And now that you read the article did you see the references to "as of February 26th" and the statement that the article was published on February 28th?
Which would mean that these are not Fauci's "latest statements".
No, I will not play your silly game. I pointed out proof that you are wrong and now you come back with unintelligible bull. I don't know why anyone would find an issue that someone got a date wrong by two days in the past when the information was correct. It could even have been a typo. You have made a few typos right here yourself. Splitting hairs is not anything I care much about. It's stupid and infantile.
1. “I pointed out proof that you are wrong”
Actually you didn’t point to any proof at all. You made an assertion, to wit “OANN just editorially added the .28% which is the official fatality percentages of those two pandemics.”
Shall we check that assertion?
Case fatality rate 1957 pandemic: .019%
Case fatality rate 1957 pandemic: .005%
So far from being proof your assertion is what’s known in logic as the opposite of proof, namely: false.
My only point of curiosity is whether you found the false information online somewhere, or you just made it up. But actually don’t tell me. It can be your secret.
2. “ I don’t know why anyone would find an issue that someone got a date wrong by two days”
February 28th to March 26 is not equal to “two days”. It’s more than that. I think its actually more than 25 days. Is that relevant?
Well, using the correct date puts Fauci’s claims before the March 11 testimony that COVID may be 10 times worse than the flu, thus showing that Fauci originally thought the virus was not much worse than the flu but later came to believe that it was much worse which totally eviscerates the fake news story, that “Dr. Anthony Fauci Backtracks On Deadliness Of Virus”, because, like, he didn’t.
When correcting a “typo” guts your whole story and makes it the exact opposite of your headline, you should pull the story. (Unless you need the clicks). Especially when it gives people the false impression that they shouldn’t worry about contracting a deadly disease.\
Which they should.