk of infection or transmission.
The advantage of properly designed RCTs is that they avoid both of those problems by randomly assigning subjects to mask and no-mask groups in real-world conditions. Yet as the Cochrane review shows, those studies do not support the claim that encouraging or requiring general masking has a substantial impact on the number of infections.
Critics of the review have argued that better-designed studies might detect a significant effect. But the fact remains that governments required children and adults to wear masks without firm evidence indicating that such policies would make an important difference. And even if you join Fauci in taking the Bangladesh study at face value, it is not reasonable to expect more than a modest effect.
The CDC, of course, did not get into any of this. Based on observational and laboratory studies with widely recognized weaknesses, it claimed that wearing a mask—any mask, apparently—"reduc[es] your chance of infection by more than 80 percent." It even claimed, based on a statistically insignificant result from a deeply flawed observational study, that wearing a cloth mask "lowered the odds of testing positive" by 56 percent.
Nor did the CDC have any reservations about trumpeting the supposed benefits of mask mandates, without regard to whether studies controlled for confounding variables or even whether they included a comparison group at all. It was especially aggressive in promoting school and day care policies that required children as young as 2 to wear masks, pretending that the scientific case for them was overwhelming.
Leaving aide the methodological problems that the CDC ignored, its claims about the effectiveness of those mandates were inherently implausible for the reason that Burnett mentioned in her interview with Murthy: If adults typically do not wear masks consistently and properly, how likely is it that toddlers, elementary school students, and teenagers will do so? Not very, as anyone who observed masked students or saw photos of them could confirm.
Unsurprisingly, Murthy does not want to talk about all the ways in which public health officials like him systematically exaggerated the strength of the evidence in favor of mask mandates. He prefers to discuss "a national strategy to address loneliness." But refusing to acknowledge the public health establishment's credibility problem will not make it go away.
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Sorry, but as an asbestos professional, KN95s and N95s do not work. They can never be made tight-fitting enough to block particles from coming in around the sides, and the spaces in the filter are too big to block an asbestos fiber, much less an aerosolized virus. The only sort of mask/respirator that would work at a minimum is a half-face respirator with rubberized seals to go on the face. This must be used with a cleanly-shaven face and P100 (HEPA) filter cartridges. Anything less will never provide protection from anything airborne. If you got tested for Covid, you should've taken note that the testers were wearing exactly those, the half-face respirators. There's a valid reason they were doing so.
Everyone I knew who worked in construction, along with a friend who is an emergency room doctor, told me this at the beginning, so the only time I wore a mask was when my doctors required it. Getting thrown out of a grocery store, so what. But not getting my annual check-ups, etc., was not something I wanted to risk.
I heard the same from an ER doctor. His opinion was that the "six feet apart" rule was much better at stopping transmission but that all of us would get Chicomvirus at some point.
The fact that people are still getting it bears this out.
The 6 foot rule was also merely pulled out of Fauci's butt with absolutely no study supporting it. Quite the opposite, transmission occurred indoors with people much greater than 6 feet. In contrast, there was no outdoor transmission.
Fauci et al funded no RCTs about masks because they didn't want to know the answer.
Don't bother getting an annual checkup, that's a doctor scam that they use to upsell you with more services that you don't need.
Why are you conflating asbestos protection with virus protection? N95 masks are not used in many industrial situations, but they are in medical situations. Maybe doctors are just idiots?
Yes they are actually. I bought mine before the pandemic at a hardware store.
Also, given that doctors say masks work and that men can have babies, yes, I think doctors are idiots.
Amen!
