Aids 'n Dr. Fauci

Discussion in 'OFF TOPIC SUBJECTS' started by CULCULCAN, Aug 15, 2021.

  1. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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    Wait until everyone finds out that Fauci
    killed 100's of thousands of AIDS patients with AZT.

    It was all about the money for AZT just like now.

    aidsNfauci.
     
  2. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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    aids750.
     
  3. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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  4. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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    SAME PLAYBOOK: In 1983, Fauci tried to spread mass ...

    SAME PLAYBOOK: In 1983, Fauci tried to spread mass hysteria over AIDS, claiming it could be spread through “casual contact” – Civilian Intelligence Network 3.0

    https://www.civilianintelligencenet...ng-it-could-be-spread-through-casual-contact/


    2021-07-13 · SAME PLAYBOOK:
    In 1983, Fauci tried to spread mass hysteria over AIDS, claiming it could be spread through “casual contact”.
    America’s fakest “doctor,” Anthony Fauci, has a disease.

    And that disease is demarcated by a fear of other human beings, …
     
  5. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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    SAME PLAYBOOK: In 1983, Fauci tried to spread mass ...

    SAME PLAYBOOK: In 1983, Fauci tried to spread mass hysteria over AIDS, claiming it could be spread through “casual contact” – Civilian Intelligence Network 3.0

    https://www.civilianintelligencenet...ng-it-could-be-spread-through-casual-contact/

    fig-0-93.
    EUGENICS
    SAME PLAYBOOK: In 1983, Fauci tried to spread mass hysteria over AIDS, claiming it could be spread through “casual contact”

    1810ddf347ec20232f35fb90a3288d4e?s=96&d=mm&r=g. by Shawn Paul Melville2021-07-13
    America’s fakest “doctor,” Anthony Fauci, has a disease. And that disease is demarcated
    by a fear of other human beings, a fear of intimacy, and a narcissistic desire
    to impose these fears on everyone else in the name of “disease prevention,”
    a schtick he has been peddling for more than 40 years.

    It was the year 1983, in fact, when Fauci gave the following interview
    about the alleged AIDS virus, in which he claimed that casual contact
    such as a hug or handshake might pass it between friends and family members.

    Sound familiar?

    If it does, that is because Fauci is still fearmongering like this today.

    Fauci has been in the business of fearmongering for about half a century,
    it turns out, constantly hyping up the latest “virus” while trying to scare people
    into fearing other people as if everyone else is some kind of walking disease vector.

    Watch for yourself below to see how Fauci loved to grandstand,
    as he still does today, about what he thinks he knows about viruses:
    As you will clearly see, Fauci loved to hear himself talk back then just as he does today. And just like today, Fauci back then loved to talk in circles using fancy-sounding words while saying pretty much nothing of actual substance.
    “This syndrome has been evolving over the past several months,” Fauci fearmongered back in ’83 about AIDS. “It seems that as every month, or even week, goes by, we learn a little bit more about how it can go out of its original epidemiological constraints.”
    “Early on, as you know, the disease was felt to be limited to the male homosexual community and then IV drug users, and then we began to see that groups like Haitians, hemophiliacs, the implications of possible transmission by blood transfusions.”
    Fauci lied about AIDS, and now he is lying about coronavirus

    Okay, so what happened next, you might be asking? Not much.

    The AIDS virus that Fauci spoke about in ’83 never actually materialized in the way he said it would
    – just like the Wuhan coronavirus (Covid-19) of today has never materialized like he said it would.

    “When you have a situation that we’re seeing here … in which children, household contacts,
    of either individuals with AIDS or individuals at high risk for AIDS, have indeed at least a significant number
    of them have what looks like a syndrome that’s identical to AIDS syndrome, that tells you that it’s quite possible
    that just intimate contact outside of the sexual contact, blood transmission route is a possible mechanism
    whereby this disease can be transmitted,” Fauci stated erroneously.
    “The implications for the spread to even other groups besides infants and childrens [sic]
    become something that needs to be reckoned with.

