Tucker Carlson: Dr. Fauci Is Suggesting "National Suicide"
https://www.realclearpolitics.com/vi...lclearpolitics
TUCKER CARLSON, FOX NEWS: The emergence of a new and dangerous form of   coronavirus became known to the public outside China about three months   ago. The first case in this country appeared on January 21. Since the   middle of March, much of America has been locked down in response. We’re   three weeks into the largest and most disruptive response to a  national  emergency in our lifetimes. Yet often you get the sense that  our  leaders are still feeling their way along, making up details ad hoc  as  they plod forward. More precisely, they’re waiting to receive those   details from the professionals they’ve gathered around them for   directions. Chief among the experts now crafting national policy is a   79-year-old physician from Brooklyn called Anthony Fauci. Fauci   certainly has the credentials for the job. He graduated first in his   class from Cornell medical school. He’s spent more than half a century   practicing medicine. He’s has been the director of the National   Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases since 1984. Those of us who   are 50, were freshman in high school when he started there. You can’t   say he’s not experienced. We’ve interviewed Dr. Fauci respectfully on   this program, and we’d do it again if he came back. We hope he will.   He’s an impressive person. But that doesn’t mean he’s never wrong. On   the question of this pandemic, he has been repeatedly. On January 21,   Fauci appeared on television to reassure the public that the Wuhan   coronavirus was not worth worrying about
:
 
GREG KELLY: Bottom line. We don’t have to worry about this one right?
FAUCI: Well obviously we have to take it seriously and follow the things   the CDC an DHS are doing but this is not a major threat to the people   of the United States and this is not something that the citizens of the   United States right now should be worried about.
 
Two days later, Chinese security forces quarantined an entire city of 11   million people. In some cases, they locked residents in their   apartments from the outside. Chinese authorities were clearly panicked.   But Anthony Fauci wasn’t. He assured Americans that, while they might   want to reconsider immediate travel plans to Wuhan, going to the Super   Bowl was absolutely fine. As it turned out, it wasn’t fine. Florida   Governor Ron DeSantis now says the Super Bowl in Miami may have been a   breeding ground for the spread of the virus. But Fauci kept going. On   February 17, when coronavirus cases were  starting to appear all over   the world, he once again reassured the American public that the danger   in this country was, quote, “just minuscule.” He said people ought to   worry more about the quote, “real and present danger” of the annual flu.
 
To be clear, we’re not attacking Tony Fauci for getting it wrong on the   Coronavirus. Most people did, in and out of medicine. It isn’t easy   predicting which faraway problems will become imminent crises at home.   Even the experts make big mistake. They’re human beings. They make human   mistakes. And that’s exactly the point we ought to remember. Human   beings frequently underestimate risk. They also very often overreact to   risk once they identify it. We may be watching that now. Less than two   months ago, Antony Fauci told us not to worry about this epidemic. Now   he’s demanding that the federal government quarantine the entire   country:
 
COOPER: Does it make sense to you that some states are still not   issuing stay at home orders? Whether there should be a federally   mandated directive for that or not, I guess that's more of a political   question, but just scientifically, doesn't everybody have to be on the   same page with this stuff?
FAUCI: Yeah. I think so, Anderson. I don't understand why that's not   happening. As you said, the tension between federally mandates vs states   rights is something I don’t want to get into but when you look at   what’s going on, I don’t understand why we’re not doing that. We really   should be.
 
How long should a shutdown like this last? Two days ago, Fauci suggested   the country could remain under quarantine until there are no more   infections of deaths. He did not suggest when that might be, if ever.   Politicians followed his lead. Virginia Governor Ralph  Northam has   shuttered his state until June 10. A source with knowledge reports that   Andrew Cuomo has privately discussed locking down New York until Fall.   Meanwhile, various epidemiologists are talking about putting the entire   nation on a year of cycled shutdowns. Americans would be allowed back  to  work, then ordered home again, then back to work. Over and over  again.
 
These are extreme measures. We can only guess at the social and economic   destruction they might wreak, but it would be profound. With this much   at stake, it’s important to know more about the science behind these   proposed policies. What is it? It begins with sophisticated computer   models, that predict where and how quickly the virus will spread. The   purpose of these predictions is to quote, “flatten the curve” — in other   words, to slow the spread of the pandemic over a longer period of  time.  If anyone gets sick at once, our healthcare system will collapse,   leaving Coronavirus patients and many other sick people without care.   Obviously we should work to prevent that. So how reliable have the   predictions been so far? Many government policy-makers have relied on a   model created by the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, the   IHME. By some measures, like death rates, that model has been fairly   accurate. Yesterday, for example, the model predicted 1,036 deaths   nationwide. That was close. Today, it predicts about 1,200. That should   be roughly accurate too.
 
But on other, likely more important, numbers, the predictions have   terrible at best. As of yesterday, the IHME model predicted that the   country would need 135,000 hospital beds, just to treat coronavirus   patients. New York alone, the model predicted, would need 56,000. That   was not even close. Yesterday, New York was at about 13,400 coronavirus   hospitalizations. That’s not even a quarter of what the model  predicted.  And even that was closer that what it foresaw in other  states. The  model predicted Oklahoma would need a thousand hospital  beds. They’re  using 38. Louisiana had a forecast of 5,800 required  beds. The state has  had about 1,600 hospitalizations. And so on.  Nationwide, just three  states had more hospitalizations than the model  predicted. In all three  cases, they are small states with minuscule  outbreaks so far.
 
Here’s the problem with getting these numbers so horribly wrong: They’ve   driven massively disruptive government policy. Our entire national   shutdown is based on the fear that Coronavirus patients would overwhelm   hospitals. That mostly hasn’t happened. If the model had been accurate,   would we have quarantined the country? Good quesion. But it’s too late   now. More than ten million Americans have already lost their jobs.   Imagine another year of this. That would be national suicide. Anthony   Fauci doesn’t want to hurt America. He seems like a decent person. But   Fauci is not an economist — or for that matter, someone who fears being   unemployed. Like most of the people around him, he’s got bulletproof  job  security. He has the luxury of looking at the world through the  narrow  lens of his profession. He doesn’t seem to think much outside  it. Watch  this exchange, from NBC’s morning show yesterday:
 
FAUCI: I know it’s difficult. We’re having a lot of suffering and a   lot of death. This is inconvenient from an economic and a personal   standpoint, but we just have to do it.
 
Ten million Americans out of work and staring at poverty. That’s not   quote “inconvenient,” as Dr. Fauci put it. It’s horrifying. It’s a far   bigger disaster than the virus itself. Tony Fauci can’t see that,   because he doesn’t think it’s his job to see it. But even a doctor   should be able to think beyond the models. Our response to coronavirus   could turn this into a far poorer country. Poor countries are unhealthy   countries. People die of treatable diseases. They’re far more  vulnerable  to obscure viruses, like the one we are fighting now. Want  to keep  Americans from dying before their time? Don’t impoverish them.  For all  his credentials, experience and apparent decency, Dr. Fauci  doesn’t seem  to understand that. We should never let someone like that  run the  country.