I worked in power plants my whole working career. I was qualified up to a SCBA (Self Contained Breathing Apparatus). Asbestos, coal, silica, wood fibers, lime, soda ash, anhydrous ammonia, aqua ammonia, nitric acid, caustic soda, biocides and slimicides are just some of the OSHA mask required substances I have worked with in my career. Our equipment met all MSA (Mine Safety Administration) standards. All had to make a seal, all had to be worn clean shaven, no face jeweler could interfere. Failure to do do would lead to punishment up to termination. Also not only the correct for the purpose mask must be worn, but the correct filter cartridge must also be used, for particulates, aerosol mists and organics. OSHA and MSA have never qualified one single cloth mask for a reason, they do nothing. Their qualified mask do all protect the wearer if worn properly. And as for “protecting others” every mask has a fatal flaw, the mask must allow you to exhale.
Anyone with any kind of experience knew the masks were a joke from day one. As for surgeries, the surgical teams masks are made to keep their coughs, sneezes and spittle out of the patients wounds. The patient has a tight fitting seal with oxygen and anesthesia over their face to protect them from air borne germs during the operation.
I’ve always wondered; why does the surgeon general wear a navy uniform?
The original was the Marine Hospital Service, which would be under the Navy. That evolved into the US Public Health Service.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Public_Health_Service
Thanks.
So the Marine's medics wear Navy uniform? This actually makes sense considering the "everyone is a rifleman" Marine philosophy and how many doctors won't carry a weapon at all.
The Marine's highest officers are Generals. That might explain why the commander of the Public Health Service is a General rather than an Admiral, but I think instead it's by analogy with Attorney General. Both of these are from an earlier usage of "General" as part of a title - for instance, in Elizabethan times, the commander of a commercial expedition with several captains was a "Captain-General".
The Public Health Service has a proud tradition of responding to public health emergencies. This was not one of their proudest moments.
This one's an Indian, he should be wearing buffalo horns.
That's Indian 'dot.' Not Indian 'feather.'
Then shouldn't he be the Surgeon Admiral?
That’s Admiral Surgeon to you!
He's lying now about lying then.
Fire 'em all.
Out of a cannon.
“governments required children and adults to wear masks without firm evidence indicating that such policies would make an important difference.”
I don’t know why “Reason” writers continue to soft-soap this issue! Governments required us to wear masks in direct contradiction to the pre-pandemic evidence and firm recommendations by their own public health and epidemiologist experts that mask mandates and other draconian social measures would do very little to modulate the spread of the virus, and that such mandates would do EXACTLY the kind of harms that Murthy is pooh-poohing!
Reason soft-soaps medical issues because they believe that the government should have a substantial role in public health. For instance, they advocate adding fluoride to the water supply. Consult other sites when you want to know the libertarian view on a medical controversy.
"a national strategy to address loneliness"
I blew milk out of my nose when I first read this ... just before I almost lost my lunch after thinking about it for a few seconds! That will teach me not to read news articles while eating. I wondered, "Will this be like the national strategy to fight overweight and the national strategy to fight drug abuse and the national strategy to fight poverty and ...
I had the same reaction, along with the image of Ralph Wiggum from The Simpsons squeaking out: "I'm from the government and I'm here to help!"
It's too bad I abandoned facebook! This would have made a perfect meme to post there: Murthy labeled with "The National Strategy to Address Loneliness" bracketed by two street-walkers photo-shopped in each holding one of his arms. Maybe one of them would be a tranny.
Mandatory home sharing.
Where do I sign up to get my government issued girlfriend?
You’ll be issued a “girlfriend” when they imprison you.
Or you may be selected as the “girlfriend “.
I was trying to put a positive spin on it.
My first thought when reading that was Jesus H Christ, can't you just leave us the F alone?
I also did a double take at that very line. Please Mr. Government, I've had enough "national strategies" for one lifetime, thanks.
Sort of calls to mind Cool Hand Luke's great line "Cap'n, I wish you'd stop being so good to me."
They don’t intend to be honest or accurate . It’s obvious. They intend to be heeded and obeyed.
People who don’t intend to be honest don’t belong in public service positions.
Anarchist!
Oh for fucks sake, Sullum. You were doing so great until you tried to throw all those wrong people a bone.