    I think it’s going to have a major impact on our thinking about what the real confines of this syndrome will be.”

    When asked specifically how AIDS is able to transfer, Fauci responded with,
    “Just the ordinary close contact that one sees in normal interpersonal relationships.”

    Is that true? Of course not. But when has Fauci ever said anything true? Pretty much never.

    We just thought you should know this.

    Take a few minutes to watch the video above, or at least as much of it as you can stomach.

    The constant tongue-flipping and robotic repetition of words from the guy is painful,
    but hearing and seeing it will quickly remind you why you should never listen to a word
    this psychopath has to say because all he has ever been is wrong, not to mention corrupt.
    JUDY MIKOVITZ, PHD, EX-NIH WHISTLEBLOWER EXPOSES ANOTHONY FAUCI:

    SAME PLAYBOOK: In 1983, Fauci tried to spread mass ...

    SAME PLAYBOOK: In 1983, Fauci tried to spread mass hysteria over AIDS, claiming it could be spread through “casual contact” – Civilian Intelligence Network 3.0

    https://www.civilianintelligencenet...ng-it-could-be-spread-through-casual-contact/
     
  6. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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    aidsNfauci.
     
  7. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

    Messages:
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    Fauci Was Duplicitous on the AIDS Epidemic Too
    https://www.aier.org/article/fauci-was-duplicitous-on-the-aids-epidemic-too/

    Fauci Was Duplicitous on the AIDS Epidemic Too
    P_W_Magness_1255cropped-wpv_60x60_center_center. Phillip W. Magness
    February 23, 2021
    duplicity-800x508.

    In May 1983, amid the rapidly escalating AIDS crisis,
    a doctor at the National Institutes of Health (NIH)
    promoted a stunning theory about the newly encountered disease
    in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA).

    Noting that the same issue of the journal contained an article
    documenting one of the first cases of the immunodeficiency
    disease’s appearance in an infant, the author sounded an alarm
    about “the possibility that routine close contact,
    as within a family household, can spread the disease.”

    The article took an increasingly speculative turn
    in promoting this new theory.

    “If indeed the latter is true, then AIDS takes on an entirely new dimension,”
    it continued. “If we add to this possibility that nonsexual,
    non-blood-borne transmission is possible, the scope of the syndrome
    may be enormous.”

    Although the article reiterated the need to “be cautious”
    in accepting these findings as they awaited more evidence,
    the discovery “should at least alert us to the possibility
    that we are truly dealing with AIDS in children,”
    as transmitted through routine interaction.

    The author of the article has since attained widespread familiarity.

    It was Dr. Anthony S. Fauci, a rising star within the NIH bureaucracy.

    Press accounts, noticing Fauci’s article, immediately sounded the alarm.

    Household contacts can transmit AIDS,” read one nationally syndicated report
    on the UPI wire dated May 5, 1983.

    The Associated Press queried the next day
    “Does AIDS spread by Routine Contact?”
    and quoted Fauci as their lead authority.

    The New York Times raised the specter of household transmission between family members, invoking Fauci’s commentary as its main authority.

    We now know of course that Fauci’s theory was wrong. HIV, the virus that was later discovered to cause AIDS, only transmits by exposure to infected bodily fluids such as blood, or by sexual contact.

    The infant infection discussed in the same JAMA issue involved vertical transmission from the mother to child during pregnancy.


    The damage was already done though, as the media went to work stoking alarm about AIDS transmission through simple routine contacts.

    Hundreds of newspapers disseminated the distressing theory from Fauci’s article.

    Writing a few weeks later, conservative columnist Pat Buchanan enlisted
    Fauci as the centerpiece of a rebuttal against Health and Human Services Secretary Margaret Heckler, who told him “there is no evidence…
    that the general population is threatened by [AIDS].”

