Sunday, June 23, 2024

Thomas D. Klingenstein: How Fauci Became the Embodiment of America's Bureaucratic Overreach

Fauci Was Just a Symptom


By Jeffrey H. Anderson


The mainstream press corps prefers to deal with Robert F. Kennedy Jr. by pretending that he doesn't exist. This is true both for his presidential campaign—which is thought to pose too much of a threat to President Biden to risk acknowledging it—and for his popular book, The Real Anthony Fauci.


Relegated to Skyhorse Publishing, which Wall Street Journal film critic Kyle Smith describes as "something of a refuge for the cancelled," Kennedy's book nevertheless cracked the top 15 on the New York Times hardcover nonfiction best-seller list for 15 consecutive weeks—topping out at #7. Yet apparently it did not merit space in the Times for a review. Wikipedia quickly dismisses The Real Anthony Fauci as a "controversial" book by a "conspiracy theorist" who unjustifiably "attacks" Fauci and "offers disinformation."


In truth, however, Kennedy's book is a valuable and generally well-researched indictment of the public health establishment, and more broadly of anti-republican rule by "experts." While the book's claims should not be taken as gospel in the way that the credulous press corps hangs on Fauci's every muddled word, Kennedy shows impressive willingness to stand strong against the current, and his informative and rather countercultural book is very much worth a read. He makes a compelling case that—from AIDS to Covid—Fauci and friends have been pursuing their own agenda at the expense of the American people.


Kennedy chronicles a federal public health establishment that wields nearly monopolistic control over America's medical research, funding, and messaging. That establishment ensures that university researchers are almost entirely dependent upon federal grants, regularly stifles free inquiry and open debate, effectively "cancels" those who deviate from the establishment orthodoxy, seems uninterested in any sort of care or prevention not involving a pharmaceutical patent, ensures that government public health employees are enriched by pharmaceutical royalties, and—all in all—represents one of the worst examples of the pitfalls of centralized power and control anywhere on our shores. 

Read More