Thomas T. Siler, M.D. has a very good column at American Thinker. He opens with this:
Now that we have had 18 months to
“slow the spread” it is time to take stock of the pandemic. We have learned
many good things that the media and our pandemic managers rarely report. Most
fundamentally, we do not need to be afraid of COVID-19 anymore. The media and
some government health authorities are still pushing hysteria and fear, but
that should not prevail.
And he closes his column with:
We do not need to be afraid of
COVID-19 anymore. Let’s begin to end the hysteria and fear. The worst is over
and we are transitioning
to endemic status which means a low level of cases and deaths.
We will have many fewer deaths if
we start to treat the infection early now with the available outpatient
treatments. We should resist further attempts at lockdowns and mask mandates as
neither worked. We know exactly whom to protect—the elderly and those with
chronic health problems. That’s where we should concentrate our energies.
Thankfully, children have very
little risk and do not need masks at school or vaccinations. Variants will come
but will not send us back into a situation like last year.
Can our pandemic managers take some
of this useful information and transform it into helpful public health policies
from this point forward? Or is there another agenda behind unending hysteria,
fear, and the constant push for 100% vaccination? That remains to be seen. For
now, let's celebrate the good news.
Dr. Siler’s column is here. As to his closing question: “is there another agenda behind unending hysteria, fear, and the constant push for 100% vaccination?” Well, here’s the photograph from Australia that we posted the other day:
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