    On July 14, both Buchanan’s column and its excerpt of Fauci’s article
    were entered into the congressional record along with moralizing commentary
    that assigned blame for the disease to homosexual establishments and gatherings.

    Unfounded fears of transmission risk through simple contact, and accompanying social ostracization of the disease’s victims, became one of the most notorious
    and harmful missteps of the entire AIDS crisis.

    It might be tempting to chalk Fauci’s error up to the scientific uncertainties
    of a novel disease. Medicine advances by investigating all plausible theories, subjecting them to testing, and ruling out those that lack evidence.

    In this case however, the more likely candidate was scientific negligence and unwarranted alarmist speculation.

    Journalist Randy Shilts documented the incident in his classic early history of the AIDS crisis, And the Band Played On.

    Immunologist Arye Rubinstein had already offered a more plausible explanation
    for the infant case, which even cursory examination would verify:
    the disease transmitted from the mother to the baby during pregnancy.

    As Shilts explains, “Upon investigation, Rubinstein learned that Anthony Fauci
    had not bothered to read his paper.” The NIH scientist instead relied
    on second-hand information from another researcher to indulge in open-ended speculation (for a longer excerpt of Shilts, see David Henderson’s post
    on Fauci’s early career).

    Although his speculative commentary had triggered a national media frenzy
    over unfounded fears of AIDS transmission through routine contact,
    Fauci himself emerged relatively unscathed from the episode.
    He did so by deploying an all-too-familiar tactic
    from his Covid-19 commentary: the political pivot,
    executed in front of a fawning news media.

    On June 26, less than two months after his JAMA article appeared,
    Fauci publicly contradicted its most irresponsible claim
    – albeit without ever acknowledging his own central role in promoting
    that claim to begin with. As he told the Baltimore Sun,
    “It is absolutely preposterous to suggest that AIDS
    can be contracted through normal social contact like being
    in the same room with someone or sitting on a bus with them.

    The poor gays have received a very raw deal on this.”

    In short, Fauci flip-flopped with the political winds and the press
    barely even noticed.

    It’s a familiar pattern to anyone who has closely followed
    the infectious disease bureaucrat’s public commentary
    since Covid-19 burst into the national news cycle last January.

    It usually starts with Anthony Fauci fielding a question about a disease
    from the press, at which point he offers up a highly speculative answer
    that nonetheless appears to carry the gravity of his own authority.

    Fauci usually caveats his remarks with a stream
    of noncommittal auxiliary verbs – the disease “could,” “might,”
    or “may” behave as his latest prognostication asserts.

    But the press runs with a bold headline anyway,
    declaring that Fauci has spoken and his word is final…
    at least until it is not.

    That’s when Fauci modifies his prior position without even the slightest
    scrutiny from an adoring press corps, and proceeds as if his
    newer pronouncement has been his position all along.

    The flip-flop is then complete and broadcast by the same press
    as the new gospel, even if it directly contradicts the fair doctor’s
    own advice given only weeks or days prior.

    Consider one of the first examples of Fauci’s commentary on Covid-19,
    given to CNN on January 24, 2020
    – the day after the Wuhan region of China
    went into draconian lockdown.

    Asked about the Chinese government’s decision, Fauci declared

    “That’s something that I don’t think we could possibly do in the United States,
    I can’t imagine shutting down New York or Los Angeles.”

    This assessment was no casual political preference,
    but rather reflected Fauci’s own judgment from past pandemics.

    He continued: “[h]istorically when you shut things down
    it doesn’t have a major effect.”

    Indeed, this was Fauci’s own position during the 2014 Ebola outbreak.

    A recently resurfaced interview on NBC shows Fauci warning
    against “draconian” quarantine measures for Ebola,
    and chastising several state governors for enacting hasty emergency restrictions
    to contain an outbreak in the United States without considering
    the unintended consequences.

