Lex Fridman Podcast - #254 – Jay Bhattacharya: The Case Against Lockdowns

Episode Date: January 5, 2022

Jay Bhattacharya is a professor of medicine at Stanford University and co-author of the Great Barrington Declaration. Please support this podcast by checking out our sponsors: - Athletic Greens: https...://athleticgreens.com/lex and use code LEX to get 1 month of fish oil - InsideTracker: https://insidetracker.com/lex and use code Lex25 to get 25% off - Coinbase: https://coinbase.com/lex to get $5 in free Bitcoin - ROKA: https://roka.com/ and use code LEX to get 20% off your first order - Indeed: https://indeed.com/lex to get $75 credit EPISODE LINKS: Jay's Twitter: https://twitter.com/DrJBhattacharya Great Barrington Declaration: https://gbdeclaration.org/ PODCAST INFO: Podcast website: https://lexfridman.com/podcast Apple Podcasts: https://apple.co/2lwqZIr Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2nEwCF8 RSS: https://lexfridman.com/feed/podcast/ YouTube Full Episodes: https://youtube.com/lexfridman YouTube Clips: https://youtube.com/lexclips SUPPORT & CONNECT: - Check out the sponsors above, it's the best way to support this podcast - Support on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/lexfridman - Twitter: https://twitter.com/lexfridman - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/lexfridman - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/lexfridman - Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/lexfridman - Medium: https://medium.com/@lexfridman OUTLINE: Here's the timestamps for the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. (00:00) - Introduction (10:18) - How deadly is Covid? (39:48) - Covid vs Influenza (45:42) - Francis Collins email to Fauci (1:06:19) - Francis Collins (1:13:48) - Vaccine safety and efficacy (1:20:46) - Vaccine hesitancy (1:37:21) - Great Barrington Declaration and lockdowns (1:53:39) - Focused Protection (2:15:31) - Fear (2:19:57) - Advice for young people (2:24:56) - Fear of death (2:26:53) - Meaning of life

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 The following is a conversation with Jay Barakarya, Professor of Medicine, Health Policy, and Economics at Stanford University. Please allow me to say a few words about lockdowns and the blinding destructive effects of arrogance on leadership, especially in the space of policy and politics. Jay Barakarya is the co-author of the now famous grade barrington declaration, a one-page document that in October 2020 made a case against the effectiveness of lockdowns. Most of this podcast conversation is about the ideas related to this document. And so let me say a few
Starting point is 00:00:37 things here about what troubles me. Those who advocate for lockdowns as a policy often ignore the quiet suffering of millions, that it results in, which includes economic pain, loss of jobs, that give meaning and pride in the face of uncertainty, the increase in suicide, and suicidal ideation, and, in general, the fear and anger that arises from the powerlessness, forced onto the populace, but the self-proclaimed elites and experts. Many folks whose job is unaffected by the lockdowns, talk down to the masses about which path forward is right and which is wrong.
Starting point is 00:01:16 What troubles me most is this very lack of empathy among the policymakers for the common man, and in general for people unlike themselves. The landscape of suffering is vast, and must be fully considered in calculating the response to the pandemic, with humility and with rigorous, open-minded scientific debate. J and I talk about the email from Francis Collins to Anthony Fauci that called Jay and his two call authors, Fringe Epidemiologists, and also called for devastating publish take-down of their ideas. These words from Francis broke my heart. I understand them. I can even steal men them. But nevertheless, on balance, they show to me a failure of leadership.
Starting point is 00:02:07 Leadership in the pandemic is hard, which is why great leaders are remembered by history. They are rare. They stand out, and they give me hope. Also, this whole mess inspires me at my small individual level to do the right thing. In the face of conformity, despite the long odds. I talk to Francis Collins. I talk to Albert Burla, Pfizer CEO. I also talked and will continue to talk with people like Jay and other dissenting voices that challenge the mainstream narratives and those in the seats of power. I hope to highlight both the strengths and weaknesses in their ideas with respect and
Starting point is 00:02:49 empathy but also with guts and skill. The skill part I hope to improve on over time. And I do believe that conversation and an open mind is the way out of this. And finally, as I've said in the past, I value love and integrity far, far above money, fame and power. Those latter three are all ephemeral. They slip through the fingers of anyone who tries to hold on, and leave behind an empty shell of a human being. I prefer to die a man who lived by principles that nobody could shake, and a man who added a bit of love to the world. And now a quick few second mention of each sponsor.
Starting point is 00:03:36 Check them out in the description, it's the best way to support this podcast. First is Athletic Greens, the all-in-one nutrition drink I drink twice a day. Second is Inside Tracker, a service I use to track my biological data. Third is Cornbase, a platform I use to buy cryptocurrency. Fourth is Roca, my favorite sunglasses and prescription glasses, and fifth is indeed a hiring website. So the choice is Health, money, style or teamwork. Choose wise of my friends.
Starting point is 00:04:07 And now onto the full ad reads. As always, no ads in the middle. I try to make these interesting, but if you skip them, please still check out the sponsors. I enjoy their stuff maybe you will too. This show is brought to you by Athletic Greens and its new renamed AG1 Drink, which is an all-in-one daily drink to support better health and peak performance. It replaced the multivitimate for me and went far beyond that with 75 vitamins and minerals. It has a bunch of healthy stuff in it and they keep innovating on it, it keeps iterating. Like Tesla Autopilot keeps getting new over the airsoftware updates,
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Starting point is 00:05:18 slash likes, that's athleticgreens.com slash likes. This show is also brought to you by Inside Tracker, a service I use to track biological data. There are a bunch of plans, most of which include blood tests that give you a lot of information that you can then make decisions based on. They have algorithms that analyze your blood data, DNA data, and fitness tracker data to provide you with a clear picture of what's going on inside you to offer you signs, back recommendations for positive diet and lifestyle changes. The great Andrew Huberman talks a lot about it.
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Starting point is 00:07:11 When you sign up today at coinbase.com slash Lex that's coinbase.com slash Lex I'm pretty sure I'm going to talk to the CEO soon. I look forward to that conversation. It's an incredible service. I Don't care that they're sponsor. It's an incredible service. I don't care that their sponsor. It's just I've been a fan for a long time. I think they've been a big part of bringing cryptocurrency to the mainstream. This shows also brought to you by Roka, the makers of glasses and sunglasses that I love wearing for their design, feel, and innovation on materials, optics, and grip. Roca was started by two all-american swimmers from Stanford, and it was born out of an obsession
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Starting point is 00:08:31 ENTERCODE LEX to save 20% on your first order. That's roca.com and ENTERCODE LEX. This show is also brought to you by Indeed, a hiring website. I've used them as part of many hiring efforts I've done for the teams I've led in the past. They have tools like indeed instant matching, giving you quality candidates whose resumes and indeed fit your job description immediately. You may hear in my voice a bit of a melancholy tone. I've just been going through a bunch of difficult things in my life and it's just been rough. One of the things that gives me a lot of, I don't know, hope, just on a basic human level, maybe strength is the better word.
Starting point is 00:09:15 It's having a great team of people around me and not necessarily in terms of productivity but just as human beings. They spend a lot of time with the people on your team. And so you should do a great job, I guess, hiring them and use the best tools for the job. I happen to be part of a great team already. So I'm really proud of that. I'm really grateful for that.
Starting point is 00:09:38 Anyway, right now I'll get a free $75 sponsored job credit to upgrade your job post at indeed.com slash Lex. Get it at and.com slash Lex get it at and and.com slash Lex terms and conditions apply go to indeed.com slash Lex. This is the Lex treatment podcast and here is my conversation with Jay but a career. To our best understanding today, how deadly is COVID? Do we have a good measure for this very question?
Starting point is 00:10:26 So the best evidence for COVID, the deadliness of COVID, comes from a whole series of zero prevalent studies. Zero prevalent studies are these studies of antibody prevalence in the population at large. I was part of the, you know, the very first set of zero prevalent studies, one in Santa Clara County, won in LA County, and won in with Major League Baseball on the US. If I may just pause you for a second, if people don't know what serology is in serial prevalence, it does sound like you say zero prevalence. It's not. It's serology's antibodies. So it's a survey that counts the number of antibodies specific to COVID. Yes. People that have antibodies specific to COVID, which perhaps shows an indication that they likely
Starting point is 00:11:12 have had COVID. And therefore, this is a way to study how many people in the population have been exposed to have had. Exactly. Yeah. Exactly. So the idea is that we don't know exactly the number of people with COVID just by counting the people that are that are to present themselves with symptoms of COVID. COVID has it turns out a very wide range of symptoms possible for ranging from no symptoms at all to this deadly viral pneumonia that it's killed so many people. And the problem is like in if you just count the number of cases, the people who have very few symptoms often don't show up for testing, we just don't, they're outside of the can of public health. And so it's really hard to know the answer to your question without understanding how many people are infected, because
Starting point is 00:11:58 you can probably tell the number of deaths, that's even though there's some controversy over that. But that, so the numerator is possible, but the denominator is much harder. How much controversy is there about the death? We're going to go on million tangents. Is that, okay, I have a million questions. So one, I love data so much, but I almost tuned out paying attention to COVID data because I feel like I'm walking on shaky ground. I don't know who
Starting point is 00:12:25 to trust. Maybe you can comment on different sources of data, different kinds of data, the death one. That seems like a really important one. Can we trust the reported death associated with COVID or is it just a giant messy thing that mixed up? And then there's this kind of stories about hospitals being incentivized to report a death as COVID death. So there's some truth in some of that. Let me just talk about the incentive. So in the United States, we passed this CARES Act that was aimed at making sure hospital
Starting point is 00:13:00 assistance didn't go bankrupt in the early days of the pandemic. The couple of things they did, one was they provided incentives to treat COVID patients, tens of thousands of dollars extra per COVID patient. And the other thing they did is they gave a 20% bump to Medicare payments for elderly patients who treated with COVID. The idea is that there's more expensive to treat them at, I guess, the early days. So that did provide an incentive to sort of have a lot of COVID patients in the hospital because your financial success of the hospital or at least not lack of financial ruin,
Starting point is 00:13:32 depended on having many COVID patients. The other thing on the death certificates, reporting of deaths is a separate issue. I don't know that there's a financial incentive there, but there is this sort of complicated, when you fill out a death certificate for a patient with a lot of conditions, but there is this sort of like complicated, you know, when you fill out a desert if it get for a patient with a lot of conditions, like let's say a patient has diabetes, a patient out where that while that diabetes could lead to heart failure, you know, you have a heart attack heart failure, your lungs fill up, then you get COVID and you die. So what do you what do you write on the desert certificate? Was it because of COVID that killed you? Was it the lungs filling up? write on the death certificate? Was it because it covered the kill G. You was at the lungs filling up was it the heart failure?
Starting point is 00:14:07 Was it the diabetes is really difficult to like disenangle? And I think a lot of a lot of times what's happened is they people have like arid on the side of signing it is COVID now. What's the evidence of this? There's been a couple of audits of death certificates in places like Santa Clara County where I live in Alameda County, California, where they carefully went through the death certificate said, okay, is this reasonable to say this was actually COVID or was COVID in San Ano? And they found that about 25% or 20%, 25% of the deaths were more likely incidental than directly due to COVID. I personally don't get too excited about this.
Starting point is 00:14:45 I mean, it's a philosophical question, right? Like, ultimately, what kills you? I would just, which is not a thing to say, if you're not in medicine, but like really, it's almost always multifactorial. Not always just the bus hits you. The bus hits you, you get a brain bleed, was the brain bleed that killed you,
Starting point is 00:15:03 would it burst anyway? I mean, you know, the bus hit you, killed you, right? The way you die is a philosophical question, but it's also sociological and psychological question because it seems like every single person who's passed away over the past couple of years, kind of the first question that comes to mind was a COVID, not just because you're trying to be political, but just in your mind. No, I think there's a psychological reason for this, right? So, you know, we have, we spent the better part of at least a half century in the United States, not worried too much about
Starting point is 00:15:34 infectious diseases. And the notion was we'd essentially conquered them. It was something that happens in far away places to other people. And that's true for much of the developed world. Life expectancy were going up for decades and decades. And for the first time in living memory, we have a disease that can kill us. I mean, I think we're effectively evolved to fear that. Like the panic centers of our brain, the lizard part of our brain takes over. And our central focus has been avoiding this one risk. And so it's not surprising that people, when they're filling out death certificates, are thinking about what led to the death, this most salient thing that's in the front of everyone's brain would jump to the top. And we can't ignore this very deep psychological thing when we consider what people say on the internet, what people
Starting point is 00:16:25 say to each other, what people write in scientific papers, what everything. It feels like when COVID has been brought onto this world, everything changed in the way people feel about each other, just the way they communicate with each other. I think the level of emotion involved. I think in many people it brought out the worst in them. For sometimes short periods of time and sometimes it was always therapeutic. Like you were waiting to get out like the darkest parts of you just to say, if you're angry
Starting point is 00:17:03 at something in this world, I'm going to say it now. And I think that's probably talking to some deep primal thing that fear we have for formalities of all different kinds. And then when that fear is aroused and all the deepest emotions, it's like a Freudian psychotherapy session, but across the world. Something that psychologists are going to have a field day with for generation, trying to understand. I mean, I think what you say is right, but paled on top of that is also this sort of
Starting point is 00:17:38 this impetus to empathy, the empathized compassion toward others, essentially militarized. the empathized compassion toward others essentially militarized. Right? So I'm protecting you by some actions. And those actions, if I don't do them, if you don't do them, well, that month's bust me, you hate me. It's created this like social tension that I've never seen before. And we started, we started, we looked at each other as if we were just simply sources of germs rather than people to get to know, people to enjoy, people to learn from. It colored basically almost every human interaction
Starting point is 00:18:19 for every human on the planet. Yeah, the basic common humanity, it's like you can wear a mask, you can stand far away, but the love you have for each other when you're looking to each other's eyes, that was dissipating and by region too. I've experienced having traveled quite a bit throughout this time. It was really sad, even people that are really close together, just the way they stood, the way they looked at each other. And it made me feel for a moment that the fabric that connects all of us is more fragile than I thought.
Starting point is 00:18:54 I mean, if you walk down the street, or if you did this during COVID, I'm sure you had this experience where you walk down the street, if you're not wearing a mask, or even if you are, people will jump off the sidewalk that you walked past them, as if you're not wearing a mask, or even if you are, people will jump off the sidewalk that you walk past them, as if you're poison. Even though the data are that COVID spreads in differently outdoors, or if at all, really outdoors, but it's not simply a biological, or it infects the Z's phenomenon,
Starting point is 00:19:20 or a pre-moological, it is a change in the way humans treated each other. I hope temporary. I do want to say on the flip side of that. So I was mostly in Boston, Massachusetts when the pandemic broke out. I think that's where I was. Yeah. And then I got what came here to Austin, Texas to visit my not good friend, Joe Rogan. And he was the first person Without pause this wasn't a political statement. This was anything. Just walk toward me Give me a big hug and say it's great to see you and I can't tell you how great it felt because I in that moment Realized the absence of that connection back in Boston over just a couple of of our couple of months and It's we'll talk about it more, but it's tragic to think about
Starting point is 00:20:07 That distancing that dissolution of common humanity at scale. What what kind of impact it has on society? just across the board political division And just in the quiet of your own mind and the privacy of your own home the depression the sadness the loneliness that at least the suicide and forget suicide, just low-key suffering. Yeah. No, I think that's the suffering, that isolation. We're not meant to live alone. We're not meant to live apart from one another.
Starting point is 00:20:37 That's, of course, the ideology of lockdown is to make people live apart alone, isolated, so that we don't spread diseases to each other, right? But we're not actually designed as a species to live that way. And that what you're describing, I think, if everyone's honest with themselves have felt, especially in places where lockdowns have been very militantly enforced, has felt deep into their core. Well, I, if I could just return to the question of deaths, he said that the data is imperfect because we need these kind of, uh, seroprevalence surveys to understand how many cases there were to determine the rate of deaths.
Starting point is 00:21:14 And we need to have a strong footing in the number of deaths. But if we assume that the, the number of deaths is approximately correct, like what's your sense? What kind of statements can we say about the deadliness of COVID against across different demographics, maybe not in a political way or in the current way, but when history looks back at this moment of time, 50 years from now, 100 years from now, the way we look at the pandemic 100 years ago, What will they say about the deadliness of COVID? I mean, I think the deadliness of COVID depends on not just the virus itself, but who it
Starting point is 00:21:51 infects. So the probably the most important thing about it, about the deadliness of COVID, is is this steep age gradient in the mortality rate. So according to these zero prevalence studies that that that have been done, now hundreds of them, mostly from before vaccination, this vaccination also reduces the mortality risk of COVID. The zero prevalence studies suggest that the risk of death, if you're say over the age of 70, is very high, you know, 5 percent, if you get COVID, If you're under the age of 70, it's lower, 0.05, but there's not a single sharp cutoff. It's more like, I have a rule of thumb that I use. So if you're 50, say the infection fatality rate from COVID is 0.2% according to the
Starting point is 00:22:40 seroprevalence data, that means 99.8% survival if you're 50. And for every seven years of age above that, double it, every seven years of age below that have it. So 57 year old have a 0.4% mortality, 64 year old would have a 0.8% and so on. And if you have a severe chronic disease like diabetes or if you're morbidly obese, it's like adding seven years to your life.
Starting point is 00:23:07 And this is for unvaccinated folks. This is unvaccinated in the before delta also. Are there a lot of people that will be listening to this with PhDs at the end of their name that would disagree with the 99.8 would you say? So I think there's some disagreement over this. And the disagreement is about the quality of the seroprevalent studies that were conducted. So as I said earlier, I was a senior investigator in three different seroprevalent studies, very early in the epidemic.
Starting point is 00:23:37 I view them as very high quality studies. We in Santa Clara County, what we did, we used a test kit to, that we obtained from someone who works in major league baseball, actually. He'd ordered these test kits very early in March 2020 that measures, very accurately measures antibody levels, antibodies in the bloodstream. This test kits were eventually by the EUA by the emergency use authorization by the FDA shortly after we did this. It had a very low false positive, right?
Starting point is 00:24:14 False positive means if you don't have these COVID antibodies in your bloodstream, the kit shows up positive anyways. That turns out to happen about 0.5% of the time. And based on studies, very large number of studies looking at blood from 2018, you try it against this kit, and 0.5% of the time. 2018, there shouldn't be antibodies there. So, to cover it, so if it turns positive, it's the false positives, 0.5% of the time. And then, you know, like a false negative rate, about 10%, 12%, something like that. I don't remember the exact number. But the false positive rates are the important thing there, right? So you have a population in March 2020 or April 2020 with very low fraction of patients having been exposed to COVID. You don't know how much, but low. Even a small false positive rate could end up
Starting point is 00:25:06 biasing study quite a bit. But there's a formula to adjust for that. You can adjust for the four false positive rate, false negative rate. We did that adjustment. And those studies found in a community population. So leaving aside people in nursing homes who have a higher death rate from COVID,
Starting point is 00:25:22 that the death rate was 0.2% in Santa Clara County and in LA County. Across all age groups in the community, community meeting just like regular folks. Yeah, so that's actually a real important question too. So the Santa Clara study, we did this Facebook sampling scheme, which is, I mean, not the ideal thing, but it was very difficult to get a random sample in during lockdown, where we put out an ad on Facebook, soliciting people to volunteer for the study, randomly selected a set of people. We were hoping to get a random selection of people from Santa Clara County, but the people who tended to volunteer were from the richer parts of the county.
Starting point is 00:26:03 I had Stanford professors writing begging to be in the study because they wanted an early antibody levels. So we did some adjustment for that. In LA County, we hired a firm that had a pre-existing representative sample of LA County. So, but it didn't include nursing homes, it didn't include people in jail, things like that, didn't include the homeless populations. So it's, it's representative of a community dwelling population, both of those. And there we found that both in LA County, Amesana Clara County in April 2020, something like 40 to 50 times more
Starting point is 00:26:37 infections than cases in both places. So for every case that had been reported to the public health authorities, we found that, you know, 40 or 50 other infections, people with antibodies in their blood that suggested that they had COVID and recovered. So people were not reporting or severe, at least in those days, under reporting? Yeah, I mean, there was, you know, there's testing problem. There weren't so many tests available. People didn't know a lot of them. We asked a set of questions about the symptoms that faced, and most of them said they face no symptoms,
Starting point is 00:27:10 or the most, 30, 40% of them said face the no symptoms. And I mean, even these days, how many people report that they get COVID when they get COVID? Okay, have those numbers that point 2%? Has that approximately held up over time? That is. So if Professor John E. Needy's, who's a colleague of mine at Stanford, is a world expert in meta-nouse, probably the most cited scientist in the honor of I think, at least living, he did a meta-nouse of now 100 or more of
Starting point is 00:27:39 these cerebellum studies. And what he found was that that 0.2% is roughly the worldwide number. I mean, in fact, I think you cite this lower number, 0.15% as the meeting infection fatality rate worldwide. So we did these studies and it generated an enormous amount of blowback by people who thought that the infection fatality rate is much higher. And there's some controversy over the quality of some of the other studies that are done. And so there are some people who look at this same literature and say, well, the lower quality studies tend to have lower IFRs, the higher quality studies.
Starting point is 00:28:15 IFR? Oh, infection fatality, right? Apologize. I do this in lectures too. And I'm going to rudely interrupt you. And ask for the basics, sometimes if it's okay. No, of course. So these these higher quality studies they say are pretend to produce higher. But the problem is that if you want a global infection fatality rate you need to get
Starting point is 00:28:37 zero prevalence studies from everywhere. Even places that don't necessarily have the infrastructure set up to produce very, very high quality studies. And in poor places in the world, the, the, the, the, like places like Africa, the infection for how you rate is incredibly low. And in some richer places, like New York City, the infection for how you rate is, is, is much higher. It's, there's a range of IFRs on a single number. This sometimes surprises people, because they think, well, it's a, it's a range of IFRs on a single number. This sometimes surprises people because they think, well, it's a virus. It should have the same properties no matter where it goes.
Starting point is 00:29:11 But the virus kills or infects or her hurts in interaction with the host. And the properties of both the host and the virus combine to produce the outcome. But you also mentioned the environment too? Well, I'm thinking mainly just about the person. I'm going to think about the simplest way to think about it is age. Age is the single most important risk factor. So older places are going to have a higher IFR than younger places. Africa, 3% of Africa is over 65.
Starting point is 00:29:44 So in some sense, it's not surprising that they have a low infection fatality rate. So that's one way you would explain the difference between Africa and New York City in terms of fatality rate is the age, the average age. Yeah. And especially in the early days of the epidemic in New York City, the older populations living in nursing homes were differentially infected based on because of policies that were adopted, right, to send COVID infected patients back to nursing homes to keep hospitals empty.
Starting point is 00:30:14 What do you mean by differentially infected? The policy that you adopt determines who is most exposed. Right. Okay. So that's what it's the policy. It's the person that matters. I mean, it's not like the virus just kind of, it doesn't care. I mean, the policy determines the nature of the interaction.
Starting point is 00:30:33 And there's also, I mean, there is some contribution from the environment. Different regions have different proximity, maybe of people interacting or the dynamics of the way they interact. They don't say it. I'm like, if you have situations where there's lots of intergenerational interactions, then you have a very different risk profile than if you have societies that are where generations are more separate from one another. Okay, so let me just finish. We're real fast about this. So you had in New New York You have a population that was infected in the early days that was very likely going to die but I had a much higher likely of dying if infected and so New York City had a higher IFR
Starting point is 00:31:17 especially in the early days then Then then like Africa had has had The other thing is treatment, right? So the treatments that we adopted in the early days of the epidemic, I think actually may have exacerbated the risk of death. So like using ventilators, like the overvalidance on ventilators is what I'm really thinking of,
Starting point is 00:31:39 but I can think of other things. But that also, we've learned over time how better to manage patients with the disease. So you have all those things combined. So that's where the controversy over this number is. I mean, New York City also is a central hub for those who tweet and those who write powerful stories and narratives in article form. And I remember there's quite dramatic stories about sort of doctors in the hospitals and these kinds of things.
Starting point is 00:32:11 I mean, there's very serious, very dramatic, very tragic deaths going on always in hospitals. Those stories, a lot loved ones losing each other on a deathbed, that's always tragic and you can always write a hell of a good story about that and you should about the loss of loved ones, but they were doing it pretty, pretty well, I would say, over this kind of dramatic deaths. And so in response to that, it's very unpleasant to hear, even to consider the possibility that the death rate is not as high as you might otherwise, as you might feel.
Starting point is 00:32:52 Yeah, I was surprised by the reaction, both by regular people and also the scientific community in response to those studies, those early studies in April of 2020. To me, they were studies. I mean, they're the kind of, not exactly a kind of work I've worked on all my life, but kind of like the kind of, you know, you write a paper and you get responses from your fellow scientists and you, you know, change the paper and improve it.
Starting point is 00:33:19 You have to hopefully learn something from it. Well, but to push back, it's just a study, but there are some studies, and this is kind of interesting, because I've received similar pushback on other topics. There's some studies that if wrong might have a wide ranging detrimental effects on society, so that's the way they would perceive the studies.
Starting point is 00:33:46 If you say the death rate is lower, and you end up, as you often do in science, realizing that that was a flaw in the way the study was conducted, or we just not representative of a broader population. And then you realize the death rate is much higher, that might be very damaging in people's view. So that's probably where the scientific community, sort of to steel man, the kind of response,
Starting point is 00:34:11 is that's where they felt like, you know, there's some findings where you better be damn sure before you kind of report them. Yeah, I mean, we were pretty sure we were right and it turns out we were right. So like when we so We released the the Santa Clara study via this open open science process and this of server called med med archive It's it's designed for releasing studies have not yet been peer reviewed in order to garner comment from the from the scientists before peer review The the LA County study we went through the traditional peer review process and got a published in the Journal of American Medical Association sometime in like July, I think, forget the date of 2020.
Starting point is 00:34:53 The Santa Clara study released in April of 2020 in this sort of working paper archive. The reason was that we felt we had an obligation, we had a result that was, we thought was quite important. And we wanted to tell the scientific community about it and also tell the world about it. And it wasn't, we wanted to get feedback. I mean, that's part of the purpose of sending it to these kinds of places.
Starting point is 00:35:16 I think a lot of the problem is that when people think about published science, they think of it is automatically true. And if it goes through peer reviews, automatically true, if it hasn't gone through peer reviews, it's not automatically true. And especially in medicine, when we're not used to having this access to pre-peer reviewed work, I mean, in economics, actually, that's quite normal.
Starting point is 00:35:40 You take years to get something published. So there's a very active debate over or discussion about papers before they're peer reviewed in this sort of working paper way, much less normal or much newer in medicine. And so I think part of that, the perception about what those, that, that, what process happens in open science when you release a study, that, that got people confused. And you're right, it was a very important result, because we had just locked the world down in the middle of March with, I think, catastrophic results.
Starting point is 00:36:13 And if that study was right, if our study was right, that meant we'd made a mistake. And not because of the death rate was low. That's actually not the key thing there. The key thing is that we had adopted these policies, these test and trace policies, these policies, these lockdown policies aimed at suppressing the virus level to close to zero. That was essentially the idea. If we can just get the virus to go away, we won't have to ever worry about it again. The main problem with our result as far as that strategy was concerned wasn't
Starting point is 00:36:45 the death rate, it was the 40 to 50 times more infections than cases. It was the 2.5% or 3% or 4% prevalence rate that we identified of the antibodies in the population. If that number is right, it's too late. The virus is not going to go to zero. And no matter how much we test and trace and isolate, we're not going to get the viral level down to zero. So we're going to have to let the virus go through the entire population in some way or so. Well, we can talk about that in a bit. That's the great variant in declaration. You don't have to let the virus go through the population.
Starting point is 00:37:18 You can shield preferentially. The policy we chose was to shield preferentially the laptop class, the set of people who could work from home without losing their job. And we did a very good job at protecting them. Well, let me take a small tangent. We're going to jump around in time, which I think will be the best way to tell this story. So that was the beginning.
Starting point is 00:37:45 Yeah. Okay, actually, can I go back one more thing for that? Because that's really important, and I should have started with this. What led me to do those studies was a paper that I had remembered seeing from the H1N1 flu epidemic in 2009. This is where I've been much less active in writing about that. I had written a paper too about that in 2009. I've been much less active in writing about that. I've done written a paper or two about that in 2009. There was actually the same debate over the mortality rate, except it unfolded over the course of three years, two or three years. The early studies
Starting point is 00:38:19 of the mortality rate in H1N1 counted the number of cases in the denominator, kind of the number of deaths in the numerator. Cases meaning people identified as having H1N1 showing up the doctor tested to have it. And the early estimates of the H1N1 mortality were like 4%, 3%, really, really high. Over the course of a couple of more years, a whole bunch of serum prevalence studies,
Starting point is 00:38:47 serum prevalence studies of H1N1 flu came out. And it turned out that there were a hundred or more times of people infected per case. And so the mortality rate was actually something like 0.02% for H1N1, not the three, like a hundred full difference. So this made you thinkN1, not the three, I was like 100 full difference. So this made you think, okay, it took us a couple of two or three years
Starting point is 00:39:10 to discover the truth behind the actual infections for H1N1 and then what's the truth here and can we get there faster? Yeah, and there was, it spreads in a similar way as the H1N1 fluid did. I mean, it's spread fear, so a solization via, you know, so person-person breathing kind of contact up. And maybe some by filmized,
Starting point is 00:39:31 but seems like that's less likely now. In any case, it seemed really important to me to speed up the process of having those serial prevalent studies. So we can better understand who was at risk and what the right strategy ought to be. This might be a good place to kind of compare influenza, the flu and COVID in the context of the discussion we just had, which is how deadly is COVID.
Starting point is 00:39:58 So you mentioned COVID is a very particular kind of steepness, more the x-axis is age. So in that context, could you maybe compare influenza and COVID? Because a lot of people outside of the folks who suggest that the lizards who run the world have completely fabricated the COVID, outside of those folks, kind of the natural process by which you dismiss the threat of COVID and say, what's just like the flu, the flu is a very serious thing actually. So in that comparison, where does COVID stand? Yeah, the flu is a very serious thing. It kills, you know, 50, 60,000 people a year, something I found out, or depending on the particular strain that goes around that's in the United States.
Starting point is 00:40:47 The primary difference to me are the, there's lots of differences, but one of the most salient differences is the age gradient and mortality risk for the flu. So the flu is more deadly for two children than COVID is. There's no controversy about that. Children, thank God, have much less severe reactions to COVID infection than due to flu infections. And rate of fatalities and stuff like that. Rate of mortality, all of that. I think you mentioned, I mean, it's interesting to maybe also come up on, I think in another conversation mentioned, there's a U shape
Starting point is 00:41:25 to the flu curve. So meaning like there's actually quite a large number of kids that die from flu. Yeah. I mean, the 1918 flu, the H1N1 flu, the Spanish flu in the US killed millions of younger people. And that is not the case with COVID. More than, I'm going to get the number wrong, but something like 70, 80% of the deaths are people over the age of 60. Well, we've talked about the fear the whole time really. But my interaction with folks, now I want to have a family, I want to have kids, but I don't have
Starting point is 00:42:05 that real first-hand experience, but my interaction with folks is at the core of fear that folks had is for their children. That somehow, you know, I don't want to get infected because of the kids, like, because God forbid something happens to the kids. And I think that obviously that makes a lot of sense, this kind of, the kids come first no matter what, that's the more in priority. But for this particular virus, that reasoning was not grounded in data. It seems like, or that emotion and feeling. It was not grounded.
Starting point is 00:42:43 It was. At the same time, this is way more deadly than the flu, just overall, and especially older people. Yes. Right? So the numbers, when the story is all said and done, COVID would take many more lives. Yeah. So I mean, point two, it sounds like a small number, but it's not a small number.
Starting point is 00:43:03 What do you think that number will be by the, you know, that's not like me, but would we cross, I think it's in the United States, it's the way the deaths of currently reports, like 800,000 something like that, do you think we'll cross a million? Seems likely. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:43:21 Do you think it's something that might continue with different variants? What, well, I think, so we can talk about the end state of COVID, the end state of COVID is it's something that might continue with different variants? Well, I think so we can talk about the end state of COVID, the end state of COVID is it's here forever. I think that there is good evidence of immunity after infection such that you're protected both against reinfection and also against severe disease upon reinfection. So the second time you get it, it's not for everyone, but for many people, the second time
Starting point is 00:43:49 you get it will be milder, much milder than the first time you get it. With the long tail, like that lasts for a long time. Yeah. So just their studies that follow a course of people who are infected for a year. And the reinfection rate is something like somewhere between 0.3 and 1%. And like a pretty fantastic study out Italy's found that. There's one in Sweden I think. There's a few studies that found the similar things. And the reinfections tend to produce much milder disease, much less likely to end up in the hospital, much less likely to die. So the end state state of COVID is, it's circulating in the population forever and you get it multiple times.
Starting point is 00:44:32 And then there's I think studies and discussions like the best protection would be to get it and then also to get vaccinated. And then a lot of people push back against that for the obvious reasons from both sides because somehow this Discourse has become less scientific and more political. Well, I think you want to like the first time you meet it It's gonna be the most deadly for you And so the first time you meet it. It's just wise to be vaccinated the vaccine reduces severe disease Yeah, well, we'll talk about the vaccine because I want to make sure I address it carefully and properly in full context. But yes, sort of to add to the context, a lot of the fascinating discussions we're having is the early days of COVID and now for people who are unvaccinated.
Starting point is 00:45:21 That's where the interesting story is. The policy story, the social geological story and so on. But let me go to something really fascinating, just because of the people involved, the human beings involved, and because of how deep like care about science and also kindness, respect, and love and human things. Francis Collins wrote a letter in October 2020 To Anthony Fauci anything somebody else I have
Starting point is 00:45:53 The letter was not a letter email I apologize high-tony and cliff C G.B. Declaration dot org This proposal this is the great barrington declaration that Eurico author on. This proposal from the three fringe epidemiologists who met with the secretary seem to be getting a lot of attention and even a co-signature from Nobel Prize winner Mike Levitt-Stanford.
Starting point is 00:46:22 There needs to be a quick and devastating, published take-down of its premises. I don't see anything like that online yet. Is it underway? Question Mark Francis. Francis Collins, Director of the NIH. Somebody I talked to on this podcast recently. Okay. A million questions I want to ask, but first, how did that make you feel when you first saw this email come to light, which when did it come to light? This week actually, I think, or last week. Okay. So this is because of freedom of information, which by the way sort of Maybe because I do want to add positive stuff on the side of Francis here
Starting point is 00:47:10 Boy when I see stuff like that. I wonder if all my emails leaked How much embarrassing stuff like I think I'm a good person, but I don't I haven't read my old emails. Maybe I'm pretty sure sometimes later I could be an asshole. Well, I mean, look, he's a Christian, and I'm a Christian I'm supposed to forgive, right? I mean, I think he was looking at this a great-bearing declaration as a political problem to be solved as opposed to a serious alternative approach to the epidemic.
Starting point is 00:47:44 So maybe we'll talk about it in more, but just for in case people are not familiar great bearing the declaration was was was the document that you co authored that basically argues against this idea of lockdown as a solution to COVID and you propose another solution that we'll talk about. But the point is it's not that dramatic of a document. It is just a document that criticizes one policy solution. But it was the policy solution that had been put forward by Dr. Collins and by Tony Fauci and a few other, few other scientists. I mean, I think a relatively small number of scientists and epidemiologists in charge of the advice given to governments worldwide. And it was a challenge to that policy
Starting point is 00:48:34 that said that look, there, there is an alternate path that the path we chose in this path of lockdown with an aim to suppress the virus to zero effectively. I mean, that was unstated. with an aim to suppress the virus to zero effectively, I mean, that was unstated. It cannot work and is causing catastrophic harm to large numbers of poor, and vulnerable people worldwide. We put this out in October 4th, I think, of 2020, and it went viral.
Starting point is 00:49:00 I mean, I've never actually been involved with anything like this, where I just put the document on the web and tens of thousands of doctors signed on hundreds of thousands of regular people signed on it It really struck a court of people because I think even by October of 2020 people had this sense that there was something really wrong with the COVID policy that we've been following and they were looking for COVID policy that we've been following. And they were looking for reasonable people
Starting point is 00:49:26 to give an alternative. I mean, we're not arguing that COVID doesn't, isn't a serious thing. I mean, it is a very serious thing. This is why we had a policy that aimed at addressing it. But we were saying that the policy we're following is not the right one. So how does a democratic government deal with that challenge?
Starting point is 00:49:47 So to me, that yes, me how I felt, I was actually frankly just, I was, I suspected there had been some emails, exchanges like that, not necessarily from Francis Collins, around the government, around this time. I mean, I felt the full brunt of a propaganda campaign, almost immediately after we published it, where newspapers mischaracterized it in all in the same way over and over and over again. And sought to characterize me as sort of a marginal fringe figure or whatnot, and Sunetro Gupta, Martin Kool-Dorf, or the tens of thousands of other people that signed it. I felt the brunt of that all year long. So to see this in black and white, with the handwriting essentially, the metaphorical
Starting point is 00:50:34 handwriting of Francis Collins was actually frankly disappointment because I've looked up to him for years. Yeah, I've looked up to him as well. I mean, I look for the the best in people and I still look up to him. What troubles me several things. The reason I said about the the asshole emails I send late at night is I can understand this email. It's fear, it's panic, not being sure. The fringe, three fringe epidemiologists. Plus Michael Evert who want to know about price. But using fringe, maybe in my private thoughts, I have said things like that about others,
Starting point is 00:51:22 like a little bit too unkind. Like you don't really mean it. Now add to that, he recently this week, whatever, double down on the fringe. This is really troubling to me. That, like I can't excuse this email, but this, the arrogance there. That, Francis, honestly, I mean, broke my heart a little bit there. This was an opportunity to like, especially at this stage, to say, just like I told him,
Starting point is 00:51:55 to say I was wrong to use those words in that email. I was wrong to not be open to ideas. I still believe that this is not like say like actually argue with the with the with the policy of the pros solution. Also, the devastating published take devastating take down devastating take down. As you say, somebody who's sitting on billions of dollars that they're giving to scientists, some of whom are often not their best human beings because they're fighting with each other over money, not being cognizant of the fact that you're challenging the integrity. You're corrupting the integrity of scientists by allocating the money.
Starting point is 00:52:45 You're now playing with that by saying devastating takedown. Where do you think the published takedown will come from? It will come from those scientists to whom you're giving money. What kind of example would they give to the academic community that thrives on freedom. Like this, this is, I believe Francis Collins is a great man. One of the things I was troubled by is the negative response to him from people that don't understand the positive impact that NIH has had on society.
Starting point is 00:53:18 How many people has helped? But this is exactly the, so he's not just a scientist. He's not just a bureaucrat who distributes money He's also scientific leader that in a time in difficult times we live in is supposed to inspire us We trust with love with the freedom of thought He's supposed to you know those fringe epidemiologists, those are the heroes of science. When you look at the long arc of history, we love those people.
Starting point is 00:53:50 I mean, love ideas, even when they get proven wrong. That's what always attracted me to science. Like, somebody, there's a lot, the lone voice saying, oh no, the moon of Jupiter does move. Yeah. I mean, you know,
Starting point is 00:54:03 but the funny thing is, you thing is Galileo was saying something truly revolutionary. We were saying that what we proposed in Great Branch in Declaration was actually just the old pandemic plan. It wasn't anything really fundamentally novel. In fact, there were plans like this that lockdown scientists had written in late February, early March of 2020. So we were not saying anything radical. We were just calling for a debate effectively over the existing lockdown policy.
Starting point is 00:54:35 And this is a disappointment, a really truly a big disappointment because by doing this, you were absolutely right, like he sent a signal to so many other scientists to just stay silent, even if you had reservations. Yeah. Devastating takedown, the people, you know how many people wrote to me privately, like Stanford MIT, how amazing the conversation with Francis Collins was, there's a kind of admiration because okay how do I put it? A lot of people get into science because they want to help the world. They get excited by the ideas
Starting point is 00:55:16 and they really are working hard to help in whatever the discipline is. And then there are sources of funding, which help you do help at a larger scale. So you admire those, the people that are distributing the money because they're often at least on the surface are really also good people. Oftentimes they're great scientists. So like it's amazing. That's why I'm sort of, like sometimes people from outside think academia has broken some kind of, no, it's a beautiful thing. It's really a beautiful thing. And that's why it's so deeply heartbreaking where this person is, I don't think this is malevolence.
Starting point is 00:56:00 I think he's just incompetence of communication. Well, twice. I think there's also arroganceence of communication. Well, twice. I think there's also arrogance at the bottom of it too. But you know, you have arrogance. Yeah, it's a particular kind of arrogance, right? So here, it's of the same kind of arrogance that you see when Tony Fauci gets on TV and says that if you criticize me, you're not simply criticizing a man, you're criticizing science itself.
Starting point is 00:56:24 Right. That is at the heart also of this email. you criticize me, you're not simply criticizing a man, you're criticizing science itself, right? That is at the heart also of this email. The certainty that the policies that they were recommending, Collins and Fauci were recommending to the President of the United States were right, not just right, but right so far right that any challenge whatsoever to it is dangerous. And I think that that is really the heart of that email. It's this idea that my position is unchallengeable. Now to be to be to be completely to be as charitable as I can be to this, you know, I believe they thought that. I believe they some of them still think that that there was only one true policy possible
Starting point is 00:57:06 in response to COVID. Every other policy was immoral. And if you come from that position, then you write an email like that. You go on TV, you say effectively, La Sion, Sémuah, right? I mean, that is what happens when you have this sort of unchallengible arrogance
Starting point is 00:57:22 that the policy of falling is correct. I mean, when we wrote the Great Painted Declaration, what I was hoping for was a discussion about how to protect the vulnerable. I mean, that was the key idea to me and the whole thing, was better protection of the older population, who really seriously risked if infected with COVID. And we had been doing a very poor job, I thought,
Starting point is 00:57:43 to date in many places in protecting the vulnerable. And what I wanted was a discussion by local public health about better methods, better policies to protect the vulnerable. So when I was, what we were met with instead a series of essentially propagandist lies about it. So they, so for instance, I kept hearing from reporters in those days, why do you want to let the virus rip? Let it rip, let it rip. The words let it rip does not appear in the Great Barrington Declaration. The goal isn't to let the virus rip. The goal is to protect the vulnerable. Let society go as, you know, open schools and
Starting point is 00:58:24 do other things that it functions best to can in the midst of a terrible pandemic, yes, but not let the virus rip, where the most vulnerable on protected, the goal was to protect the vulnerable. So why let it rip? Because it was a propaganda term to hit the fear centers of people's brains. Oh, these people are immoral. They just want the let the virus go through society and hurt everybody. That was the idea. It was a way to preclude a discussion and preclude a debate about the existing policy.
Starting point is 00:58:54 So this is an app called Clubhouse. I've gone back on it recently to practice Russian unrelated for a few big Russian conversations coming up. Anyway, it's a great way to talk to regular people in Russian. But I also, I was nervous, I was preparing for a Pfizer-CIO conversation and there was a vaccine room. So I joined it. And there's a pro-science room.
Starting point is 00:59:23 These are scientists that were calling each other pro science It the whole thing was like theater to me. I mean, I haven't thoroughly researched but looking at the resume. They were like pretty solid researchers and doctors And they were mocking everybody Who was at all? I mean it doesn't matter what they stood for, but they were just mocking people. And the arrogance was overwhelming.
Starting point is 00:59:50 I had to shut off because I couldn't handle the human beings can be like this to each other. And then I went back to just a double check. Is this really happened? How many people are here? Is this theater? And then I asked the government stage on clubhouse to make a couple of comments.
Starting point is 01:00:07 And then as I open my mouth, I say thank you so much. This is a great room, sort of the usual civil politeness, all that kind of stuff. And I said, I'm worried that the kind of arrogance with which things are being discussed here will further divide us not United us and and before I said even the United's further divide us. I was thrown off stage now This isn't where I mentioned platform, but like I am like Lex Friedman MIT also
Starting point is 01:00:44 Which is something those people seem to sometimes care about, followers and stuff like that. Like, did you just do that? And then they said, enough of that nonsense. Enough of that nonsense. They said to me, enough of that nonsense. Somebody who is obviously interviewed Francis Collins is the Pfizer CEO to bring you on the French epidemiologist also. Yeah, exactly. But this broke my heart, the arrogance. And this is echoes of that arrogance is something you see in the email. And I really would love to have a million things to talk about to try to figure out how can we find a path forward? I think a lot of the problems we've seen in the discussion over COVID, especially in the scientific community, there's two ways to look at science, I think, that have been competing with each other for a while now. One way, and this is the way that I view science and why I've always found it so attractive,
Starting point is 01:01:45 is an invitation to a structured discussion where the discussion is tempered by evidence, by data, by reasoning and logic. So it's a dialectical process where if I believe A and you believe B, well, we talk about it, we come up with an experiment that distinguishes between the two and, well, you know, B turns out to be right. I'm all frustrated by a value dinner. And I say, I don't know, no, no, see.
Starting point is 01:02:13 And then we go on from there, right? That's what science is at its best. It's this process of using data in discussion. It's a human activity, right? To learn, to have the truth unfold itself before us. On the other hand, there's another way that people have used science or thought about science as a truth in and of itself, right? This, like, if it's science, therefore it's true automatically.
Starting point is 01:02:41 And there, you know, what does the science say to do? Well, the science never says to do anything. The science says, here's what's true. And then we have to apply our human values to say, okay, well, if we do this, well, then this is likely to happen. That's what the science says. If we do that, then that is likely to happen. Well, we'd rather have this than that, right? And, but it doesn't, does science doesn't tell us that we'd rather have this than that. Is our human values that tell us that we'd rather have this than that? Science plays a, but it doesn't, does science doesn't tell us that we'd rather have this than that, is our human values that tell us that we'd rather have this than that. Science plays a role, but it's not the only thing.
Starting point is 01:03:10 It's not the only role. It's like, it helps to understand the constraints we face, but it doesn't tell us what to do in face of those constraints. But underneath it, at the individual level, at the institution level, it seems like arrogance is really destructive. So the flip side of that, the productive thing is humility. So sort of always not being sure that you're right. This is actually kind of Stuart Russell talks about this for AI research. How do you make sure that AI, super intelligent AI doesn't destroy us?
Starting point is 01:03:45 You built in a sort of module within it that it always doubts its actions. Like it's not sure. Like I know it says I'm supposed to destroy all humans, but maybe I'm wrong. And that maybe I'm wrong is essential for progress, for actually doing in the long arc of history, better, not the perfect thing,
Starting point is 01:04:06 but better and better and better and better. I mean, the question I have here for you is, this email so clearly captures some, maybe echo, but maybe a core to the problem. Do you put responsibility of this email, of the shortcomings and failures on individuals or institutions. Is this a skull sentence? No, this is an institutional failure, right?
Starting point is 01:04:29 So the NIH, so I've had two decades of NIH funding, I've sat on NIH review panels. The purpose of the NIH is what you said earlier, Lex. The purpose of the NIH is to support the work of scientists. To some extent, it's also to help scientists, to direct scientists to work on things that are very important for public health, or for the health of the public. So, and the way you do that is you say, okay, we're going to put, you know, $50 million on the research in Alzheimer's disease this year,
Starting point is 01:04:59 or $70 million on HIV or whatever it is, right? And that part of money, then scientists compete with each other for the best ideas to use it to address that problem. So it's essentially an endeavor to support the work of scientists. It is not in and of itself a policy organ. It doesn't say what public health policy should be. For that you have the CDC. And what happened during the pandemic is that people in the NIH were called upon to contribute to public
Starting point is 01:05:37 health policy making. And that created the conflict of interest you see in that email. Right? So now you have the head of the NIH in effect saying to all scientists, you must agree with me in the policies that I've recommended or else you're a French. That is a deep conflict of interest. It's deep because first he's conflicted. He has this dual role as as the head of the NIH supporter of scientific funding and then also inappropriately called to set or help set pandemic policy. That should never have happened. There should be a bright line between those two roles. Let me ask you about just Francis Collins. I don't know if you at a chance to talk to him on a podcast. I don't know if you
Starting point is 01:06:24 maybe by chance got in chance to hear a few words of it. Well, I have a kind of a question to that because a lot of people wrote to me quite negative things about Francis Collins. And like I said, I still believe he's a great man and a great scientist. One of the things when I talked to him off mic about the vaccine, the excitement he had about when we were recollecting when they first got an inkling that it's actually going to be possible to get a vaccine. Just he wasn't messaging just in the private or of our own conversation. He was really excited. And why was he excited? Because he gets to help a lot of people. This is a man that really wants to help people. And there could be some institutional, self
Starting point is 01:07:17 delusion, the arrogance, all those kinds of things that lead to this kind of email. But ultimately, the goal is, this is what I don't think people quite realize this. The reason you call your friend Japanese meologist, the reason there needs to be a devastating published takedown, he I believe really believes that this could be very dangerous. And it's a lot of burden to carry on the shoulders, because like you said, in his role where he defines some of the public policy, like, you know, depending on how he thinks about the world, millions of people could die
Starting point is 01:07:54 because of one decision he make. Yeah. And that's a lot of burden to walk with. Yeah, no, I think that's right. I don't think that he has bad intentions. I think that he was basically put, it I think that he was put himself in a position where this kind of conflict of interest was going to create this kind of reaction. The kind of humility that you're calling for is almost impossible when you have that dual role.
Starting point is 01:08:22 That shouldn't have as funder of science and also set a scientific policy. I agree with everything you just said except the last part. The humility is almost impossible. The humility is always difficult. I think there's a huge incentive to for humility in that position. Now look at history.
Starting point is 01:08:43 Great leaders that have humility are popular as hell. So if you like being popular, if you like having impact, legacy, these descendants of vapes seem to care about legacy, especially as they get older in these high positions. Like I think the incentive for humility is pretty high. I mean, the thing is, there's a lot that he has to be proud of in his career.
Starting point is 01:09:06 I mean, the human genome project wouldn't have happened without him. And he is a great man and a great scientist. So it is tragic to me that his career is ended in this particular way. You ask you a question about my podcast conversation with him. By way of advice advice or maybe criticism. There's a lot of people that wrote to me kind words of support and a lot of people that wrote to me a respectful constructive criticism. How would you suggest to have conversations with folks like that?
