by Frank Bergman
January 15, 2024
from
SlayNews Website
Anthony Fauci has admitted
during testimony before a congressional hearing that the social
distancing rules he promoted during the Covid pandemic had no
scientific basis.
Last week, Fauci, Democrat President
Joe Biden's former chief
medical advisor, gave a closed-door testimony before the House
Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Pandemic.
However, during a grilling from lawmakers, Fauci revealed that the
"six-feet-apart" social distancing recommendation he promoted "sort
of just appeared"
Fauci, the former director of the National Institute of Allergy
and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), also finally acknowledged that
the lab leak hypothesis is
not a conspiracy theory.
Committee Chair
Brad Wenstrup (R-OH) issued a
statement after the interview with Fauci.
"After two days of testimony and 14 hours of
questioning, many things became evident," Wenstrup said.
"During his interview today, Dr. Fauci testified that the lab
leak hypothesis - which was often suppressed - was, in fact, not
a conspiracy theory."
The admission from Fauci has come nearly four
years after federal health officials started prompting the
publication of the now infamous "Proximal
Origin."
The narrative attempted,
to vilify and disprove the hypothesis that
COVID-19 leaked from a lab in China.
According to Wenstrup's release, Fauci played semantics with the
definition of a "lab leak," however.
Wenstrup accused Fauci of attempting to cover up the inaccurate
conclusions of the said paper.
Furthermore, the social distancing recommendation promoted by
federal health officials "sort of just appeared," Fauci admitted.
He confessed that the "six-feet-apart" rule was
not likely based on
scientific data.
Fauci's admission was revealed in the transcribed dialogue with the
retired government official.
Elsewhere, Fauci also admitted that America's authoritarian Covid
injection mandates during the pandemic could increase vaccine
hesitancy in the future.
Previously, Fauci advocated for governments to "make it difficult
for people in their lives" to force them to comply with vaccination
plans.
"They lose their ideological bullsh*t, and
they get vaccinated," he declared.
Some other highlights in the interview included
Fauci denying allegations that he visited the Central Intelligence
Agency (CIA) during the pandemic, despite
reports confirming otherwise.
He claims he never influenced the CIA's investigation into the
origins of COVID-19.
Also, when American universities approached him, Fauci advised them
to impose vaccine mandates on their students.
"Dr. Fauci's transcribed interview revealed
systemic failures in our public health system and shed light on
serious procedural concerns with our public health authority,"
Wenstrup concluded.
"It is clear that dissenting opinions were often not considered
or suppressed completely.
Should a future pandemic arise, America's
response must be guided by scientific facts and conclusive
data."
The congressman added the committee was
frustrated with Fauci's inability to recall COVID-19 information
that is important for the investigation.
Nevertheless, he appreciates Fauci's willingness to testify
privately and stated that he looks forward to speaking with him
further at a public hearing this year.
Fauci became a politically polarizing figure during the pandemic.
He was vilified by those opposed to lockdowns, masking rules, and
vaccine mandates while being idolized by those who agreed with the
government's actions.
Sen. Rand Paul, who has publicly lambasted the former NIAID
director, said in an appearance on "The Ingraham Angle" that
Fauci has always lied to the public.
"The one thing that's consistent about
Anthony Fauci is that what he says in private is largely true,
what he says in public is largely a lie," he said.
Fauci, together with former National
Institutes of Health (NIH) Director
Francis Collins, have
both denied in testimony to Congress that the agency funded a risky
gain-of-function research at a lab in Wuhan, China, where the
pandemic began in late 2019.
But in June 2023, the Government Accountability Office issued a
report revealing that NIH contributed more than $1.4 million to
Chinese research institutions between 2014 and 2019 despite serious
biosafety concerns, including at the Wuhan Institute of Virology.
As per the report, the study,
"included genetic experiments to combine
naturally occurring bat coronaviruses with SARS and MERS
viruses, resulting in hybridized [also known as chimeric]
coronavirus strains" and its funding has since been cut off.
On Monday, Wenstrup said that Fauci had given a
"new definition" of "operational"
gain-of-function research, a phrase that often describes
experiments that make viruses more contagious and virulent.
"I don't know that every scientist that deals
with this type of viral research understands his definition," he
said of Fauci.
"He needs to define his definition of gain-of-function research,
because, as I have, through this process in the last three
years, read many, many published articles about gain-of-function
research or creation of a chimera, this is a new one.
"And it varies from what a lot of other scientists use when they
report on gain-of-function research."
"I think it is probably pretty political that we're here to
begin with," Rep. Debbie Dingell (D-MI) told reporters
outside the hearing room referring to Fauci's previous reference
to his "operational" definition in this clashes with Paul.
She said, though that the closed-door format
would yield "a lot of answers."
"This format is not playing the cameras, it's
helping us to get the facts and the details," Dingell added.
It was also reported that Fauci will be
questioned about having accepted royalties and failing to disclose
potential conflicts of interest during his nearly four-decade tenure
as a public health official.
He claimed to have donated all royalties but he was at one point the
highest-paid U.S. government official, with a net worth of $11.5
million when he left government service in December 2022.
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