    By mid-March 2020, less than two months after he disavowed
    the use of lockdowns in major US cities such as New York and Los Angeles,
    Fauci executed a flip-flop and repositioned himself as the U.S. government’s
    primary architect of our historically unprecedented lockdown response.

    “If you look at the curves of outbreaks, they go big peaks, and then come down.

    What we need to do is flatten that down,” he told the press on March 11.

    On March 16, Fauci, along with the rest of the Trump administration’s coronavirus task force, threw their weight behind the now-discredited Imperial College Model
    of Neil Ferguson, igniting a wave of draconian shelter-in-place ordinances
    in not only New York and Los Angeles but ultimately 43 of 50 states.

    “But the evidence on lockdowns changed!” comes the predictable cry of those who instinctively defend Fauci through every twist and turn in his messaging.

    Except it didn’t. Prior to March 2020,
    a substantial body of epidemiological literature strongly condemned lockdowns

    – both for their ineffectiveness and their extremely high social and economic costs.

    The only change that happened between January and March was political;
    namely that technocratic modelers such as Ferguson realized that fear
    and alarm over the coronavirus could be used to brush aside civil liberties
    and democratic norms in favor of a society-wide quarantine modeled
    on the Chinese response in Wuhan.

    Neil Ferguson openly boasted as much in a December 2020 interview,
    recalling the political sea change of those confused and panicked days
    from the previous March.

    Among those who embraced this rapid political shift toward lockdowns
    was none other than Fauci. Indeed on February 17, 2020 the infectious disease administrator told USA Today that the risk from the coronavirus
    in the United States was “just minuscule.”

    Barely three weeks later Fauci would call for a nationwide lockdown,
    albeit for only two weeks.

    For Fauci, that quickly became a month.

    Then two months.

    Then denunciations of states that reopened “too early.”

    Then testimony praising New York for remaining closed and providing a “model” Covid response despite boasting one of the highest per-capita death rates in the entire world.

    Then a push to reimpose stricter lockdowns in the fall.

    Per his latest prognostication, offered almost exactly 1 year
    to the day after he dismissed Covid-19 as a “minuscule” threat
    to the United States, we may return to normal by early 2022.

    And just like that, “two weeks to flatten the curve” became two years.

    In recounting this history, it is important to be mindful
    that high-uncertainty events such as a novel virus and pandemic
    are unavoidably difficult to predict.

    But that acknowledged challenge is no excuse for figures like Fauci,
    who not only offer their prognostications on the whim of the moment
    but often do so on an entirely speculative basis, fully knowing that it will see credulous repetition in the press as an authoritative pronouncement.

    Fauci’s greater fault is not that he errs, although he does err frequently,
    but rather the hubris of the moment through which he speaks
    even as he curiously shelters his pronouncements in caveats
    intended to permit a future pivot.

    Yet when that pivot occurs and Fauci adopts a completely different
    or even contradictory position in light of new political circumstances,
    he advances it with further hubristic pretensions
    before an obsequious gaggle of journalists,
    as if the new stance had always been his position.

    We’ve now seen such pivots on countless occasions, including some
    that entailed willful duplicity.

    Consider Fauci’s pronouncements against mask wearing in
    March 2020 on 60 Minutes.

    By July, Fauci had not only reversed to the opposite position
    – he essentially conceded that he deceived the public back in March
    in order to allegedly prevent a run on masks that might cause
    a hospital shortage.

    In effect, Fauci told what he considered to be a “noble lie” in the name
    of coaxing the public into a position he desired them to follow,
    rather than serving as a reliable source of scientific information.

    It’s a pattern he has repeated many times, most recently
    when he moved the target vaccination rate goalposts from 70% to 90%
    in a self-admitted deception intended to “nudge” the public
    toward his new position.

    That duplicity earned him praise though when he excused it
    as an effort to counter vaccine misinformation.

    Even beyond these intentional manipulations though,
    Fauci’s commentary displays a stunning level
    of inconsistency and contradiction.