Starting point is 01:09:42 And maybe, I mean, because I have other conversations like this, including I was debating whether to talk to Anthony Fauci. He wanted to talk. And so what kind of conversation do you have? I'm sorry to take a son of a tangent, but almost from an interview perspective of how to inspire humility and inspire trust in science or maybe give hope that we know what the heck we're doing
Starting point is 01:10:09 and we're gonna figure this out. I mean, I think you're, I've been now interviewed by many people. I think the style you have really works well, Lex, you have to, because I don't think you're gonna be ever an attack dog trying to go after somebody and force them to submit that they were wrong or whatever about. I mean, I also actually find that form of journalism and podcasting really off-putting is hard
Starting point is 01:10:35 to watch. Also, it's a whole lot of the tangent. Is that actually effective? I don't think so. Do you want to ask, Hitler, and I think about this a lot, actually interviewing Hitler. I've been studying a lot about the rise in the fall of the Third Reich. I think about interviewing Stalin.
Starting point is 01:10:51 Like I put myself in that mindset, like how do you have conversations with people to understand who they are, so that not so you can sit there and yell at them. Yeah. But to understand who they are, so that you can inspire a very large number of people to be the best version of themselves.
Starting point is 01:11:08 So they have to avoid the mistakes of the past. I believe that everyone that's involved in this debate has good intentions. They're coming at it from their points of view. They have their weaknesses. And if you can paint a picture in your questioning, by sympathetic questioning of those strengths and weaknesses and their point of view, you've done a service.
Starting point is 01:11:31 And that's really all you, I personally like to see in those kinds of interviews. I don't think a gotcha moment is really the key thing there. The key thing is understanding where they're coming from, understanding their thinking, understanding the constraints they faced, and how do they manage them. That's going to provide a much, I mean, for me, that's what I look for when I listen to podcasts like yours, is an understanding of that person and the moment and how they dealt with it. I mean, I guess the hope is to discover in a sympathetic way a flaw and a person's
Starting point is 01:12:06 thinking together. Like, is it supposed to discover in the positive thing together, you discover the thing? Well, I didn't really think about that. Yeah, I mean, that's how science is, right? That's why we find it, I think, find it so attractive. Is this, I like it when a student shows me I'm thinking incorrectly. I'm really grateful to that student because now I have an opportunity to change my mind about it and start thinking even more correctly. I mean, that's, and there are moments when, I mean, like this is probably
Starting point is 01:12:38 a good time to say, like what I think I got wrong during the pandemic, right? So like, for instance, you said Francis Collins had a moment when he learned that there was quite possible to get a vaccine going. Yeah. He must have learned that quite early. And I didn't learn that early. I mean, I didn't know, in March of 2020, in my experience with vaccine development,
Starting point is 01:13:02 it would have taken, I thought it would take a decade or more to get a vaccine. That was wrong, right? I didn't, and I was so happy when I started to see the preliminary numbers in the Pfizer trial that strongly suggested it was going to work. Yeah, and I was, I mean, like very very few times my life is so happy to be wrong And it changes kind of I think I've heard you mentioned that a lockdown is still a bad idea Unless the vaccine comes out in like tomorrow there's still like Suffering and economic pain all kinds of pain can still happen and even just a scale of weeks kinds of pain can still happen in even just a scale of weeks versus months. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:13:48 Well, let's talk about the vaccine. What are your thoughts on the safety and efficacy of COVID vaccines at the individual and the societal level? Okay. So for the vaccine safety data, it's actually challenging to convey to the public how this is normally done. Like normally you would do this in the context of the trial. You'd have a long trial with relatively large numbers of people. You'd follow them over a long time and the trial will give you some indication of the
Starting point is 01:14:17 safety of the vaccine. And it did. I mean, but the trial, the way it was constructed when it came out that it was protective against COVID, it was no longer ethical to have a placebo arm. And so that placebo arm was vaccinated, what, large part of it. And so that meant that from the trial, you were not going to be able to get data
Starting point is 01:14:39 on the long-term safety profiles of the vaccine. And also the other thing about trials, although there's tens of thousands of people enrolled, that's still not enough to get when you deploy a vaccine at population scale, you're going to see things that weren't in the trial. Guaranteed. Populations to people that weren't represented well in the trial are going to give in the vaccine and then they're going to have things that happen to them that you didn't anticipate. So I wasn't surprised when people were a little bit skeptical when the trial was done about the safety profile, just the way the nature of the thing was going to make it so
Starting point is 01:15:15 that it was going to be hard to get a complete picture from the trials itself. And the trials showed they were pretty safe and quite effective at preventing both you from getting COVID. I think of the main endpoint of the trial itself was a symptomatic COVID. So that was, to me, about as an amazing achievement is anything, organized a trial of that scale and running it so quickly. And the final result being so, so, so, so, so good, right? Yeah. And so, the, but the problem then was normally it would take a long time, like FDA would tell Pfizer to go back and try it in this subgroup, they'd work more on dosing, they do all do all these kinds of things that kind of didn't, we really didn't have time for in the middle of the pandemic. So you have a basis for approval that it's less full than normally you would have for a population scale vaccine. But the results were good,
Starting point is 01:16:20 the results looked really good. And actually, I should say, for the most part, that's been born out when we've given the vaccine at scale in terms of protection against severe disease. So, people who have got the vaccine for a very long time after they've had the full vaccination have had great protection against being hospitalized and dying if they get COVID. Let's separate because this seems to be, there's critics of both categories, but different. Kids and kids and older people, like let's say five years old and above or something, or 13 years old and above. So, for those, it seems like the reduction of the rate of fatalities and serious illness
Starting point is 01:17:10 seems to be something like 10X. I mean, for older people, it is a godsend, this vaccine. It transforms the problem of focus protection from something that's quite challenging, possible, I believe, quite challenging, into something that's much, much more manageable. Because the vaccine in and of itself, when deployed in older populations, is a form of focus protection. Yes. Well, by the way, we'll talk about the focus protection in one segment,
Starting point is 01:17:38 because it's such a brilliant idea for this pandemic of a future pandemic. I thought the sociological, psychological discussion about the letter from Francis Collins is because it was so recent, it was been so troubling to me, so I'm glad we talked about that first. But so there seems to be the vaccines work to reduce deaths. And that has the especially the most transformative effects for the older. So let me give you I've told you one thing that I got wrong in the pandemic. Let me tell you the second thing I got wrong for sure in the pandemic. In January of last of this year, 2021, I thought that the vaccines would stop infection. Yes, right. It would make it so that you were much less likely to be infected at all because the antibodies
Starting point is 01:18:29 that were produced by the vaccines looked like they are neutralizing antibodies that would essentially block you from being infected at all. That turned out to be wrong. Right? So I think it became clear as data came out from Israel, which vaccinated very early, that they were seeing surges of infection, even in a very highly vaccinated population, that the vaccine does not stop infection. So your use car salesman and your selling the vaccine and the features you thought of
Starting point is 01:19:02 vaccine would have, I mean, I have a similar kind of sense when the vaccine came out. Vaccine would reduce, if you somehow were able to get it, you would reduce rate of death and all those kinds of things, but you would also reduce the chance of you getting it, and if you do get it, the chance of you transmitting to somebody else. And it turns out that those latter two things are not as definitive or in fact, I mean, I don't know to what you agree they're not at all.
Starting point is 01:19:32 I think it's a little complicated because I think the first two or three months after your fully vaccinate, after the second dose, you have 60, 70% efficacy peak against infection. Yeah. So that, which is pretty good, right? But by six, seven, eight months, that drops to 20% some places, some studies like there's a study out of Sweden suggested might even drop to zero. But and then you're also infectious for some period of time. If you do get it, even though you're vaccinated, correct, although there seems to be lucidated that the period of time your infectious is shorter.
Starting point is 01:20:06 It's shorter, but the productivity per day is about as high. So you're still at the point is that the vaccine might reduce some risk of infecting others, but it's not a categorical difference. So an unvaccinated, it's not safe to be in the presence of just vaccinated people. You can still get infected. Right. So, I mean, there's a million things I want to ask here, but is there in some sense because the vaccine really helps on the worst part of this pandemic, which is killing people,
Starting point is 01:20:42 yes. part of this pandemic, which is killing people. Yes. Doesn't that mean where does the vaccine hesitancy come from? In terms of it seems like obviously a vaccine is a powerful solution to let us open this thing up. Yeah, so I wrote a Wall Street Journal op-ed with Sinatra Gupta in December of last year. Yes. A very naive, with a very naive title, which, we can end the lockdowns in a month. The idea was very simple. Vaccinate all vulnerable people. And then open up. And the idea was that the lockdown harms, this is directly
Starting point is 01:21:20 related to the Great B Anti-Neclaration. The Great B Anti-Neclaration said the lockdown harms are devastating to the population at large. There's this considerable segment of people that are vulnerable, protect them. Well, with the vaccine, we have a perfect tool to protect the vulnerable, which is, I still believe, I mean, is true, right? You vaccinate the vulnerable, the older population, and as you said, it is a tenfold decrease
Starting point is 01:21:43 in the mortality risk from getting infected, which is amazing. So that was a strategy we outlined. What happened is that the vaccine debate got transformed. So you're asking about vaccine hasn't I think there's first there's like there's the inherent limitations of how to measure vaccine safety, right? So we talked about a little bit about the trial, but also after the trial, there's a mechanism, and this work I've been involved with before COVID, on tracking and identifying and checking whether the vaccines actually are safe. And the central challenge is one of causality. So you no longer have the randomized trial. But you want to know, is the vaccine when it's deployed at scale causing adverse events? Well, you can't just look at people who are vaccinated and see what adverse events happen, because you don't know what would have
Starting point is 01:22:37 happened if the person had not been vaccinated. So you have to have some control group. Now, what happened is there's several systems to do to check this in that the CDC uses. One very, very, very commonly known one now is called VAERS, the vaccine adverse event reporting system. There, anyone who has an adverse event that either regular person or doctor can just go report, look, I have the vaccine and two days later I at a headache or whatever it is. The person died a day after that, the vaccine, right? Now, the vaccine was rolled out to older people first
Starting point is 01:23:13 and older people die sometimes, with or without the vaccine. So sometimes you'll see someone's vaccinated in a few days later, they die. Did the vaccine cause it or something else? Cause it's really difficult to tell. In order to tell, you need a control group. To for that, there are other systems, the FDA and CDC have, like there's one called VSD, vaccine safety data link. There's another system called BEST.
Starting point is 01:23:39 I forget the acronym is to essentially to track cohorts to people vaccinated versus unvaccinated with this careful and matching as you can do. It's not randomized and see if you have safety signals that pop up in the vaccinated relative to the control group unvaccinated. And so that's for instance how the myocarditis risk was picked up in young, especially young men. So also how the higher risk of blood clots in middle age and older women with the J&J vaccine was picked up. There what you have is our situations where the baseline risk of these outcomes are so low that if you see them in the
Starting point is 01:24:26 vaccinated arm at all, then it's not hard to understand that the vaccine did this, right? Young men should not be having Lyricitis. Middle-aged women should not be having huge blood clots in the brain, right? So when you see that, you can say it's linked. Now, the rates are low, so young men maybe one in 10,000 of the vaccine related to myocarditis, paracarditis, young women, middle age women, I don't know, I'm not sure what the right number might be, but like I'd say it's like in the one in hundreds of thousands, something like that. So these are rare outcomes, but they are vaccine linked outcomes.
Starting point is 01:25:05 How do you deal with that as a messaging thing? I think you just tell people. You tell people here are the risks. You're transparent and we tell them. They're not getting into something that they don't know. And don't treat people like their children and need to be told lies because they won't understand the full complexity of the truth. People I think are pretty good at, or actually, you know, people with time are good at understanding
Starting point is 01:25:33 data, but better than anything, they're, they're, they're better at, they're extremely good at detecting arrogance and bullshit. Yeah, I mean, either one of those. I mean, I'll give you one that's where I think it's greatly under mind vaccine has. Great, greatly under mind the demand for the vaccine is this weird denial that if you recover from COVID, you have extremely good immunity, both against infection and access to the exchange.
Starting point is 01:26:01 And that denial leads to people distrusting the message given by like the CDC director, for instance, is very of the vaccine. Why would you deny a thing that's such an obvious fact? Like you can look at the data and it just just pops out at you that people that are covered are not getting infected again at very high rates, much lower rates. After these kinds of conversations, I'm sure after this very conversation, I often get a number of messages from Joe, Joe Rogan, and from Sam Harris, who to me are people I admire, I think, of really intelligent, thoughtful human beings. They also have a platform, and I believe, at least in my mind about this
Starting point is 01:26:46 COVID set of topics, they represent a group of people. Each group has smart, thoughtful, well-intentioned human beings. And I don't know who is right, but I do know that they're kind of tribal a little bit of those groups. And so the question I want to ask is like, what do you think about these two groups? And this kind of tension over the vaccine, that sometimes it just keeps finding different topics on which to focus on like whether a kid should get vaccinated or not, whether there should be vaccine mandates or not, which seem to be often very kind of specific policy kinds of questions, that is the bigger picture.
