| Daniel Greenfield After Biden's spokeswoman boasted that the administration was  ordering Facebook to censor some people's speech, Fauci joined the  campaign by appearing on CNN to warn about the dangers of letting anyone  say whatever they think. "We probably would still have polio in this  country if we had the kind of false information that's being spread  now," he falsely claimed. Fauci, as usual, is wrong about everything. The polio vaccine was the subject of numerous controversies which played out in public. There were anti-vaccine campaigns long before Facebook. The most  bracing of these took on the polio vaccine with the headline, "Little  White Coffins" declaring, "Only God above will know how many thousands  of little white coffins will be used to bury the victims of Salk's  heinous, fraudulent vaccine."  Walter Winchell, who at his peak reached  over 50 million people, warned that one particular version of the  vaccine, which contained a live virus, was a "killer". Contrary to Fauci's fantasies (aided and abetted by a media eager to  find a pretext for censoring any open marketplace of ideas), the fifties  were not a totalitarian dystopia in which free speech did not exist.  Many of the same controversies as today, from socialism to science,  played out to large audiences across a bewildering array of national and  local newspapers, radio stations, mailings, books and magazines in a  country where the media had not yet been consolidated. Today, much of the newspaper, radio, and television markets, not to  mention publishing, are controlled in one way or another by a handful of  giant companies. While the fifties had their massive chains and  networks, they were far more intellectually diverse, and had plenty of  different owners and perspectives in the mix. The American cultural  environment today would strike people from that era as Communist because  it resembles the tight centralized control of the Soviet Union. America  has never had as little free and open debate as it does now because  never have the means of debate been clutched in as few hands as is now  the case.. There was aggressive promotion of the polio vaccine by the  government, by local authorities, and by non-profit advocacy groups, but  there was also vigorous opposition by a variety of people, some  credible and some not, and the scientific debates over the vaccine, most  notably between the live virus and the inactive virus, played out in  public with ordinary people following the back and forth between Salk  and Sabin. When Salk's inactive vaccine was replaced with Sabin's live  virus, the vaccine researcher turned to attacking it as unsafe and  dangerous. Americans not only survived a vigorous public debate over the polio  vaccine, but managed to stop polio because the debate over the vaccine  between advocates and opponents, and between scientists, played out in  public creating a sense of transparency and trust. Democrat revisionists act as if public health, elections, or any  important enterprise can only succeed if dissenting voices are  suppressed. But public trust comes from debate, not from a lack of it.  Americans trusted the polio vaccine more than they trust the coronavirus  vaccines because they were part of a public debate, instead of being  told to shut up and just go along. And the existence of a vigorous public debate proved vital when  batches of the polio vaccine from one manufacturer not only proved  lethal, but infected children with polio and paralyzed some of them. The  initial response by many in the scientific community and among  corporate leaders was a cover-up. Instead, the Eisenhower administration  chose to be transparent even though it led to a smear campaign by  Democrats. Eisenhower, instead of acting as if there was nothing wrong, admitted  that the government had failed. It would be incomprehensible today when  no politician ever admits to having mishandled the pandemic. New York's  Cuomo might have killed countless seniors, but he'll never admit to it.  Neither will any of the other governors who forced infected patients  into nursing homes Contrary to Fauci's lies, the polio vaccine process survived not only  "false information", but vigorous public debate between its two central  figures, Salk and Sabin, between Republicans and Democrats, (Basil  O'Connor, the vaccine's biggest champion, was FDR's old friend and had  brought him on board), and catastrophic failures that included a vaccine  manufacturer who infected 40,000 children with polio, paralyzed 51  children, and killed 5 children. Finally, Fauci is wrong about there being no more polio in America.  What he really means is that there's no virus in the wild naturally  spreading "polio" in the United States. Polio now comes to this country through vaccines taken abroad by  immigrants or travelers. (Fauci would also prefer that we not debate  Biden's open borders policies which are bringing in illegal aliens  infected by the coronavirus and spreading them around the country.) After a temporary win by Sabin, the United States switched to a live  virus in its polio vaccine due to an outbreak caused by an inactive  vaccine which turned out to carry the live virus. More recently, we went  back to the Salk inactive virus vaccine. However countries which use  the live virus vaccine continue to spread polio to a percentage of those who are vaccinated. In 2005, an Arizona woman "contracted vaccine-derived paralytic polio" from South America. In 2008, the CDC reported that "vaccine-derived polioviruses were  detected in patients from eight countries who had acute flaccid  paralysis." That's why vaccine debates, and any other medical debates, are worth having. The polio debate still continues today generations later. The switch  from a live to an inactive vaccine happened less than a generation ago.  Historians still argue over whether the vaccine outbreak was the fault  of private industry or government oversight. And that's a good thing. Vaccines are an important and powerful tool. Like any other  scientific program, they can go disastrously wrong. The best way to  maintain public trust in vaccines or in any other program is through  transparency, telling the truth and conducting an open and public  debate. Debates over vaccines or any other subject will not always be  conducted in good faith. But secret planning and cover-ups are always  held in bad faith and destroy public trust. Fauci is a government employee. And the legitimacy of the government  derives from public oversight and scrutiny. That legitimacy fails when  those employees mislead and manipulate the public. Fauci was showered  with the same outpouring of worshipful attention as Salk, without  possessing anything resembling Salk's level of accomplishment. But where  Salk also faced harsh criticism and accountability when things went  wrong, Fauci never has. He glides from one interview to another, changes his story twice a  week, adopts whatever the popular Washington D.C. is, and never actually  confronts any of the difficult issues. In the 50s, Fauci would have long since faced accountability. And  Americans would have never tolerated the level of control over the  public by unelected administrators. Let alone the calls for the  suppression of free speech that Fauci feels free to indulge in to his  fan base at CNN. People not only have a right, but an obligation, to debate what their  government does. Their opinions may be right or wrong, but that's not  for Fauci and the government to decide. It is not the job of government employees to tell the public what to think, but to serve the public. When a government administration blames a crisis on the public having  too much of a say in things, it's either covering up its own horrifying  actions or plotting a coup against the public. Either one is a warning that the only thing unhealthier than a virus is big government. Daniel Greenfield, a Shillman Journalism Fellow at the Freedom Center, is an investigative journalist and writer focusing on the radical Left andIslamic terrorism.			
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