    Long after masking supplanted his initial advice against masking,
    Fauci shifted yet again to double-masking, then backtracked
    on this advice a few days later
    , then re-embraced the practice
    a few days after that in conjunction with a new CDC recommendation.

    More recently, he’s taken to contradicting himself on whether to expect
    the sharp peaks and declines in case numbers we’ve recently seen
    in the US and around the world.

    Yet throughout, Fauci’s reputation as a steady and measured source
    of sage wisdom and medical authority remains largely intact
    before the public’s eye.

    Why? I’ll posit that it’s the product of a skilled political operative
    with four decades of honing his abilities to execute politically
    motivated pivots amid disease uncertainty.

    Note the recurring characteristics of his public communications
    that have become hallmarks of Fauci’s style.

    Whether it’s the coronavirus of 2020-21 or the AIDS crisis of 1983,
    he routinely stakes out public positions that rely upon unwarranted
    speculation about scientific matters in the absence of evidence.

    His scientific statements carry an air of authority,
    and are certainly repeated as such by an adoring press

    – including in ways that mislead the public and even cause harm
    to our ability to address and combat an emerging disease.

    Yet if one reads his statements carefully, they also contain
    enough weasel words – “might,” “may,” “could” – to facilitate
    a convenient political pivot at a later date, shirking all responsibility
    for the harm caused in the process.

    And in the instances where a complete contradiction occurs,
    he takes refuge in duplicity for a “noble” purpose,
    which the press is all too happy to excuse away.

    But missteps by powerful and trusted public health officials often lead
    to genuine harms.

    Indeed, it’s no small irony that Fauci’s initial response to AIDS triggered
    a wave of panicked fear that quickly morphed into the social ostracization
    of the disease’s victims.

    It’s not difficult to see similar patterns at play in the rise of a moralizing coronajustice ideology that treats all of society as a potential disease vector,
    and even valorizes social derision of those who contract Covid-19.

    While Fauci is not the only factor in the politicization of either disease,
    his vacillating commentary has often served to inflame these
    and other social ills, and usually with few
    or no professional repercussions to himself.

    Quite the opposite – the more he’s been wrong,
    the higher his stature has grown.

    The more he’s played politics in the name of doing science,
    the higher levels of political power he has attained.

    If you want to see an end to the lockdown madness,
    the ongoing destruction of human lives and livelihoods,
    and the unprecedented government failures
    that have come to characterize our daily routines for the last year,
    the lessons of this administrator’s performance should be obvious.

    It’s time to stop listening to Fauci, and time to stop treating
    his wildly inconsistent political posturing as if it carries
    any scientific authority.

    Phillip W. Magness

    P_W_Magness_1255cropped-wpv_254x234.
    Phillip W. Magness is Senior Research Faculty and Interim Research
    and Education Director at the American Institute for Economic Research.

    He holds a PhD and MPP from George Mason University’s School
    of Public Policy, and a BA from the University of St. Thomas (Houston).

    Prior to joining AIER, Dr. Magness spent over a decade teaching public policy, economics, and international trade at institutions
    including American University, George Mason University, and Berry College.

    Magness’s work encompasses the economic history of the United States
    and Atlantic world, with specializations in the economic dimensions
    of slavery and racial discrimination, the history of taxation,
    and measurements of economic inequality over time.

    He also maintains active research interest in higher education policy
    and the history of economic thought

    . In addition to his scholarship, Magness’s popular writings
    have appeared in numerous venues including the Wall Street Journal,
    the New York Times, Newsweek, Politico, Reason, National Review,
    and the Chronicle of Higher Education.


    Books by Phillip W. Magness




    Fauci Was Duplicitous on the AIDS Epidemic Too
    https://www.aier.org/article/fauci-was-duplicitous-on-the-aids-epidemic-too/

    printfriendly-icon-md.
     