Starting point is 01:27:40 I think it's a symptom of the distrust that people have in public health. I think this kind of schism over the vaccine does not happen in places where the public health authorities have been much more trustworthy. So you don't see this vaccine hasn't seen Sweden, for instance. What's happened in the United States is the vaccine has become first because of politics, but then also because of the scientific arrogance, this sort of touchstone issue, and people line up on both sides of it,
Starting point is 01:28:11 and the different language you're hearing is structured around that. So before the election, for instance, I did a testimony in the house on measurement of vaccine safety, and I was invited by the Republicans. There were, I think, four other experts invited by the Democrats, or three other experts invited
Starting point is 01:28:30 by Democrats, each of whom had a lot of experience in measuring vaccine safety. I was really surprised to hear them each doubt whether the FDA would do a reasonable job in assessing vaccine safety, including by people with who have at long records of working with the FDA. I mean, these are professionals, great scientists, whose main sort of goal in life is to make sure
Starting point is 01:28:54 that unsafe vaccines don't get released into the world. And if they are, they get pulled. And they're casting down on the vaccine, the ability to track vaccine safety before the election. And then after the election, the redder switched on a dime, right, all of a sudden it's Republicans that are cast as if they're vaccine and hesitant. That kind of political shift, the public notices.
Starting point is 01:29:22 If all it takes is an election to change how people talk about the safety of the vaccine Well, we're not talking science anymore many people think right? I think that creates created its hesitancy The other thing I think the the the hesitancy Some politicians viewed it as a political as sort of like a political opportunity to sort of like a political opportunity to sort of demonize people who are hesitant. And that itself fuel hesitancy, right? Like if you're telling me I'm a rube that just doesn't want the vaccine
Starting point is 01:29:54 because I want everyone to die, well, I'm gonna react really negatively. And if you're talking down to me about my legitimate, you know, my legitimate concerns about whether this vaccine is safe to tell, I've heard from women who are thinking about getting pregnant, should I take the vaccine, I don't know. I mean, there are all kinds of questions, legitimate questions that I think should have good data to answer, that we don't necessarily have good data to answer.
Starting point is 01:30:22 So what do you do in the face of that? Well, one reaction is to pretend like we know for a fact that it's safe when we don't have the data to know for a fact in that particular group with that particular set of clinical circumstances you know. And that I think breeds hesitancy. People can detect that bullshit. Whereas if you just tell people, you know, I don't know. Yeah, leave with humility. Yeah, you've got to, you will end up with a better result. Let me ask you about a recent conversation with the Pfizer CEO. This is part therapy session, part advice, because again, I really want us to get through this together and it feels like the division is a thing that prevents us from getting through this together.
Starting point is 01:31:09 And once again, just like with Francis Collins, a lot of people wrote to me awards of support, and a lot of people wrote to me words of criticism. I'm trying to understand the nature of the criticism. So some of the criticism had to do with against the vaccine and those kinds of things. That I have a better understanding of. But some kind of deep distrust of Pfizer. So actually looking at big pharma broadly, I'm trying to understand, am I so naive that I just don't see it? Because yes, there's corrupt people and they're greedy, their flawed, in all walks of life. But companies do quite an incredible job of taking a good idea at the scale and making some money with that idea. But they are the ones that achieve scale on a good idea. I don't know, it's not obvious to me, I don't see where the
Starting point is 01:32:22 manipulation is. So the fear that people have, and I talked to Joe about this quite a bit, I think this is a legitimate fear, and a fear you should often have, that money has influence, this proportional influence, especially in politics. So the fear is that the policy of the vaccine was connected to the fact that lots of money could be made by manufacturing the vaccine. And I understand that. And it's actually quite a heck of a difficult task to alleviate that concern. Like you really have to be a great man or woman or leader to convince people that you're not foolish yet, that you're not just playing a game on them.
Starting point is 01:33:07 I don't know. It's a difficult task, but at the same time, I really don't like the natural distrust every billionaire, distrust everybody who's trying to make money because it feels like under a capitalistic system, at least the way to to do a lot of good at scale in the world is by being at least in part motivated by profit. I mean, I share your ambivalence, right? So on the one hand, you have a fantastic achievement, the manufacturing, the discovery of the vaccine, and then the manufacturing at at scale so that billions of people can take
Starting point is 01:33:46 the vaccine in a relatively short time. That is a remarkable achievement that could not have happened without companies like Pfizer. On the other hand, there is this corrupting influence of that money. Just to give you one example, there's a there's an enormous controversy over whether relatively inexpensive repurposed drugs can be used to treat the the disease. None of no company like Pfizer has any interest whatsoever in evaluating it. Even Merck, I think it's point it was Merck, that had the patent on Ivermectin now expired, has no interest at all in checking to see if it works. Not only do they not have interest, they have a way of talking about people who might have a little bit of interest that's again, a full of arrogance.
Starting point is 01:34:45 And that is what troubles me. Is there not a, it's back to the play of science. It's not, they're not a bit of curiosity. One, okay, one, the natural curiosity of a human being that should always be there. And an open mind is, and second, in the case of Ivermectin and other things like that, you have to acknowledge that there's a very large number of people who care about this topic, and this is a way to inspire them to also play in the space of science, to inspire them with science. You can't just like dismiss everybody that you can't just dismiss people, period.
Starting point is 01:35:20 Yeah. Well, I mean, I think here here take Ivermectin right there's actually a study funded by the NIH by 25GNIAID and the NIH called active 6 that's a randomized trial of Ivermectin It's due to be completed in March 2023 So normally when you have So normally when you have private actors like these big drug companies that have no interest in conducting some kind of scientific experiment, there would have some public benefit. It's the job of the government, and in this case the NIH to fund that kind of work.
Starting point is 01:35:59 The NIH has been incredibly slow in its evaluations of these repurpose drugs. And it's been left to lots of other private activities of uneven quality. And hence, that's why you have these big fights. Because the data are not solid, you're going to have these big fights. But also, okay, forget the process of science here, the studies, not enough effort being put into the studies, just the way it's being communicated about. Yeah, no, like horse paste. I mean, come on. The FDA put a tweet out telling people who are like, they're taking an eye remection because they've heard good things about it and they're sick and they're desperate. And just call it horse paste was just that was that was terrible. That was deeply responsible. My hope is Growning in the fact that young people see the the bullshit of this young PhD students graduate students young students in college. They see
Starting point is 01:36:55 the Less than stellar way that our scientific leaders and our political leaders are behaving and then the new generation will not repeat the mistakes of the past. That is my hope because that's the cool thing I see about young people is they they're good at detecting bullshit and they they don't want to be part of that. That's my hope in this space of science. Let me return to this idea of the great-barrington declaration, return to the beginning. So what are the basics? Can you describe what the great-barrington declaration is? What are some of the ideas in it? You mentioned focus protection. What are your concerns about lockdowns? Just
Starting point is 01:37:39 paint the picture of just early proposal. Sure. So the great-barrington declaration, first why is it called great parenting declaration? It's such a great name. I mean, it's just an epic name, but the reason why it's called that is way less than epic. It was because the conference, which is organized by Martin Kooldorf, who was a professor at Harvard University by a statistician, He actually designed the safety system, the statistical system that FDA uses for tracking vaccine safety.
Starting point is 01:38:14 And I had met previously just the summer before that summer. And he invited me to come to this small conference where he was inviting me and Suneta Gukta, who is a professor of theoretical epidemiology at Harvard at Oxford University. And I jumped at the chance because I knew that Martin and Sunetra were both smarter than me and it would be fun to like talk about what the right strategy would be. On the drive in, I didn't know what the name of the town was, and I asked, they said, it was great, Burrington, and I had it in the back of my head. Martin and I arrived a little early, and we were writing an op-ed about some of the ideas I hope we'll get to
Starting point is 01:38:55 talk about very soon, about focus protection and the right strategy. And when Sunnettra arrived, we realized we actually come basically to the same place about the right way to deal with the epidemic. And I thought, well, why don't we put issue, why don't we write something like the port here in statement is what I had that back on my head. Yes. And then I'm like, well, what's the name of this town again? It was great barrington. Yeah. So it's not barrington. It's great. It's, which is fantastic. It's right.
Starting point is 01:39:24 It's so over the top that it's perfect. It's literally like the big bang. There's something about these over the top fun titles that just really deliver them. That's my main contribution. That's the name of the great barrington. But yeah, so it was kind of a, so the idea is actually Well, the title is great and I think that it was written in a very stylish way It's you know like it's a go it's less than a page you can go look online and read it It's written in written for not for scientists but for the general public so that people can understand the ideas really simply
Starting point is 01:40:01 But it is not actually a radical set of ideas. It actually represents the old pandemic plans that we've used for century dealing with other similar pandemics. And it's twofold. First, let me talk about the science that rests on and then I'll talk about the plan. The science actually, some of what we already talked about, there's this massive age gradient in the risk of COVID infection, older people face much higher risk than younger people. The second bit of science is all, that's not controversial, right?
Starting point is 01:40:33 Even if you think the IFR is 0.7 or 0.2 no matter what, everyone agrees on this age gradient. The second bit of science is also not controversial. The lockdown focus policies that we followed have absolutely devastating consequences on the health of the population. Let me just give you some examples. This was known in October of 2020 when we wrote it. The UN was sounding alarms that there would be tens of millions of people who would starve as a consequence of the economic dislocation caused by the lockdowns. And that's come to pass.
Starting point is 01:41:13 Hundreds of thousands of children in places like South Asia dead from starvation as a consequence of lockdowns. The priorities like the treatment of patients with tuberculosis in poor countries stopped because of lockdowns. Childhood vaccinations of measles, most rubella, dip, DPP, you know, diptheria, so on, pertussis, tetanus, all those standard vaccination campaigns stopped. Tens of millions of children skipping these doses for diseases that are actually deadly for them. Is there just on a small tangent? Is it well understood to you? What are the mechanisms that stop all those things because of lockdowns? Is it some aspect of supply chain? Is it just literally because
Starting point is 01:42:07 Hospital doors are closed? Is it because there's a Disincentive to go outside by people even when they deeply need help? It's all of the above But a lot of those efforts spent like especially those like vaccination efforts are funded and run by Western efforts like Gavi is a I think it's a Gates Funded thing actually, that provides vaccines for millions of kids worldwide. And those efforts were scaled back. Malaria prevention efforts. So in the developing world, it was a devastating effect,
Starting point is 01:42:41 these lockdowns. There was also direct effects, like in India, the lockdowns, when they first instituted, there was an order that 10 million migrant workers who live in big cities and they live hand to mouth, they buy coconuts, they sell the coconuts with the money, they buy food for themselves and coconuts for the next day to sell. Walk back to their villages or get, or go back to their villages or get, or get, or get,
Starting point is 01:43:05 go back to their villages the overnight. So 10 million people walking back to their villages or taking a train back, a thousand died on route, overcrowded trains dying essentially on the side of the road. I mean, it was, it was absolutely inhumane policy. And the lockdowns there, what, what, it's, it's, it's actually, it's kind of like what's happened in the West as well, but it was so severe. There was a zero prevalence study done in Mumbai by a friend of mine at the University of Chicago. What he found was that in the slums of Mumbai, there were 70% surre prevalence in July or August of 2020,
Starting point is 01:43:43 whereas in the rest of Mumbai was 20%. So it was incredibly unequal. The lockdowns protected the relatively well off and spread the disease among the poor. So that's in the developing world. In the developed world, the health effects of lockdowns were also quite bad. So we've talked already about isolation and depression. There was a study done in July of 2020 that found that one in four young adults seriously considered suicide.
Starting point is 01:44:18 Now suicide rates haven't spiked up so much, but the depths of despair that would lead somebody to, because seriously consider suicide itself should be a source of great concern in public health. Yeah, this is one of the troubling things about measuring well-being is we're okay at measuring death and suicide. We're not so good at measuring suffering. It's like people talk about maybe even hallet or hallet of more in the understallin or the concentration camps with Hitler. We talk about deaths but we don't talk about the suffering over periods of years by people living in fear, by people starving, psychological, trauma that lasts the lifetime, all of those things.
Starting point is 01:45:08 I mean, and just to get back to that point, we closed schools, especially in blue states, we closed schools. Now, richer parents could send their kids to private schools, many of which stayed open even in the blue states. They could get pod, they could get tutors, but that's not true for poorer and middle-class parents. And as a result, what we did is we took away life opportunities for kids. We tried to teach five-year-olds to read via Zoom in kindergarten, right?
Starting point is 01:45:37 And the consequence, actually, you think, okay, we can just make it up, but it's really difficult to make that up. There's a literature in health economics that shows that even relatively small disruptions in schooling can have lifelong consequences, negative consequences for kids. So they end up growing up poorer. They lead shorter lives and less healthy lives as a consequence. And that's what the literature now shows is likely to happen with the interruptions of schooling that we had in the United States.
