By Michael D. Shaw July
20, 2020
@ HealthNewsDigest
We’re living through
the most politicized public health event in history, so you might as well enjoy
it. We start with a ridiculous story featured in the NY Times,
that was extensively modified—or as they call it “updated.” As was pointed out
by Michael Brendan Dougherty, the updating was done
on at least two occasions. This gist is that some young
arrogant sap (unnamed), from a Red state (natch) went to a “COVID party” to
purposely expose himself to the virus. You see, he thought the disease was a
hoax; only it isn’t, and he died.
As Dougherty
observes, this story has every earmark of an urban
legend. The man is not named; it is clearly presented as a morality
tale; and no date of the incident nor location of the party was mentioned. In
fact, these rather obvious faults with the story are what caused the Times
to add all their qualifying paragraphs. So much for “the paper of record.”
The so-called “COVID
party” is clearly analogous to chickenpox parties, which were popular before a vaccine was
developed. The idea was to let your kids get infected in a controlled setting,
recover, and attain immunity. While there seems to be no end to human
stupidity, it is hard to believe that someone would willingly infect themselves
with SARS-CoV-2, which can cause a disease far more serious than chickenpox.
And, who would host such a party anyway, given the staggering potential liability?
But, as I said, we’re
just getting started.
No doubt, you’ve
heard about the astronomical infection rates being seen in Florida. But when
many labs were reporting 100 percent positives, a TV station decided to look into this. In the case
of Orlando
Health, their reported 98% positives were really 9.4%. The Orlando VA Medical
Center showed 76% positives, but this was really 6%. The
discrepancies were explained as failure of certain labs to include both
positive and negative results in their reports to the state. If you think that
sounds a bit fishy, you’re not alone.
Related to this is
the shock announcement from the Sunshine State on
July 12 of 15,300 new COVID-19 “cases” (positive tests). As it happens more
than 7,000 of the 15,300 positive cases reported on Sunday came from Richmond,
VA based GENETWORx.
Oddly, on that July
12, nearly 100,000 total test results were reported by the Florida Department
of Health, and more than half of these came from GENETWORx. But, according to
the company CEO William Miller, “Genetworx is currently processing between
10-13,000 tests per day in Florida, I’m not sure why Florida reported 50,000
tests in one day from us, more than likely it’s a file with a few days’ worth
of data.”
OK, so there was
somehow a backlog in reporting the results, but even so, what genius thought
that it would be a good idea to cram all of them into a single day? Since the
public was waiting breathlessly for each day’s results, was this malfeasance,
or just malice?
We have indicated, in
a previous article, how the CDC is inflating the
number of COVID-19 fatalities. For those familiar with the agency, this sort of
politically driven policy should come as no surprise. And, now they consider
themselves being persecuted by the White House.
I guess the CDC is
going to be unhappy with this latest announcement. The Trump administration has
ordered hospitals to bypass CDC and send all
COVID-19 patient information to a central database in Washington beginning on
July 15.
You might recall that
this same CDC botched the initial COVID testing. Moreover, they
made the ridiculous mistake of conflating viral and
antibody tests. And, this is supposed to be our lead agency.
So many media outlets
refer to the overpraised Dr. Anthony Fauci as “America’s top infection disease
expert.” Hardly. Fauci is a bureaucrat who heads the National Institute
of Allergy and Infectious Disease. It is vaguely possible that such
a “top expert” might reside within that agency, but even that contention is a
bit frivolous. There are far too many infectious diseases for one person to be
an overall “top expert.”
And, it must be said
that since SARS-CoV-2 is a novel virus, no one can yet claim to be an expert on
it or COVID-19.
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