'New Coronavirus Adviser Roils White House With Unorthodox Ideas,' 'Misguided, Dangerous': NYT
'A New Coronavirus Adviser Roils the White House With Unorthodox Ideas.' By Noah Weiland, Sheryl Gay Stolberg, Michael D. Shear and Jim Tankersley, 3 hrs ago. The New York Times. - Excerpts, Ed:
Washington Dr. Scott W. Atlas has argued that the science of mask wearing is uncertain, that children cannot pass on the coronavirus and that the role of the government is not to stamp out the virus but to protect its most vulnerable citizens as Covid-19 takes its course. Ideas like these, both ideologically freighted and scientifically disputed, have propelled the radiologist and senior fellow at Stanford Universitys conservative Hoover Institution into President Trumps White House, where he is pushing to reshape the administrations response to the pandemic. Mr. Trump has embraced Dr. Atlas, as has Mark Meadows, the White House chief of staff, even as he upsets the balance of power within the White House coronavirus task force with ideas that top government doctors and scientists like Anthony S. Fauci, Deborah L. Birx and Jerome Adams, the surgeon general, find misguided even dangerous according to people familiar with the task forces deliberations. That might be the point.
I think Trump clearly does not like the advice he was receiving from the people who are the experts Fauci, Birx, etc. so he has slowly shifted from their advice to somebody who tells him what he wants to hear, said Dr. Carlos del Rio, an infectious disease expert at Emory University who is close to Dr. Birx, the White House coronavirus response coordinator. Dr. Atlas is neither an epidemiologist nor an infectious disease expert, the two jobs usually associated with pandemic response. But his frequent appearances on Fox News Channel and his ideological surety caught the presidents eye. So when Mr. Trump resumed his coronavirus news conferences in July and August, it was Dr. Atlas who helped prepare his briefing materials, according to people familiar with them. And it was his ideas that spilled from the presidents mouth.
He has many great ideas, Mr. Trump told reporters at a White House briefing last month with Dr. Atlas seated feet away. And he thinks what weve done is really good, and now well take it to a new level.
The core of his appeal in the West Wing rests in his libertarian-style approach to disease management in which the government focuses on small populations of at-risk individuals- the elderly, the sick and the immune-compromised- and minimizes restrictions for the rest of the population, akin to an approach used to disastrous effect in Sweden. The argument: Most people infected by the coronavirus will not get seriously ill, and at some point, enough people will have antibodies from Covid-19 to deprive the virus of carriers- herd immunity. Once you get to a certain number- we use the word herd- once you get to a certain number, its going to go away, Mr. Trump told Laura Ingraham on Fox News on Monday night. Dr. Atlass push has led to repeated private confrontations with Dr. Birx, who in recent weeks has been advocating rigorous rules on wearing masks, limiting bars and restaurants, and minimizing large public gatherings.
Dr. Atlas declined a request to be interviewed, but Judd Deere, a WH spokesman, accused the news media of trying to distort & diminish his beliefs & record, adding that Dr. Atlas is working to carry out the presidents No. 1 priority: protecting the health & safety of the American people. WH officials said there had never been an attempt to shift policy to anything resembling herd immunity. Theres never been any advocacy of a herd immunity strategy coming from me to the president, to anyone in the administration, to the task force, to anyone Ive spoken to, Dr. Atlas said in a radio interview Tuesday. WH officials said administration policy continued to focus on efforts to curb the spread of the disease while pushing to rapidly develop medical therapies to minimize deaths, as well as a vaccine. The president & his aides believe effective treatments are critical to allowing the country to return to normal. But health officials say Dr. Atlass beliefs, argued in news media appearances & private conversations, have begun to shift the administrations thinking. Before joining the task force, Dr. Atlas pitched his ideas as a health commentator on Fox News.
The idea has gained traction in conservative circles. Sen. Rand Paul says the U.S. needs to look at Sweden before letting the nanny-staters shut the economy down again. Conservative radio host Rush Limbaugh discussed it on his show in April & cheered Dr. Atlass hiring at the White House, saying he was countering Fauci....
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I_UndergroundPanther
(12,480 posts)Another incompetant asshole to tell him what he wants to hear .
Trump needs to go.