Starting point is 01:46:11 Many European countries actually managed to avoid this. There were in the early days, the epidemic, great indications that children first were not very severely at risk from COVID itself. Nor are they super spreaders. Schools were not the source of community spread, community spread the disease to schools, not the other way around. And if we can talk about the scientific basis, that if you'd like, but that was pretty well known
Starting point is 01:46:36 even in October. We closed hospitals in order to keep them available to COVID patients. But as a result, women skipped breast cancer screening. And as a result, they have, are showing up with late stage breast cancer that should have been picked up last year. Men and women skipped colon cancer screening, again, with later stage disease that should have been picked up last year with earlier stage. For patients with diabetes, it's very important to have regular screening for blood
Starting point is 01:47:06 sugar levels and sort of counseling for lifestyle improvement. And we skipped that. People stayed home with heart attacks and died at home with heart attacks. So you have these like sort of wide range of medical and psychological harms that were being utterly ignored as a result of a lockdowns. Plus, there's the economic pain. So like you said, whatever is a good term for the non-laptop class, people would lose their jobs. Yes, there might be in the Western world support for them, financially, but the big loss there that is perhaps correlated with the depression and suicide is loss of meaning, loss of hope for the future, loss of kind of a sense of stability, all the pride you have in being able
Starting point is 01:47:59 to make money that allows you to pave your own way in the world. And yes, just having less money than you're used to so that your family, your kids are suffering, all those kinds of things. There's a, again, economics literature on this, on deaths of despair it was called. 2009, there was a great recession. It led to an enormous uptake in overdose from drugs, suicidality, depression, as a result of the job losses that happen during the great recession. Well, that's happening again, like an enormous increase in drug overdoses.
Starting point is 01:48:38 That's not an accident, that's a lockdown horn, right? Same thing with the job losses. The job loss, by the way, are like, it's so interesting because the states that state open have had much, much lower unemployment than the states that stayed closed. The labor force participation rates declined by 3%.
Starting point is 01:48:58 It's women that separated because they stayed home with their kids. We reversed a generation of women, improving women's participation in the labor force. Do you think it has to do with the institutions that we mentioned that there was so much priority given or so much power given to maybe NIH versus other civilian leaders or do people just not care about the economic
Starting point is 01:49:28 pain the leaders. I mean, because to me it was obvious. I'm probably is just studying history. Whenever I listen to people on Twitter, on mainstream news, or just anything. I realized that's the very kind of top. The people that have a voice represent a tiny selection of people. And so whenever there's hard times, I always kind of think about the quiet, the voiceless, the quiet suffering of the tens of millions, of the hundreds of millions.
Starting point is 01:50:07 Due to political leaders not just give a damn. I mean, I think it was actually a very odd ethical thing at the beginning of the pandemic, where if you brought up economic harms at all, you were seen as callous. Right, so I had a reporter call me up almost at the very beginning of the epidemic asking me about about about a very particular phenomenon. So like he was anticipating a rise in child abuse because children were going to be staying at home. Child abuse is generally picked up at school. And that actually happened. Like so like the child that reported child abuse dropped, but actual child abuse increased.
Starting point is 01:50:50 Because normally you pick up the child abuse at school and that you have the intervention, right? So yeah, so I started talking about like, well, there's going to be some economic harms, and they're going to have health consequences, but the economic harms matter. But the, but he he cancelled me, and I think he was he had his best interest in art. Like if you were to put that in the story, I would essentially be canceled. Because what the narrative that arose in March of 2020 is if you care about money at all, you're evil and crass, you must only care about lives. The problem with that narrative is that money, what we're talking about, is actually lives of poor people. When you throw 100 million
Starting point is 01:51:28 people around the world into poverty, you're going to see enormous harm to their health, enormous increases in their mortality. It is not immoral to think about that and worry about that in the context of this pandemic response. Our mind focused so much on COVID that it forgot that there are so many other public health priorities as well that need our attention desperately. And this is the thing I sense the ball San Francisco when I visited I was thinking of moving there for startup. This is the thing I'm really afraid of, especially if I have any effect on the world through a startup is losing
Starting point is 01:52:06 touch in this kind of way, that you mentioned the laptop class living in this world with your only concern about this particular class of people. And also, you know, perhaps early on in the pandemic amongst the laptop class, there was a legitimate concern for health. Like, you're not sure how deadly this virus is. You're not sure who to listen to, so there's a real concern. And then, at a certain point, when the data starts coming in, you start becoming more and more detached from the data. You don't start carrying less and less, and you start just swimming in the space of narratives,
Starting point is 01:52:45 like existing in the space of narratives, and you have this narrative in San Francisco, in the laptop class, that you're just a very proud that you know the truth. You're the sole possessors of the truth. You congratulate yourself on it. And you don't care what actually gigantic detrimental effect has on society, because you're mostly fine. I'm so terrified of that. Well, I think the antidote to that is just to remember.
Starting point is 01:53:14 You remember? Yeah. Yeah. I don't think, you remember where you came from, remember who you're doing this for. At the back of your head should always be, what's the purpose? Like, why am I here? What's the purpose of this? And if the purpose is simply self-aggrandizement, then you should rethink, because it's just end up being a hollow life. All of us will be forgotten in the end. Focus protection. The idea, the policy, what is focus protection. Right. So those I was saying that there's two scientific bases, right. So one is this, this steep age gradient, the second is the lock, the existence of locked in our arms.
Starting point is 01:53:51 Again, I think there's not very little disagreement in the scientific community of both of those facts. If you put those facts together, the obvious policy is to protect the people who are at the most severe risk from the disease itself. And that's the idea of focus protection. That's the general principle of it. The actual implementation of it depends on the living circumstances of the people that are at risk. The resources that are available in the community, the technology is available to do this. And so it's almost always going to be, in fact, it'll always be a local thing
Starting point is 01:54:29 because it'll depend on all of those things which are all local in nature. So one very, very obvious thing in a country like ours where so many older people live in institutionalized settings, nursing home settings, and that's where older, really vulnerable, chronically ill patients often live.
Starting point is 01:54:50 And you know this disease affects that group, most like most, most commonly, it is absolutely vital to protect that group. We should have known that in February 2020, from just when the Chinese data. And we should have thought about that group February 2020 from just from the Chinese data. And we should have thought about that group as the key constraint in our policy making. Instead we thought about in February, March 2020, as hospital beds as the key constraint,
Starting point is 01:55:19 hospital beds and ventilator shortages. So we ran around trying to address that constraint, like a linear programming problem. You figure out which constraints binding and you address that one thing and you are on the next one. If that one constraint, we said, OK, the constraint is hospital beds. That led to the decision in many of the Northeast states
Starting point is 01:55:42 to send COVID infected patients who are on the verge of or look like they're about to recover back to nursing homes, who then spread the disease all through there because they want to preserve the hospital beds. Well, for somebody who loves numerical optimization, I love the way you frame this. But those are kind of connected, right?
Starting point is 01:56:04 If you actually focus on protecting the vulnerable, you will also have the effect of not hitting the ceiling of the available. That's the irony. If we protected the vulnerable, the vulnerable, the most likely to be hospitalized. And so by protecting the vulnerable, we will also have addressed the shortage of hospital beds more effectively. So that little shift in priority would have had a big impact. Okay, but specifically, the idea is to, and we can talk about different ideas of how to actually do this, but you know, you basically do a lockdown or something like that on a very small set of people.
Starting point is 01:56:46 You may have to do that if it's community spread is very high, but generally, I think it would depend on, again, the living circumstances. So for instance, if you are in a, if you have a, here's a very simple idea that doesn't require a lockdown, a forced on them, I don't actually generally not in favor of that kind of forced lockdown because you just won't get cooperation. But what you could do is provide resources to that group of people.
Starting point is 01:57:12 So like imagine you live next door to somebody an older couple and there's high community spread. Well, they have to go grocery shopping. We did like some of these, some communities did these like senior only grocery hour. Right, but they have to still have to go grocery shopping. We did some of these, some communities did these senior only grocery hour, right? But they have to still have to go out and they might get exposed when they're shopping amongst other seniors.
Starting point is 01:57:33 Yeah. Well, why not organized home delivery of groceries to them? We did that for the laptop class, right? Or it can even just as a volunteer effort. You know, the older people living next door just calling up and say say kind of help you get that go out and go shopping for it And so you would have potentially Federal support of that kind of thing. So these kinds of efforts and identify where their vulnerable people live It's really challenging in multi-generational homes LA County for instance. There's a lot of
Starting point is 01:58:01 Of older people living together with younger people in relatively crowded. They're there. It's really quite a challenge. There again, you can use resources. So if grandma is worried that grandson has come home, but is potentially being exposed, grandson calls grandma. Says, I mean, I might have been in a party where I might do the what what COVID was grandma calls public health public health.
Starting point is 01:58:23 I then says, okay, you can have the so tell room for a couple of days until you check to 10, 10, 10 turn negative. So in case it wasn't clear, the idea of focused protection is the people that are vulnerable protect them. And everybody else goes on with their lives, open up the economy, it just do as it was before. And there was still fear abroad, so there still would be some restrictions people would pose on themselves. They probably would go to parties less. The grandson's probably wouldn't go so many parties, right? There would be less participation in big gatherings.
Starting point is 01:58:58 You may even say, like, big gatherings in order to restrict community spread again. I'm not against any of that, but you shouldn't be closing businesses, you shouldn't be closing churches and synagogues, you shouldn't be closing, you shouldn't be forcing people to not go to school, you should not be shuddering businesses, you should just allow society to go on. Some disease will spread, but as we've seen,
Starting point is 01:59:21 the lockdown didn't stop the disease from spreading anyways. All right, so what do you make of the criticism that this idea like all good ideas cannot actually be implemented in a heterogeneous society where there's a lot of people intermixing and once you open it up people like the younger people will just forget that this is even existing and they'll stop caring about the older people and mess up the whole thing and the government will not want to fund. And you kind of the great efforts you're talking about about food delivery and
Starting point is 01:59:54 then the food delivery services, we'll be like, why the heck am I helping out on this anyway? Because like, it's not making me much money. And so therefore, like all good ideas, it will collapse. That might be true. I mean, I think it's always a risk with policy thing. And so therefore, like all good ideas, it will collapse. That might be true. I mean, I think it's always a risk with policy thing. But I think back to the moment, we actually felt like we were in this together to some extent.
Starting point is 02:00:14 Yes. Right. I think that that empathy that we had that was used to like tell people to stay in happily, not build in happily, but to stay in happily, not grow in happily, but like stay in, to wear a mask, or to do all these things that we thought would help other people,
Starting point is 02:00:33 could have been redirected to actually helping the people who most needed to be sure. Especially, I do remember March, so this is even way before, Barrington, all that kind of stuff. March, April, May, there was a feeling like if we all just work together, we'll solve this. Right. And that may be started to, when did that start breaking down? I mean, unfortunately, the election is mixed into this. Yeah. That the game politicized.
Starting point is 02:01:05 But I think the last that are quite a long time. I think into the summer, I think there was some of that sense. I don't know. It obviously varied among different people, but I think that it's true it would have been challenging. It's also true that it's heterogeneous, exactly the way you said. But what that means is you need a local response, a response. So like I like my vision of a public health officer is someone that understands
Starting point is 02:01:29 their community, not necessarily the nation at large, but their community. And then works within their community to figure out how to deploy the resources that they're available to do the kind of protection policies we're talking about. That's, that's what should have happened. Instead, they spent a huge amount of efforts closing, making sure businesses stayed closed. Businesses that, I mean, there are, you know, like hardware stores that closed.
Starting point is 02:01:55 What good did it closing a hardware store do for the spread of COVID? If it had effect on spread, COVID spread, I mean, it's going to be more of checking to make sure that Plexiglass was put up everywhere, which now in retrospect turns out to probably made the disease worse. You know, masking enforcement, so shaming around mask, I mean, a huge amount of effort on things that were only tangentially related to focus protection. What if we turned our energy that enormous energy put into that instead
Starting point is 02:02:27 into focus protection of the vulnerable? That's essentially the conversation I was calling for. I didn't think of it as we had every single idea. I mean, we gave some concrete proposals. But the criticism we got was that those concrete proposals weren't enough. And the answer to that is that's true. They weren't enough. I wasn't thinking of them as enough. I was thinking that I wanted to involve an enormous number of people in local public health to help think about how to do focus protection
Starting point is 02:02:55 in their communities. The question that's interesting here is about the future too. So COVID has very specific characteristics, like you mentioned, about the curve of the death rate based on the... It seems like with COVID, it's a little bit easier to actually identify a group of people that you need to protect. So other viruses may not be this way. So my lockdown be a good idea, like hardcore lockdown for future virus that's 10 times deadlier,
Starting point is 02:03:32 but spreads at the same rate as COVID, or maybe another way to ask that is, imagine a virus that's 10 times deadlier, what's the right response? I mean, I think it's always gonna be focus protection, but the group that needs the focus protection may change depending on the biology of the virus. Right?
