National Review
Online
Tuesday, April
13, 2021
More than a year ago, Americans
welcomed Anthony Fauci into their homes as a sober scientist who was helping
them make sense of a deadly new virus. But he has worn out that welcome.
It’s true that Fauci has enjoyed
an illustrious career, advising every president since Ronald Reagan and winning
the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2008. There’s much to admire in his
overall leadership since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. Yet, as director
of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, he has a
serious job that’s not supposed to involve being a media spokesman so
ubiquitous that it’s hard to believe he ever turns down any media requests.
As he’s maintained a media schedule worthy
of a serious presidential candidate or an actor in a new major studio release,
Fauci has gradually stopped standing apart from the contentious debate about
the pandemic, lockdowns, restrictions, precautions, and what is safe and what
is risky. Instead, he has become part of the acrimony, offering murky and
sometimes contradictory recommendations. This goes well beyond his initially discouraging
the use of masks in January and February 2020, like most U.S. public health officials, or his mid-March
2020 reassurance: “The guidelines are a 15-day trial guideline to be
reconsidering. It isn’t that these guidelines are now going to be in effect
until July.”
Fauci doesn’t write or establish the
quarantine policies being enforced by cities and states; he can only advise
other people in and out of government. But his voice carries a lot of weight,
and, more or less willingly, he has become the face of America’s quarantine
policies. Frustratingly, his perspective always seem to be that the right time
to open up is another six weeks from now, no matter how low caseloads get or
how much the national vaccination program accelerates.
And it’s hard to shake the sense that
Fauci makes recommendations based on how he thinks people will react. Fauci admitted
in December that he had changed his assessments about herd immunity, based on what he thought the public could handle hearing. In the
pandemic’s early days, Fauci tended to cite the same 60 to 70
percent estimate that most experts
did, but Fauci gradually boosted it to 85
percent. In an interview with the New York Times’ Donald McNeil
Jr., Fauci “acknowledged that he had slowly but deliberately been moving the
goal posts. He is doing so, he said, partly based on new science, and partly on
his gut feeling that the country is finally ready to hear what he really
thinks.”
At the beginning of March, Fauci forcefully
criticized the state of Texas for ending its statewide mask mandate, declaring, “It’s risky and could set us back to a place that’s even worse than
where we are now . . . and lead to additional surges.” And yet, Texas has seen
its caseload continue to decline. When asked about the lack of an increase in
that state, he answered, “You know, there are a lot of things that go into that. I mean, when
you say that they’ve had a lot of the activity on the outside like ball games,
I’m not really quite sure. It could be they’re doing things outdoors.”
Earlier this month, after GOP lawmakers
asked Fauci about the risk of outbreaks in migrant detention facilities, he
said, “I have nothing to do with the border. . . . Having me down at the
border, that’s really not what I do.” Except Fauci has weighed in on travel
restrictions and border closures plenty of times in the past year. It’s
self-evidently obvious that having lots of migrants of all ages cramped into
detention facilities is a formula for a rapid spread of the virus. Fauci just
didn’t want to criticize the Biden administration, so he dodged the question.
But perhaps most frustrating is Fauci’s
recent comments suggesting that getting vaccinated doesn’t alter the risk of
catching COVID-19 much and can’t justify changes in behavior. Fauci said that
even though he’s vaccinated, he still won’t
eat indoors at a restaurant, go to a
movie theater, or “go into an indoor, crowded place where people are not
wearing masks.” He said he still won’t be traveling, either.
Vaccinated people are protected against
serious health problems from COVID-19 and we’ve known for a month that vaccinated
people, if infected, shed dramatically less virus — perhaps 75 percent to 90 percent. If results like that don’t make going to a restaurant or movie theater
safe, what will? If getting vaccinated doesn’t allow you to return to something
like normality, what’s the point?
We can overlook the Hollywood-style poolside photo
shoot, or his unmasking
while watching a baseball game. But Fauci has turned into the perpetually pessimistic, overcautious,
position-shifting, administration-pleasing face of the pandemic recovery. At
this point, he’d do himself a favor by sitting out the next opportunity to
appear on a TV show or podcast and focus on his day job.
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