    Last edited: Oct 3, 2021
  8. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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    Fauci’s Fake News: In 1983 Accuses Children of Spreading AIDS - The True Defender !
    https://thetruedefender.com/faucis-fake-news-in-1983-accuses-children-of-spreading-aids/
    Fauci’s Fake News:

    In 1983 Accuses Children of Spreading AIDS


    b7b33604a87c9c92a4048bc1fb7ba73d?s=140&d=mm&r=g.
    Margaret Taylor
    May 20, 2021


    cscs.
    Ads by optAd360
    During the 1980s AIDS crisis, Anthony Fauci, a rising star in the National Institutes of Health (NIH) bureaucracy, promoted a false and unscientific hypothesis that children could spread the disease within their families through close contact. According to Great Game India, the media rapidly spread this disinformation, causing a national media frenzy and public hysteria.
    On May 6, 1983, Fauci published an article in JAMA Network, the American Medical Association’s monthly open-access medical journal, in which he promulgated this false theory about a newly discovered little-known syndrome.
    Join The True Defender Telegram Chanel Here: https://t.me/TheTrueDefender

    He also mentioned in that article that the journal had published a study documenting one of the first cases of immunodeficiency disease in an infant in the same issue, increasing “the possibility that routine close contact, such as within a family home, may spread the disease.”


    “Researchers conclude the disease can be transmitted by sexual contact and blood transfusions.
    However, “if non-sexual, non-blood transmission is plausible, the magnitude of the syndrome may be enormous,”
    Fauci continued, “AIDS takes on a whole new dimension,” fueling confusion and alarm
    by placing a more theoretical spin on his hypothesis.

    The media jumped on Fauci’s claims and took action almost immediately.

    Fauci’s hypothesis was deceptive, unsupported, and quickly debunked. It was discovered that the infant infection described in JAMA,
    on which he based his theory, involved vertical transmission from mother to child during pregnancy.

    Furthermore, HIV, the virus later connected to the cause of AIDS, is only transmitted through contact with contaminated bodily fluids,
    such as blood, or through sexual contact, according to medical and scientific consensus.

    However, the damage had already been done. Hundreds of newspapers published Fauci’s deceptive hypothesis,
    and the media vigorously worked to raise awareness about the spread of AIDS through everyday communication.

    Fears of transmission by simple touch, which were unfounded, became one of the most damaging blunders of the entire AIDS crisis.
    Making a comparison to the COVID-19 crisis, also known as the Chinese Communist Party (CCP Virus).

    Several details indicate that Fauci is a manipulation strategist who uses deception to achieve goals related to his financial interests.

    TheBL commented on one of these related facts in an article revealing how Fauci admittedly tricked Americans
    into having vaccines without providing supporting scientific evidence or prior correctly validated studies.

    He is said to be paid a large fee on vaccine sales.

    Fauci’s Fake News: In 1983 Accuses Children of Spreading AIDS - The True Defender !
    https://thetruedefender.com/faucis-fake-news-in-1983-accuses-children-of-spreading-aids/
     
  9. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

    Messages:
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  10. CULCULCAN

    CULCULCAN The Final Synthesis - isbn 978-0-9939480-0-8 Staff Member

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    EXCLUSIVE: New Fauci Email Proves He Funded Lab Training for Wuhan’s Most Deadly Lab. by Natalie Winters
    Despite his repeat denials, we've got the paper trail linking Anthony Fauci to Wuhan's BSL4 lab.
    https://thenationalpulse.com/exclusive/foia-fauci-emails-reveal-galveston-lab-training-wuhan/
    f8e1e23a31da59a9.
    EXCLUSIVE: New Fauci Email Proves He Funded Lab Training for Wuhan's Most Deadly Lab.
    Anthony Fauci's emails, obtained exclusively by The National Pulse via the Freedom of Information Act, reveal a lab funded by his National Institutes of Health agency…
     

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