How the
Trump regime ‘engaged in a coverup’ of the COVID-19
pandemic
By Brad Reed
April 28, 2020
"Information
Clearing House"
- In late February, even as it became clear that the
novel coronavirus was poised to rage like wildfire
across the United States, President Donald Trump and his
administration systematically tried to downplay the
threat the disease posed to the American public.
In a
devastating timeline compiled by New York University
School of Law professor Ryan Goodman and NYU School of
Law student Danielle Schulkin
in the New York Times,
it becomes clear that the president and his
administration tried to cover up the threat of the
virus, despite the fact that government agencies
internally were sounding alarms about the dangers it
posed to Americans’ well being.
In their analysis,
Goodman and Schulkin trace what was known about the
disease’s spread in late February and contrast it with
statements and actions that were being taken by the
administration.
“At the time,
senior officials knew the coronavirus was an extreme
threat to Americans,” they write. “Thanks to information
streaming in from U.S. intelligence agencies for months,
officials reportedly believed that a “cataclysmic”
disease could infect 100 million Americans and discussed
lockdown plans. The warnings were given to Mr. Trump in
his daily brief by the intelligence community; in calls
from Alex Azar, the secretary of health; and in memos
from his economic adviser Peter Navarro.”
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However, these
dire warnings were not at all communicated to the public
— and the administration continued to falsely claim that
the virus had been “contained.”
“That
Wednesday, the president used the day’s news conference
by the coronavirus task force, with Dr. Fauci alongside
him, to lie to the public,” they write. “‘You have 15
people, and the 15 within a couple of days is going to
be down to close to zero. That’s a pretty good job we’ve
done,’ he told the American public. He and Mr. Azar
would continue to make such assurances over the next two
days — Mr. Azar in remarks before lawmakers and the
president in statements from the White House and
bellowed at political rallies.”
The analysis
also doesn’t spare Fauci for trying to adhere to the
administration’s preferred narrative in the face of the
facts.
“Dr.
Fauci might now regret how he tried to thread the
needle, but he also knew to expect the question and he
repeated the party line,” they write. “In effect, for
five days, the president along with some of his closest
senior officials disseminated an egregiously false
message to Americans. The messaging would continue well
beyond those days until the stark images of refrigerated
morgue trucks and spiked lines on colored graphs showed
the escalating numbers of cases and dead.”
Read the whole analysis here.
"Source"
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