Jim Meigs reviews his book:
Anthony Fauci, whose early career did so much to improve human health, leaves behind a tainted legacy. He and his colleagues abused their authority, overreached on lockdowns and vaccine policies, and dissembled about dangerous research that his agency funded. The populist backlash to these excesses is still building. The public’s growing distrust of medical experts—and new skepticism toward all vaccines—is a public-health timebomb.
It is tempting to attribute Fauci’s late-career lapses to some personal moral deficiency. I think that’s the wrong tack. Fauci’s ethical shortcomings weren’t personal so much as institutional; he had been given enormous authority while being almost completely insulated from political oversight. Even the president could not easily fire him. And his centralized control over massive research budgets meant that few scientists were willing to challenge his claims or policies.
Over the decades, Fauci came to see himself as infallible. He represented “science.” Instead of welcoming contrary views, as he did during the AIDS years, the older, more thin-skinned (and more institutionally entrenched) Fauci resented criticism and tried to silence dissent. If not for the persistent pushback from a few bold scientists, journalists, and lawmakers, he might have succeeded in shutting down crucial debates entirely. No federal official should have so much power, with so little accountability, for so long.
Few people have the probity to withstand the temptations of that kind of power.
Directorships of the NIH and NIAID should they continue to exist should be reformed to be administrative duties only, i.e. make sure the checks get signed, and bills are paid, but no policy decisions nor authority over grant proposals.
Instead both NIH and NIAID should be reformed to use a commission form, like the FCC. In other words, review and grants for research proposals have to be by majority vote of an odd number of health commissioners who are appointed by the President, confirmed by the Senate and serve say a 6 year term. Or a length of term that helps insulate (only a little) from the political process but is not immune to it. To use a clinical term…
Even Don Herbert never referred to himself as “Mr. Science”.
The thing that continues to amaze me is why the Democrats in the Congressional hearings on the origins of COVID continue to suck up to Fauci.
I don’t remember SARS-CoV2 killing only constituents with an R next to their name.
Untold billions of dollars changed hands because of the government’s response to Covid. Follow the money.
Point taken.
If I want to read Fauci’s memoirs (I like fiction), I’ll request the book from a lending library… Like I would for Comey’s book.
“Anthony Fauci, whose early career did so much to improve human health”
Press ‘X’ to doubt.
La Science, c’est moi!