IMDB users are having an extremely normal one reviewing the Fauci doc that they definitely watched.
Their ongoing obsession with making Fauci a terrifying supervillain is amazing. For one the guy is like five foot tall, and secondly I like the idea that he quietly worked in public health for 40 years, all that time secretly shifting each one of his diabolical chess pieces into place, all so that he could
finally launch his lifelong plan of making Jim from Omaha, Nebraska get a coronavirus vaccine. Well played, Dr. Fauci.
Anyway, I was reading a little about cell fusion caused by SARS-CoV-2 (and as an aside: I am surprised how little this aspect of covid has penetrated anything but dry scientific papers; I know syncytia are not particularly uncommon in various nasty viruses, but given the public interest in covid, you would think people would be interested in the idea of lungs being taken over by giant mutated Voltron cells) and it struck me for the 500th time how odd it is that people are out there being paranoid about the potential long-term effects of a vaccine, with no analogous worry about the unknown long-term effects of a new bat disease?
If you are of that anxious or paranoid mindset, I don't know how you can look at
shit like this without immediately rushing out and jabbing yourself with every vaccine-like substance available:
(Note: some of the citations refer to other viruses or SARS Classic, which is why they are dated from before 2020.
Second article is a preprint)
(Another note: not trying to say here with certainty that covid is going to trigger cancers, or cause something like that horrible measles encephalitis that pops up and kills children years later. But I don't understand how people can get worked up about the potential long term effects of what is essentially a pale imitation of a virus, while expressing little to no worry about the long-term effects of
the virus itself)