February 08, 2023
For more than two years Dr. Anthony Fauci stood in front of TV cameras and preached that the only thing that was going to stop the pandemic was a new vaccine. And, for that vaccine — actually an experimental gene therapy, although he refrained from calling it that — to work, everybody needed to get it and all the boosters the CDC and FDA kept coming up with.
Dutifully,
millions of people rolled up their sleeves and took the shots, once, twice and
more. And now, that the shots are causing heart problems like myocarditis and
pericarditis, Fauci has quietly released an analysis in the journal, Cell,
admitting with two co-authors that they should have known a vaccine probably
would not work.
“Fauci and his
co-authors go on to note that different vaccines have different objectives,”
the Daily Caller reports. “Unlike others that may be aimed at preventing
infection entirely or at preventing transmission, the COVID-19 vaccines were
meant for ‘only preventing severe disease.’”
Even so,
knowing that “respiratory viruses like SARS-CoV-2 and the flu have never been
well-contained by vaccines,” Fauci continued to push the shots. And what does
he have to say about it now? While “past unsuccessful attempts to elicit solid
protection” against these viruses is a “scientific and public health failure,”
he and his colleagues are excited to have been a part of rethinking the process
“from the ground up.”
SOURCES:
You gotta be kidding me—Anthony Fauci just published an article pointing out viruses that replicate in mucosal passages cannot be effectively controlled by vaccines that create systemic immunity? After 3 years he just announces this obvious point? https://t.co/nso7g1szHY
— Todd Zywicki (@ToddZywicki) February 6, 2023
“Because these viruses generally do not elicit complete and durable protective immunity by themselves, they have not to date been effectively controlled by licensed or experimental vaccines,” Fauci and his co-authors, David Morens and Jeffrey Taubenberger of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), wrote in the paper.
The analysis, titled “Rethinking next-generation vaccines for coronaviruses, influenza viruses, and other respiratory viruses,” highlights shortcomings in current vaccine technology for respiratory viruses and speculates on how it might be improved going forward. The authors compare SARS-CoV-2 to influenza, for which they say “only less than suboptimal vaccines” exist.
Vaccine technology for influenza has not evolved much since 1957, they said, leading to influenza being the deadliest vaccine-preventable viral respiratory disease. Flu shots have only been between 14 and 60 percent effective at stopping infection over the past 15 flu seasons, according to the paper.
Notably, Fauci et. al. appear to argue that, if natural immunity alone is insufficient to prevent reinfection with respiratory viruses, then there is little hope for existing vaccines to prevent it: “This observation raises a question of fundamental importance: if natural mucosal respiratory virus infections do not elicit complete and long-term protective immunity against reinfection, how can we expect vaccines, especially systemically administered non-replicating vaccines, to do so?”
These observations differ drastically from the rhetoric Fauci used while serving as President Joe Biden’s top medical adviser and the director of NIAID. In Sept. 2021, even while recommending that all eligible Americans get vaccinated against COVID-19, he was unable to explain why those with natural immunity should do so.