“Does the Cochrane review show that masks are useless? No. Laboratory studies provide reason to believe that masks, especially N95s, can protect both the wearer and the people he encounters.”
So let’s be clear here. The Cochrane review showed convincingly that surgical masks did nothing to prevent the spread of COVID. So this statement from Sullum is misleading at best, flat out wrong at worst. Masks were useless for the purpose they were being touted. Maybe they are useful for hiding your face from cameras, but for the purposes of reducing infection rate, they were useless.
For Sullum to then go on and drag up a bunch of laboratory testing is ridiculous. If people define “usefulness” as anything more than “reducing spread of droplets in a highly controlled setting” or “making an origami pterodactyl when bored” the masks are useless.
Let’s be clear here: There is no evidence whatsoever that any mask- whether it is an N95 or Surgical- will meaningfully lower a person’s chances of getting COVID. These laboratory tests and ad-hoc studies are very convoluted ways of saying, “Masks are 95% effective half the time”.
There is ample evidence that under strict protocols, with well trained people, for limited durations, N95 masks can be part of a solution that prevents infection. But those circumstances are not applicable to the general public, or even most specific individuals. Touting the effectiveness of N95s as any solution to COVID is like suggesting that Stradivarius violins are a key to becoming master musicians.
It's like my emergency room doctor friend told me: we wear masks to prevent the transference of fluids. If anyone comes in who has a cold or the flu, we accept the chance that we might get sick because there's no way to prevent those germs from getting out there.
This is what all doctors knew to be true in the Before Times. But were too scared to assert once the pandemic was in full swing.
Facts change!
/sarc
"Pray we don't change them further" - Biden's handlers
America's surgeon general looks like a Lord High Admiral of the Church of Scientology
This guy was on the PBS Newshour yesterday talking about how an epidemic of loneliness was causing health problems, which may be true, but with no mention at all of the fact that he himself was pushing lockdowns to keep people...lonely.
"a national strategy to address loneliness."
Does it involve an mRNA vaccine?
"And he mentioned "greater loneliness and isolation" as one consequence of the pandemic"
No, this is not a consequence of the pandemic. This is a consequence of government mandated lockdowns.
Murthy's claim that the government's repeatedly revised mask guidance was driven by compelling new evidence is hard to take seriously.
This was the second failure of CDC. The first was their failure to test anyone from China - or anywhere else - and fail to even have a test by Feb. The second was the mask stuff.
Even today it is obvious that CDC doesn't understand how masks work. Masks WORK in Asia. They do not work HERE. Why? It ain't the virus. It ain't the fabric of the mask or the size holes in it. That is all irrelevant because this isn't like scuba or negative pressure equipment.
Public masks are SPEECH. That's how they work. In Asia, they send a message - please stay away from me. That is what is heard as well - and people respond by keeping as much distance as they can in the situation and they reduce their time spent in those situations where many are masked. Govt doesn't really need to say anything. In the US, the message on seeing a mask/not was - By God I'm gonna pick a fight with you right fucking now. That produces the opposite of social distancing. Worse - the focus (continuing to now and including this article and most past articles by Reason) about the medical efficacy of the mask encourages really stupid behaviors like - let's have some all-day meeting or school and we'll be OK because masks. Rather than focusing on stuff like - open windows, hold meetings/classes outside, have workers come in three days a week and from home two days to spread people out, etc.
Second - CDC totally failed when faced with the initial shortage of masks. First advising against using them. Then advising cloth but not 95. Then whatever - didn't matter because at that point they were caught in stupidity and lies and backtracking and asscovering.
South Korea had the same mask shortage - maybe worse since Chinese went there and emptied their supply. On Feb 21, 2020 Korea realized they had a mask supply problem. They prohibited exports - prohibited mfrs from selling to 'new buyers'. Bought up 100% of then existing production at existing market price. By Mar 1, 2020 there was no more mask shortage and the govt supplies were distributed to low income thru post offices.
