Covid mandate hardliners are rewriting history when they should be facing accountability
By: Rachel Marsden
VANCOUVER, British Columbia — What’s the deal with the recent self-serving
Covid-era revisionism by Western officials?
Dr. Anthony Fauci, now retired from his position as the highest paid civil
servant in America — the head of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and
Infectious Diseases — is on a public relations tour, shoring up his legacy and
moderating the various positions that he previously promoted.
Fauci went on TV amid the pandemic to peddle the idea that people make
themselves cloth masks, and now says in a new interview with the New York Times
that “masks work at the margins, maybe 10 percent”, with the exception, he says,
of N95 or KN95 masks. So much for wrapping grandma’s hosiery around your face
and thinking that you’re safe from viral contamination.
Fauci argues that he never closed a school. Except that he didn’t fight to keep
them open despite now acknowledging that closures led to “deleterious collateral
consequences.” He said that he had nothing to do with that, that it was a
political decision. Except that people were actually arguing in favor of keeping
schools open, and against the kind of lockdowns that Fauci himself claimed saved
lives when he appeared on former CNN host Chris Cuomo’s show. Those same
lockdowns are considered by various scientists, like British infectious disease
expert Mark Woolhouse, to have done more harm than good. But how did Fauci
respond to those positions that dared to contradicted his own? He dismissed them
as anti-science. Like the only truth was the one that he put forward and anyone
else was an ignoramus.
Fauci would have people believe that he had no real power when even the research
funding that he controlled had a major influence on the entire direction of the
science in America.
There’s a clear trend emerging of backtracking by Western officials who favored
the most fearmongering and authoritarian pandemic policies. Canadian Prime
Minister Justin Trudeau told a gathering of university students in Ottawa last
week that “while not forcing anyone to get vaccinated, I chose to make sure that
all the incentives and all of the protections were there to encourage Canadians
to get vaccinated. And that’s exactly what they did.”
Why would someone have required any “incentive” at all if they had personally
weighed up the benefits of the jab versus the risk of catching Covid and decided
that the anti-Covid shots were definitely the best way to go? The fact that some
didn’t come to that conclusion means they felt that introducing a laboratory
product into their system wasn’t worth it to avoid an overwhelmingly survivable
virus.
Trudeau attempted to distinguish between “someone choosing for personal reasons
… not to get vaccinated, and someone deliberately using misinformation to
mislead and scare other people with so-called facts that aren’t facts at all.”
This implies that Trudeau’s government would have been totally cool with those
who had chosen not to take the jab for personal reasons promoting their
rationale as an alternative to the government’s official position.
There was one narrative and one course of action for all Canadians, and anyone
who deviated from it quickly became a pariah, banned from polite company and
everyday venues, as was the case across much of the Western world. The Canadian
military even exploited social media to deploy military-grade propaganda
techniques, honed during the war in Afghanistan, to reinforce the government’s
Covid narrative. There was no room for debate, even though contradictory
arguments, particularly related to the efficacy of the jab and the superior
benefits of naturally acquired immunity to Covid, have since been proven valid.
Trudeau was so totally cool with people making personal choices that his
government made the jab a requirement for federal employment. “If you don’t want
to get vaccinated, that’s your choice. But don’t think you can get on a plane or
a train beside vaccinated people and put them at risk,” Trudeau said in August
of 2021, ignoring that the jab doesn’t actually prevent catching or transmitting
the virus. Presumably, that was one of Trudeau’s “incentives.”
And when faced with growing backlash, Trudeau invoked the federal Emergencies
Act against Covid-related anti-mandate protesters of Canada’s Freedom Convoy —
the kind of measure that was last used during a separatist terrorism crisis in
Quebec in 1970 — and ordered the blocking of protesters’ bank accounts. A
commission report on the use of these measures has since found that the bank
account freezes served largely to discourage and dissuade anti-mandate activists
from exercising their civil rights. Yet another of Trudeau’s “incentives.”
An “incentive” would be giving someone a coupon or a tax benefit — not
infringing on their basic civil rights of movement and work. Yet that’s exactly
what happened all across the supposedly free and democratic Western world — and
all for “reasons” that seem increasingly unjustified as the fear abates and
gives room to the many scientific facts that our governments censored to the
detriment of actual science. Lives have been ruined, families have been broken.
So when do they get held accountable?\
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN