Fauci warned the Trump administration in 2017 that an unknown infectious disease was likely to spread widely within years: https://www.businessinsider.com/fauci-warned-trump-infectious-disease-pandemic-danger-2017-2020-4 Anthony Fauci warned the Trump administration about the inevitability of a "surprise" outbreak during a speech in 2017, suggesting that the US needed to do more to prepare. "The thing we're extraordinarily confident about is that we're going to see this in the next few years," Fauci said. Fauci called infectious diseases a "perpetual challenge," specifically pointing out the risks of diseases that haven't been seen before. Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, warned members of the incoming Trump administration in January 2017 about the inevitability of a "surprise outbreak" of a new disease. He said at the time that the US needed to do more to prepare. "There is no question that there will be a challenge to the coming administration in the arena of infectious diseases," Fauci said during a speech at Georgetown University, adding, "the thing we're extraordinarily confident about is that we're going to see this in the next few years." Fauci specifically singled out the risks posed by unknown diseases, in addition to those from existing or reemergent ones. Fighting infectious diseases, he said, is a "perpetual challenge." Responses to past outbreaks like Zika and HIV/AIDS offer lessons for the incoming administration, Fauci added; he has led NIAID since 1984 and advised six US presidents on public-health crises. "The history of the last 32 years that I've been the director of NIAID will tell the next administration that there's no doubt in anyone's mind that they will be faced with the challenges that their predecessors were faced with," he said. Fauci called on the Trump administration to prepare the US for such challenges before they arise, by improving global health-surveillance systems, investing in research, and setting aside emergency funds. "We do need a public-health emergency fund. It's tough to get it ... but we need it," Fauci said. "Because what we had to go through for Zika — it was very, very painful when the president asked for the $1.9 billion in February and we didn't get it until September." But the Trump administration did not create such a fund, and instead cut spending for federal agencies responsible for detecting and preparing for outbreaks. In May 2018, Trump's national security advisor disbanded the National Security Council's pandemic response team, while in October 2019, the administration declined to renew funding for a pandemic early warning system. Throughout January, February, and March of this year, Trump downplayed the outbreak in the US, saying, "we have it totally under control," "it will disappear," and, "America will again and soon be open for business." However, Fauci and other top government officials — including health secretary Alex Azar and trade adviser Peter Navarro — have painted a more sobering picture. In congressional hearings and public press briefings, Fauci has repeatedly contradicted Trump's positive narrative, which has at times seemed to frustrate the president. Trump recently retweeted a call from a Republican congresswoman to fire Fauci after he said the US's slow response to COVID-19 has cost lives.
boo hoo hell fauchi says it himself right in front of you and everybody else... "the first and only time (fauchi) and dr b spoke with trump and made a formal recommendation...bla bla bla. you get the picture, no? did you bother to see Fauchi's own words live in the vid above? naa, doesn't fit your nartv, eh? cheers https://www.elitetrader.com/et/thre...u-suck-you-probably-fauchi-trump-rift.343350/
Fauci confirms New York Times report Trump rebuffed social distancing advice https://www.theguardian.com/world/2...rebuffed-social-distancing-advice-coronavirus Health adviser says on CNN ‘you could logically say if you started mitigation earlier, you could have saved lives’ Prominent US public health adviser Dr Anthony Fauci appeared on Sunday to confirm a bombshell New York Times report which said he and other Trump administration officials recommended the implementation of physical distancing to combat the coronavirus in February, but were rebuffed for almost a month. Asked on CNN’s State of the Union why the administration did not act when he and other officials advised, Fauci said: “You know … as I have said many times, we look at it from a pure health standpoint. We make a recommendation. Often, the recommendation is taken. Sometimes, it’s not. “…It is what it is. We are where we are right now.” More than 530,000 cases of Covid-19 have been confirmed in the US, with almost 21,000 deaths. Officials currently expect a death toll of about 60,000 by August. CNN host Jake Tapper asked if Fauci thought “lives could have been saved if social distancing, physical distancing, stay-at-home measures had started [in the] third week of February, instead of mid-March”. “It’s very difficult to go back and say that,” Fauci said. “I mean, obviously, you could logically say, that if you had a process that was ongoing, and you started mitigation earlier, you could have saved lives. Obviously, no one is going to deny that. “But what goes into those kinds of decisions is complicated. But you’re right. I mean, obviously, if we had, right from the very beginning, shut everything down, it may have been a little bit different. But there was a lot of pushback about shutting things down back then.” Since the White House issued physical distancing guidelines on 16 March, much of the US has gone into lockdown, shuttering the economy and leading to unprecedented and potentially ruinous unemployment. Chafing against such conditions in an election year, Donald Trump has voiced an eagerness to reopen the economy as early as 1 May. The president has also said he will listen to advisers if they counsel against such a move. On Sunday, Fauci, other experts and governors of hard-hit states were skeptical. Phil Murphy, governor of New Jersey, the state with the highest death toll after New York, told CBS’s Face the Nation: “If we start to get back on our feet too soon … we could be throwing gasoline on the fire.” No White House briefing was scheduled on Sunday but Trump continued to attack the Times and its article, in one tweet appearing inadvertently to confirm it, writing: “the Fake News Opposition Party is pushing, with all their might, the fact that President Trump ‘ignored early warnings about the threat’.” Trump also claimed vindication regarding his “travel ban” on China. One of his most vocal supporters in the US media, Fox News host Sean Hannity, followed suit. “Hey [Maggie Haberman],” Hannity tweeted, to one of six reporters on the byline of Saturday’s report. “…You should Thank [Trump] for the Travel Ban(s) put in place while you and [the New York Times] were fixated on impeachment and advising people to travel to China. #NYTimesEpicFail.” Trump restricted travel from China before travel from Europe. The Times has reported that scientists believe most of the first Covid-19 cases in New York came from Europe, reporting which has prompted presidential tweets. In reply to Hannity, Haberman wrote: “Weird. Six bylines on our story about how the president handled the growing threat of the coronavirus but just one he’s focused on. Something there but I can’t put my finger on it...” The only female reporter on the Times article also tweeted footage of Fauci’s remarks. “This is confirmation of our story,” she wrote, “which focused on various moments the president had to take the threat more seriously and didn’t, in no small part due to the culture of government he’s created.” Trump has also complained about the Times’ use of anonymous sources. On Sunday, the paper’s executive editor responded. Dean Baquet told CNN’s Reliable Sources there were some anonymous sources but the story was “based on many on-the-record interviews, documents. There is a tremendous email chain among scientists inside and outside the government where they talk about the growing crisis. “So, I would suggest that people read it, rather than take the president’s tweet at its word. It is a very well-documented, powerful chapter in understanding why the government was so slow in dealing with this pandemic.” Baquet also said: “I would hope that the president reads it, because I think his tweet maybe indicates that he had not read it. And I think he will see a very important historic portrait of a government that was slow to deal with crisis.” The editor was asked about his previous comparison of the coronavirus outbreak and the US government response with the terror attacks of September 11, 2001. In New York, more than three times as many people have died of Covid-19 as died on 9/11. Baquet said he did not know if the government’s failure regarding the pandemic was of the same magnitude as failing to prevent the attacks on New York, Washington and an airliner which crashed in Pennsylvania. “I think we have a lot more reporting to do,” he said. “It’s clearly a failure.”