This piece from The Daily Skeptic claims that the CDC director knowingly lied to the public because she knew that the COVID vaccines did not stop the virus even though she promoted mass vaccination.

What do we make of this one?

  • 108beads
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    21 year ago

    Sigh. On the one hand, I want, need and deserve rigorous honesty from science (and the panoply of public-facing health officials).

    On the other hand, I don’t completely trust others to use that info wisely. Like: when Faucci said that N95 masking was unnecessary—and was actually trying to stall so that adequate PPE could be supplied to healthcare workers. If he hadn’t said that, would the general pubic have graciously stepped to the back of the line to wait for their turn to get masks? I doubt it.

    But—if PPE works for healthcare workers, why doen’t it work for me? Or, if the highly touted flu vaccine merely dampens effects of the flu, why should I think this new miracle mRNA tech is going to reduce my chances of merely having milder Covid symptoms?

    I don’t know, but it seems to me that this muddled messaging and the 20/20 hindsight decoding may actually be contributing to the science-denying BS going around. Don’t patronize me, I guess is what I’m saying.

    • KabeOPM
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      1 year ago

      I don’t think many people would disagree that the CDC did a pretty poor job of their public messaging.

      Granted, it wasn’t easy to simplify the what ever- evolving body of research was revealing about both the virus and the vaccines, but they really didn’t do themselves any favours by making confident pronouncements that were later shown to be incorrect.

      It gave the conspiracy/antivax crowd a lot of ammunition.