Is that (no shortages of anything needed to mitigate covid and knowledge of how to deal with pandemics - because MERS) why SK didn't need - or rationalize - any general closure/lockdown? Their approach was not hands-off at all- but it was far more focused on public health in 2020 (with roughly 1000 total deaths in 2020) before the vaccine changed the approach.
But hey - lets continue to have some stupid argument about what kind of masks to wear or not wear - THREE FUCKING YEARS AFTER WHEN THAT DISCUSSION MIGHT HAVE BEEN USEFUL.
Bull fucking shit. Masks were never useful. They don’t fucking work.
Start telling the truth or shut the fuck up.
And no, we won’t forget what you fucking said.
They work in Asia. Why?
"They work in Asia..."
You, as a lying pile of lefty shit, have zero cred; your assertions are the stuff of amusement at best.
Cite?
China is not part of Asia.
https://www.usnews.com/news/health-news/articles/2022-12-23/report-chinas-covid-19-infections-surge-reach-37-million-in-single-day
No they don't retard.
Your own comment basically admits that the masks themselves don’t work, they just social signal to keep your distance.
The assholic JFree spent the early months of 2020 waving his PANIC flag, claiming we were all gonna die if we didn’t repent our sins by signaling our repentance by wearing the magic mask; at the time, the piece of shit made claims it had a functional effect!
I spent many key-strokes calling him on his bullshit and the assholic JFree now ignores me; jam your PANIC flag up your ass, JFree!
Now, finally, the assholic JFree admits the mask had no effect other than signaling, meaning no effect at all. If I have a cold, I don’t go to the office; no signaling required.
Stuff your PANIC flag up your ass, sit on it until it causes fatal injuries so the world gains by your death, pathetic piece of shit.
That means they work. As virtually continual reinforcement of the advice to keep your distance. Any advice from white lab coats to keep your distance would have the same effect as eat your broccoli.
By that logic, so do the two rocks I bang together while saying fire like Butthead.
But that isn’t why we were told, or forced, to mask.
"They work in Asia."
Here is JFear confidently asserting shit that isn't true. Masks did not "work" in Asia. He has no proof of this other than the fact that his convoluted theory of "social signaling" makes sense in his imagination.
the worldometers DOT info link keeps getting snagged by the comment filters, but go there and you will see:
COVID Cases per 1MM:
US: 318,799
Japan: 268,878
S Korea: 608,471
Taiwan: 428,656
Hong Kong: 380,370
If masking worked so great in Asia, we would expect to see case rate lower in Asia, right? But it isn't. Because Masking is as scientifically sound in asia as eating powdered tiger balls. Ancient Chinese Secret!
That's a reasonable start for an approach to test whether masks work.
Of course - 'cases' are nowhere near apples v apples everywhere. Those Asian countries tested and tested and tested and tested. That does produce more confirmed cases than a place where testing is not common at all.
Second - confirmed cases in 2020 (before vaccine) are different than post-2020. Social distancing (via masks) simply doesn't mean as much when one has been vaccinated v when a vaccine doesn't even exist. And vaccines reduced symptomatic cases - meaning reduced testing and confirmed cases. That's kind of the point of vaccines - so you can get back to normal with no need to social distance because far less risk of serious infection. Those two timeframes are just different thangs.
Third - masks work via distancing. Which means population density is a huge factor. As also in disease transmission. Pure pop density is not the best measure of pre-masking pre-virus distancing but hey its available:
US - 91 people per square mile
Japan - 860 people per square mile
SKorea - 1340 people per square mile
Taiwan - 1707 people per square mile
Hong Kong - 17,582 people per square mile
Big freaking difference there eh? THAT is a reasonable measure of how far apart potentially infected people are and how fast diseases (respiratory in particular) can spread. THAT is the purpose of masks - to spread people out where possible and to avoid the overly crowded 'superspreader' situations in particular. One might see that as the main reason masks were worn more in cities than in rural areas in the US. And I personally never experienced any 'mask mandate' in rural areas I was in either (and I was there sometimes during the urban closures). But hey - DeRp's will always DeRp everything.
TL;DR: You can read all the takedown below, but JFear does nothing to prove his masking hypothesis is correct. He merely offers three reasons (that often contradict with each other) why the data doesn't agree with him. He essentially says "Masking works as a signal to distance, but because people stop distancing when vaccinated and they are packed together in dense asian cities, you can't see the effect."
"Those Asian countries tested and tested and tested and tested."
Did they though? Cases and Tests per 1MM
US: .................318,799............3,520k
Japan: ...........268,878 ...........399k
S Korea: ........608,471...........308k
Taiwan: .........428,656...........1,287k
Hong Kong: ..380,370...........10,011k
This completely blows away any correlation. Japan, the country that seems to have out-performed the US on Cases, has the second fewest tests and 9x fewer than the US. And the country with the worst performance for cases (S Korea) was the lowest tester of all, with more than 1/10th testing rate of the US.
"Second – confirmed cases in 2020 (before vaccine) are different than post-2020. Social distancing (via masks) simply doesn’t mean as much when one has been vaccinated"
Ok, so now masking totally works except when it doesn't. Not once did JFear test any of this hypothesis that he just made up. He is convinced he is right, and so any justification that pops into his head must be truth. He doesn't even bother to contemplate how he can insist (wrongly) that asian countries did massive testing only to declare that they stopped testing when vaccines came out (Nor does he attempt to actually prove this assertion). Did he actually look at data to confirm that pre-vaccine case rates were measurably different than post vaccine? Does he attempt to explain how pictures showing masked asians packed on top of one another fits with his theory that masks work in Asia by signaling for people to distance?
https://www.scmp.com/news/hong-kong/health-environment/article/3093151/hong-kong-third-wave-drivers-use-softly-softly
And does JFear contemplate how his own assertions undermine his argument? After all, in one breath he insists that masks work to say "I'm sick" causing other people to stay away...and in the next breath he insists that people don't follow that social signal if they think they are safer.
No JFear doesn't bother to validate any of his hypotheses or provide any data. These things make sense in his head right now, and damn it all if maybe they conflict with facts or stuff he said a paragraph earlier.
"Which means population density is a huge factor."
And now JFear thinks he is proving his point, when in fact he is undermining it. He pulls population density data, and says that is the reason case-numbers (which he just erroneously argued were artifacts of testing bias) show Asians infecting each other in greater numbers.
In other words, JFear is saying that masking actually doesn't work *because* population density over-rides his hypothesized social distancing mechanism. And so his argument comes down to, "Masking totally would have worked in Asia as a social signal to distance, except that people ."
Now, I could go on and pick apart his data- after all, in the US 80% of the country lives in cities, and are not as rural as our massive land area expresses in averages. But I don't need to. Saying "This is why the data disagrees with my hypothesis" is not the same as "this data proves my hypothesis."
With the way that the CDC and FDA crippled testing in the US, combined with the fact that the virus has such a high asymptomatic rate, symptoms which are so similar to several other diseases in most symptomatic cases, and was actually spreading in parts of the USA for at least 6-8 weeks before WHO admitted the possibility that it had escaped the local area of Wuhan or the country of China, any comparison of "detected cases" between the USA (which was running less than 2k tests per day for the first 3 or so months when it was acknowledged that the virus was in the USA) and South Korea (which ran 10k tests per day, including using kits made in the USA but not FDA/CDC approved) can't possibly be considered valid.
It's not just a difference of apples to oranges, it's practically apples to flamethrowers.
Oh - and 'signaling' is also how the price system and spontaneous order works. In humans and even among birds.
I would have thought that libertarians understood that that word is not an insult. But not your fucking ilk.
And there is the collectivist smear, right on queue. "You guys will never understand me because you are [libertarians|crypto-bros|goldbugs|anti-vaxxers]"
I know how fucking complex adaptive systems work, you twit. I was a student and follower of John Holland of the Santa Fe Institute for 20 years before he died.
You have offered no evidence other than naked assertions that masks are a leverage point in this complex adaptive system. Is the mask a bright flower, or is it a leaf? All evidence indicates that even if it is a tag by which other agents organize, many more important signals swamp out any effect.
So, the gist of all this is:
Masks work but mandates don't.
People who use high-quality masks correctly benefit those around them but likely not themselves.
Being told to wear masks by the government results in a bunch of people wearing low-quality masks incorrectly, which benefits no one but the companies who make low-quality masks.
When the government is faced with a crisis, the response is nearly always "Oh shit! We have to do something! Make it look like we're doing something. Quick, quick, or we'll lose votes."
"...the Biden administration is working on "a national strategy to address loneliness."..."
NOOOOOOO!
We will all be issues AI-generated “friends”.
And they'll all sniff our hair and demand 10% for the 'big guy'.
Wayne does it better than I can.
https://youtu.be/-TwYVWQsXmQ?t=3
The NIH gave out cloth mask emblazoned with NIH research keeps us safe to their workers. Doubleplus good vitrual signal.
https://allbluetees.com/product/nih-research-keeps-us-safe-face-mask/
*virtue
I'm more confused about how families that were frightened into living like shut-ins (as opposed to single people living alone in cities that locked down) somehow suffered the most from loneliness and isolation.
Not to mention terrified as to what the Biden administration (or worse yet, the CA Dem party) might be looking into as a government-driven solution there. Isn't it enough that we're all going to be assigned a case officer tasked with monitoring all online activity if RESTRICT passes? Then there's the new army of IRS enforcers to look over any non-cash transaction in excess of $600?
Maybe the next four years to "finish the job" means enacting an East German style "jobs program" where anyone willing can get paid to inform on "thoughtcrimes" committed by their neighbors or co-workers? That government was pioneering in the field of having people who'd been through male puberty compete athletically against those born with X-X pituitary systems, why not follow their example on other aspects of domestic policy? It's not like anyone questioning it will get media treatment better than being labeled "enemies of the State" (another widely used Eastern-bloc concept).
Surprisingly relevant:
"The Great Mortality", John Kelly, a history of the black death. "Leaders" lied, cults arose claiming salvation by avoiding sin, and the disease was not affected in the least.
There are two obvious differences:
1) The Bubonic Plague was a killer, unlike the WuFlu which killed less than the annual flu AFAWK.
2) It was (and remains) bacterial; -cillians can treat it.
If they had penicillin back then, it would have been labeled “horse paste”.
"The authors of the Cochrane review noted several weaknesses in the Bangladesh RCT, including "baseline imbalance, subjective outcome assessment and incomplete follow-up across the groups." But that study accounted for a large share of the data in the meta-analysis and did not change the overall results, which indicated "little or no effect of mask use."
I recall this being touted as the "gold standard" of studies, proving beyond any shadow of doubt that MASKS WORK!!! The study was designed to provide that, regardless of what any evidence suggested to the contrary.
I don't believe anyone associated with politics, media, and much of the so called scientific community. Everyone just wants their 15 minutes of fame and to come out looking as if they were on some winning side.
The lockdown measures (masks, distancing, and closures) were based on nothing but fear. Before any of these measures were implemented, let alone required, substantial evidence to support them should be required. Instead, they all admit they didn't have enough information at the time and it was the lack of information that justified these measures. Lack of info = fear. It wasn't fear about what would happen to people, it was fear that they'd be blamed if something did. These lockdowners should be sent to prison for the damage they did.
Do we really need a surgeon general at this point? Couldn't this guys efforts be used for his job at the Quickie mart ?