a reply to:
Thoughtful3
Okaay the book has 455 pages and for today I am going to hone in on Part 4- "Expect the Unexpected" Chapter- "Epidemics of Disease and Fear."
Past proves future edition.
Throughout this chapter [starting on page 287] Fauci describes frequently his very close relationship with the enemedia.
We need a moment to process this. Ebola was spreading in Guinea, Africa- a country that had no experience dealing with it. Other African countries
like the Republic of the Congo had outbreaks and were experienced at effectively getting it under control very quickly. First question why did it
occur there and not in the usual locations?
Fauci states that he frequently checked with CNN alerts, New York Times and The Washington Post for world news about infectious disease.... This
outbreak of Ebola was not covered....
Instead it was allowed to spread unchecked and spilled over to 2 other African countries with people unaware of what was happening.
It is odd that Fauci was relying on them for information rather than the WHO.
The first case was a young boy who they allege was playing near a bat infested tree. Reading African local news the parents claimed that he did not
play near the tree. Question- had he been to a clinic and received a special flavored jab?
At the same time as this was spreading MERS-SARS was spreading in the Middle East.
So we have two infectious diseases overlapping which is similar to what we have now with Covid-19 and the Avian Flu.
Because of the lack of coverage it spread to Nigeria where the medical staff were unaware and who would not have used PPE.
From what I can conclude at some point the enemdia was given the green light to prep the American public and they did this with some flair-
Page 299 "This fear for the U.S. was fueled by reports and photographs appearing in major newspapers such as the New York Times and The Washington
Post of dead bodies lying in the hospitals or in the streets of major cities such as Monrovia, Liberia, Freetown, Sierre Leone and Conakry Guinea."
Fauci, rubbing his hands with glee, describes this as the perfect storm since the people were very distrustful of authority.