By Rich Lowry
Friday, December 29, 2023
The public-health officials are getting around to
admitting the fallibility of public-health officials.
The former head of the National Institutes of Health
during the pandemic and current science adviser to President Biden, Francis
Collins, has noted that he and his colleagues demonstrated an “unfortunate”
narrow-mindedness.
This is a welcome, if belated, confession.
Not too long ago, anyone who said that epidemiologists
might be overly focused on disease prevention to the exclusion of other
concerns — you know, like jobs, mental health, and schooling — were dismissed
as reckless nihilists who didn’t care if their fellow citizens died en masse.
Now, Francis Collins has weighed in to tell us that many
of the people considered closed-minded and anti-science during Covid were
advancing an appropriately balanced view of the trade-offs inherent in the
pandemic response.
“If you’re a public-health person and you’re trying to
make a decision, you have this very narrow view of what the right decision is,”
Collins said at an event earlier this year that garnered attention online the
last couple of days.
This is not a new insight, or a surprising one. It’s a
little like saying Bolsheviks will be focused on nationalizing the means of
production over everything else, or a golf pro will be monomaniacal about the
proper mechanics of a swing.
The problem comes, of course, when public health, or
“public health,” becomes the only guide to public policy. Then, you are giving
a group of obsessives, who have an important role to play within proper limits,
too much power in a way that is bound to distort your society.
Francis Collins, again: “So you attach infinite value to
stopping the disease and saving a life. You attach zero value to whether this
actually totally disrupts people’s lives, ruins the economy, and has many kids
kept out of school in a way that they never quite recover from.”
True and well said, but that’s an awful lot of very
important things to attach “zero value” to.
He also admitted to having an urban bias, driven by
working out of Washington, D.C., and thinking almost exclusively about New York
City and other major cities.
If Francis Collins and his cohort got it wrong, the likes
of Florida governor Ron DeSantis and Georgia governor Brian Kemp — and the
renegade scientists and doctors who supported their more modulated approach to
the pandemic — got it right.
It’s always worth remembering that the pandemic was a
once-in-a-hundred-years event and, initially, we had very little information
and very few means to prevent and treat the disease. It is inevitable that
decision-makers are going to make mistakes in such a crisis and adjust as they
go.
That said, the scientists who were in positions of
authority could have shown more modesty. They could have welcomed debate. They
could have distanced themselves from — or, better yet, denounced — the campaign
of moral bullying carried out in their name.
Many people wanted to outsource their thinking to the
experts and then, with a great sense of righteousness, rely on arguments from
authority to demonize their opponents and shut down every policy dispute.
Francis Collins, one of the most eminent scientists in
the country and a subtle thinker who dissents from the orthodoxy that science
and faith are incompatible, would have been an ideal voice to counter the
propaganda campaigns that aimed to suppress unwelcome views and even unwelcome
facts. Instead, he stuck with his tribe.
It’s progress, though, to realize that scientists, too,
are susceptible to groupthink, recency bias, and parochialism; that the experts
may know an incredible amount about a very narrow area while knowing little to
nothing about broader matters of greater consequence; that points of view
considered dangerous lunacy may, over time, prove out, so they shouldn’t be
censored or otherwise quashed.
It’s not just that the scientists acted like blinkered
scientists during the pandemic; they tolerated, or participated in, agitprop
that was inimical to the scientific spirit and to good public policy.
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