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Dr. Fauci’s Unscientific Legacy
Townhall.com ^ | May 11, 2022 | Bob Barr

Posted on 05/11/2022 7:37:42 AM PDT by Kaslin

Plato is the most well-known student of Greek philosopher Socrates, who lived and taught in the fourth century B.C. In his famous treatise The Republic, Plato presents the concept of a “noble lie” as a myth that “would have a good effect, making [the people] more inclined to care for the state and one another.” In other words, the “noble lie” was one that served the purpose of the “greater good.” It still was a lie, but considered acceptable because the intentions of its purveyor were noble.

Socrates and Plato were philosophers, not scientists, but their notion of the “noble lie” continues today as a predicate for myriad public policy pronouncements.

Our contemporary chieftain of the “noble lie” is Dr. Anthony Fauci, the oft self-proclaimed “scientist” who has led our country into the COVID-19 pandemic morass for more than two years based on repeated noble lies.

Sadly, the “noble” Dr. Fauci presents more as the Emperor With No Clothes than a noble philosopher-scientist.

When Fauci first laid his foundational noble lie before the public – that masks were ineffective against COVID and that citizens were fools for wearing them – there was nary a hint of nobility; just a lie to preserve the N95 mask supply for hospitals. It did, however, mark the start of a series of lies, omissions, and half-truths that would come to define how “science” was seen by the public.

This will be Fauci’s lasting legacy: a man who undercut science in his quest for personal glory.

The reason we can be so confident about this legacy is that the data already is showing clearly the negative effects of Fauci’s “noble lie” and its many corollaries. FiveThirtyEight noted in a recent article that there is a swiftly growing gap between partisan groups regarding confidence in the scientific community. Sixty-five percent of Democrats had “a great deal” of confidence in scientists, up from 50 percent before the pandemic, while Republicans were down seven points to 32 percent during the same period.

Put another way, the “confidence gap” between Republicans and Democrats tripled during the pandemic. The cause is hardly a mystery.

From the outset, citizens had ample reason to suspect that both Washington’s political leadership and the scientific community, with Fauci’s face always front and center, were motivated by factors other than “science.” Throughout the pandemic, it was clear that the accumulation and exercise of power at all levels of government was far more important than mere science.

With the power given to him (by both Donald Trump and Joe Biden), Fauci quickly moved himself from scientific representative to anointed policymaker. His aggressive strategy included going on offense against anyone who dared disagree with him, including members of Congress. “So it’s easy to criticize [me],” Fauci said in reference to Sen. Rand Paul’s questioning of his prominent role in COVID policy, “but they’re really criticizing science, because I represent science.”

Such exchanges exemplified another insidious element of the COVID debate. “Follow the science” was absolute gospel, and questioning Fauci was portrayed as something practiced only by ignorant people; those who neither understood nor accepted “science.” This new dynamic strengthened an already rising trend of science skepticism, no doubt due to the same condescending attitude of Leftists in the debate over global warming, across the educational divide.

Seemingly lost on Fauci is the notion that science relies for its acceptance and development on trust — both within the scientific community and the public at large. What good are scientific results if they cannot be trusted?

In seeking to enrich himself with the trust and power mistakenly afforded to him during the pandemic, Fauci has undermined the very trust in science that he claims to uphold; trust that is neither quickly nor easily restored.

While Fauci’s visage thankfully has been somewhat less visible in recent weeks (a factor it is hoped will continue), the damage his lies (including some not so “noble”) have wrought, will be with us long after he retires from his high-paying job at the taxpayer trough. Fauci’s legacy will be to have singularly undermined the public’s faith in “science” as applied to public policy in perhaps the same way the Vatican debunked Galileo’s scientific methodology four centuries ago.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: anthonyfauci; fauci; nobellie

1 posted on 05/11/2022 7:37:42 AM PDT by Kaslin
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To: Kaslin

Methinks that had this clown been in one of my STEM classes years ago, I’d have classified him as a future journalist.


2 posted on 05/11/2022 7:40:15 AM PDT by Da Coyote
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To: Kaslin

https://townhall.com/columnists/bobbarr/2022/05/11/dr-faucis-unscientific-legacy-n2607038


3 posted on 05/11/2022 7:43:28 AM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum (Affirmative action is systemic/institutional racism/sexism targeting straight, white males.)
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To: Kaslin

The National Institutes of Health (HIH) and its scientists received 22,100 royalty payments totaling nearly $134 million in royalties from third-party payers between 2010 and 2015 to 1,700 of its scientists, according to an investigation by government transparency watchdog Open the Books (https://www.openthebooks.com/substack-investigation-faucis-royalties-and-the-350-million-royalty-payment-stream-hidden-by-nih/ Accessed 10 May 2022). The third-party payers are, according to the report, mostly pharmaceutical companies that credit NIH scientists as coinventors on various patents. “Because those payments enrich the agency and its scientists, each and every royalty payment could be a potential conflict of interest and needs disclosure,” writes Adam Andrzejewski, founder of OpentheBooks.com and the report’s author. The NIH doled out $30 billion in government grants to roughly 56,000 recipients in 2021. The limited disclosures were made after OpentheBooks.com sued in federal court for access to the information. The nonprofit is still awaiting records covering the 2015-2020 period.


4 posted on 05/11/2022 7:47:43 AM PDT by consult
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To: Kaslin

Fauci’s first statement that masks are useless for the public was true.

They are likely harmful they way they are used by the majority of the people that use them.


5 posted on 05/11/2022 7:48:40 AM PDT by Triple (Socialism denies people the right to the fruits of their labor, and is as abhorrent as slavery)
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To: Kaslin

A “noble lie” is more like... “No honey that dress does not make you look fat.”

What Fauci did was outright evil. His lie’s and disinformation was a disservice to everyone who listened.


6 posted on 05/11/2022 7:49:28 AM PDT by READINABLUESTATE (It would be better to live under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies.)
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To: Kaslin

He’s our Lysenko.


7 posted on 05/11/2022 7:53:05 AM PDT by Blurb2350 (posted from my 1500-watt blow dryer)
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To: Kaslin

It’s not just “personal glory” that Fauci is looking for, but buckets of cash and boatloads of political influence.


8 posted on 05/11/2022 8:01:37 AM PDT by livius
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To: Kaslin

“When Fauci first laid his foundational noble lie before the public – that masks were ineffective against COVID and that citizens were fools for wearing them...”

Except the article gets it exactly backwards. This was one time that Fauci was telling the absolute truth. He only claimed it was a “noble lie” later on in order to justify his flip flopping.


9 posted on 05/11/2022 9:19:48 AM PDT by Boogieman
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