Starting point is 02:03:49 So the polio epidemic in the 40s and 50s in the U.S., the great, the people at most risk for children. We didn't know really at the beginning there was this fecal oral spread. And so we did all kinds of crazy things, including like spreading, spraying DDT in communities, which somehow is supposed to get rid of polio. But the focus was on whenever there was an outbreak, they would close a school down. And that was the right thing to do, because that group that needed protection, where it was children, and those, the disease was spread we thought in schools.
Starting point is 02:04:27 I don't think there's a single formula that works, but there's a single principle that works. No matter, it's hard to imagine a disease that's uniformly deadly across every group in every single person. There's always going to be some group that's differentially harmed. There's always going to be some group that's differentially protected. And that may change over time. In this disease, in this epidemic, as people got infected and recovered, we now had a class of people that were pretty well protected against the disease. They should be like instead of ostracizing them because they don't want a vaccine. We should be allowing them to work. I mean, we're having how staffing shortage in hospitals now because we forgot that principle.
Starting point is 02:05:17 It is quite a bit of this technology problem. So being able to a technology problem, so being able to... Oh, these. So how much of it is a sociological problem? How much of it is a technology problem? Like, where do you put the blame, sort of, on why this didn't go so great? And how can go great in the beginning? I mean, think about lockdowns.
Starting point is 02:05:39 Like, if we didn't have Zoom, we wouldn't have lockdowns. There's a reason 2009 we didn't lock down. I mean, we didn't have zoom, we wouldn't have lockdowns. There's a reason 2009 we didn't lock down. I mean, we didn't have the technology to replace work with this remote technology. So we had good lockdown technology. Yeah, and zoom. We didn't have good focus protection technology. Yeah, I mean, focus protection is always going to be complicated
Starting point is 02:06:01 especially for something like this that spreads so easily it's going to be complicated. And I'm very, I'm the last person to say would have been perfect. There would have been people that would have gotten sick. But they got sick anyways. The hope was that if we suppress community spread low enough, we can protect the vulnerable. That was the hope by lockdown. The reality was that only a certain class of people were able to benefit from a lockdown. The rest of society, we call them essential workers, had to keep working and they got sick.
Starting point is 02:06:31 And so the disease kept spreading. It didn't actually have a substantial effect on its community spread in non-laptop class populations. And also we should probably expand the class of people, we call vulnerable to those who would suffer Who have the capacity to suffer? Given the policies they're you're weighing. It's very disingenuous to call the vulnerable just the people obviously we had a very specific meaning, but broadly speaking vulnerable specific meaning, but broadly speaking, vulnerable should include anybody who can suffer based on the policies you take in response to a virus.
Starting point is 02:07:10 This is that principle, what you just said is completely agree with, is something I think has been lost and unfortunately lost, right? So the policies themselves, if they have harm, those are real. And we shouldn't pretend like they're not. And essentially demonize the people that suffer them. Or pretend, I mean, like a lot of times, like the depression that we've been talking about, that's thought of as like not as not so important, but it's important. And especially the harm to the people in poor countries, it's like being out of sight at a month, out of mind in much of the rich parts of the world.
Starting point is 02:07:51 Once again, I hope that we seeing this, learning the lessons of history with the communications that we have now will learn this. It's like going to another country and bombing targeted terrorists, locations, and there's going to be some civilians who die, pretending that that the child who watches their dad die is not going to grow up, first of all, traumatized, but second of all, potentially bring more hate to the world
Starting point is 02:08:18 than the hate that you were allegedly fighting in the first place. That's another sort of considering only one kind of harm and not the full range of harms that are being caused by your policies. You know, like the good return to focus protection, we still should be following the policy now for COVID and we're not, right? So the vaccines, there's a great shortage in vaccines.
Starting point is 02:08:41 You wouldn't know it in the United States and in the rich parts of the world, but in, there's a great shortage of vaccines. We're not going to be able to vaccinate the most of the like the entire set of elderly at least and or larger groups until late 2022. Huge numbers of older people around the world in poor countries that have not not COVID recovered yet. So they're still quite vulnerable, have not had the vaccine. And yet we're talking about vaccinating five-year-olds who benefit, if at all, from the vaccines of just a very little bit because they face such a low risk of harm from COVID.
Starting point is 02:09:22 Well, something that's a little bit near and dear to our specific, the two of our hearts. So you're at Stanford. So Stanford recently announced that they're going back to virtual, at least for some period of time, in response to the, maybe you can clarify, but I think it's in response to the escalated, how would they phrase it, it's related to Omicron. And a few other universities that kind of like considering back and forth. In my perspective, as somebody who loves in person lectures, who sees the value of that
Starting point is 02:09:57 to students, to young minds, also looking at the data seems the risk of version in university policies around this, given how healthy the student population is, seems not well calibrated. Let's put it this way. Also, pathological. Pathological is one way to put it. Given that, depending on the university, but I think many universities require that the student body is vaccinated at this point. So I think it's a big mistake by Stanford to do this. And I'd like to say that because I just hope MIT doesn't.
Starting point is 02:10:41 But what are your thoughts about Stanford? Is agree with you. I completely agree with you. I think we have failed in our mission to educate our students by this decision. And I think I frankly, just more broadly, I think we failed generally over the course of the last year and a half in living up to our educational mission. In-person teaching is vital. Now I can understand you have older faculty. The principle of focus protection says provide some alternative teaching arrangements for them. That makes sense to me. From the kids' point of view, they're more harmed by not getting the education we promised them, then by COVID. So applying this principle of this focus protection, let young professors teach in person.
Starting point is 02:11:32 This is before the vaccine. After the vaccine, let everyone teach in person. Yeah, this is the part, I don't understand this discussion we're even having because, okay, let's leave focus protection aside here because that's a brilliant policy for perhaps for the future when there's no vaccine. Now with the vaccine, I'm misunderstanding something here because we're known as space that's psychological, not it's no longer biology because with the booster shots, which I believe MIT is not requiring before January, with the booster shots, the data shows no matter how old you
Starting point is 02:12:12 are, the risks are very low for ending up in a hospital relative to all the other risks you face when you're older. I don't I don't understand. Can you explain the policy around closing a university, but also just a policy about just being so scared still in the university setting? I think the universities, the great university has done great harm by modeling this kind of behavior. Yes. To me, the site you keep interrupting, but to me, the university should be the beacon of great behavior, not the beacon of like scared, conservative, let's not mess up.
Starting point is 02:13:00 Pathological. Let's not make it pathological. Let's not make anybody angry. Let's, it should be a place to play in the space of law. That's not make it pathologic. It's not make anybody angry. It should be a place to play in the space of ideas. Yes. So I think the central problem is actually related to the central problem of COVID policy more generally.
Starting point is 02:13:16 The goal seems to be to stop the disease from spreading rather than to reduce the harm from the disease. If the goal is to stop the disease from spreading, the sad fact is we have no technology to accomplish that. At this point, yes. Because like it's already deeply integrated into the human civilization. Well, I mean, it's here forever, right?
Starting point is 02:13:41 There's a zero survey of white tail deer in the US. It turns out 80% of white tail deer in the US have COVID antibodies. Dogs get it, cats get it. There's almost certainly human animal transmission of it. I mean, presumably, I've heard bats get it apparently. So you have a situation where you have this disease that's here to stay. Yeah.
Starting point is 02:14:05 And the vaccines don't stop the spread of it, the lockdowns don't stop the spread of it, we have no technology to stop the spread of it. And so, we're burning the earth trying to do something that's impossible, rather than working on what's possible. And so, like, letting regular college happen, that's a great good. Universities are a wonderful invention, and it's contributed so much to society, to decide to shut it down, that the universities should be fighting tooth and nail to not be shut down, not the other way around.
Starting point is 02:14:40 Yeah. Whatever the mechanisms that results in the university is doing that, that's probably this is me talking. It probably has to do with certain incentives for the administration, probably has to do with lawyers and legal kinds of things to avoid legal trouble. But once again, it's when the administration has too much power and too much definition of what the policy is for the university, that's when you get to trouble. The beauty, the power of the university should be about the faculty and the students. Administration just gets in the way. Get out of the way. I mean, they can help organize things. They place some important role, but they certainly do. But they need to remember what the mission is.
Starting point is 02:15:21 The mission is not safety. The mission actually, university should be dangerous places for ideas and whatnot. What is the role of fear in a pandemic? We've been dancing around it. Is it useful? Is it destructive? Or is there sort of a complicated story here? Because sort of taking us back into January 2020, there was so much uncertainty. This could have been a pandemic that is a black death, the bubonic plague.
Starting point is 02:15:52 It could have killed hundreds of millions of people. We don't know that. We're very new to this. It's been a while. We're rusty. So like there is some value to fear so that you don't do the stupid thing. You don't just go on living. I guess where I come from, I think it's almost entirely counterproductive.
Starting point is 02:16:11 I think fear should never be used as a tactic to manipulate human behavior by public health. So, fear on the individual level, that feeling of fear should be very hesitant about that feeling because it could be easily manipulated by the powerful. Exactly. So, I think that fear is natural, and it's not something that you have to stoke to get when the facts on the ground suggested. Right? In fact, the tendency for humans in the face of threats from infectious disease
Starting point is 02:16:47 is to exaggerate the fear in their own minds of being contaminated by the environment and by others. That's just natural to humans. And the role of public health is not necessarily to eradicate the fear, like obviously technological advances can help eradicate the fear, but like obviously technological advances can help eradicate the fear, but like, but it's really to help manage that fear and and help people put the sort of incentives that come out of that to useful things as opposed to harmful things. What's happened in this pandemic is that there's been a deliberate policy to stoke the fear, to help make people think that the disease is worse than it actually is, in survey after survey you see this.
Starting point is 02:17:31 And that's been incredibly damaging. So young people have readily given away their Williams participating regular life, because A, they fear COVID more than they ought, and B, they feared that they're going to harm the vulnerable in their lives. You put those two together and you just you get this powerful demand for lockdowns. You see this all over the world. Broadly speaking, you have a powerful demand for rational policies, irrational policies because I would like to mention the flip side of that. I've been saddened to see how much
Starting point is 02:18:06 money there is to be made by the martyrs, the people, the conspiracy theorists that tell you you should be afraid of the government, you should be afraid of the man. It feels like fear is the problem. I think there's some guy that once said something about we should fear itself. He was a president or something. I vaguely remember that. So I'm worried about both sides here. That I just I think the general principle is that should not be a tool of public policy, right? The truth the public policy should attempt and public health policy in particular should attempt to address that fear
Starting point is 02:18:52 It's not that you should Tell people lies of course not tell people accurately what the risk is Give people tools that have evidence that they can address their risk with. And level with people when we don't know. I think that is the right adult way to deal with this pandemic from public health point of you. And that is not the policy we have followed. Instead, public health has intentionally stoked the fear in order to gain compliance with his edicts.
Starting point is 02:19:25 And I think the consequence of that is people distrust public health. What you're talking about is distrust of government. I think is partly a consequence of that. That movement, which is much smaller once upon a time, is much larger now. Because of essentially people look at what the public public health has done is said they've lied to me a whole bunch of times and a whole bunch of things is the general sense and their consequences to that. We're going to have to work in public health for a long time to try to regain the trust of the public.
Starting point is 02:19:57 Throughout all of this you've been inspiring to me to a lot of people. You've been fearless, bold in these kind of challenging the policies and not in a martyr kind of way because you're walking the line gracefully and beautifully, I would say. And looking at that, I think you're an inspiration to a lot of young people, so I have to ask, what advice would you give them if they're thinking of going into science, if they're thinking of having an impact in the world? What advice would you give them about their career and maybe about their life? Thinking about somebody in high school, maybe in undergraduates.
Starting point is 02:20:44 I'd say a few things. One is this is a wonderful profession. You have an opportunity to improve the lives of so many and do it by having fun. The kind of play we're talking about. It's an absolute privilege to be able to work in this kind of area. And to young people looking at the saying that that have some gifts or desired for this area, I say, please go for it. Do you want this area of science broadly? Yeah, I mean, it could be, I mean, I don't have any gifts in AI, but like, you know, it could be your, but you know, or in health or in medicine or whatever, whatever your
Starting point is 02:21:21 gifts lie, develop them, work hard and develop them because it's worth it. It's worth it not just for, not just because you get some status, but because the journey is fun and the result is improvements to the lives of so many. So I think that, that is the encouragement I give. I'd also say if you're looking at this ugliness of this debate that's happened over the pandemic, I'd say to the young people we need you to come come in and help transform it. Money that people have seen this debate that behaved poorly, I ask you to forgive them. I've done my best to try. Because many of them are acting out of their own sense that they need to do good, but the mistake they made is in this arrogance and this power. When you come in, remember that example, as a negative example. And so when you join the debate, you'll join it in a spirit of humility, in a spirit of
Starting point is 02:22:15 trying to learn, while keeping that love that led you to enter the field in the first place. And yeah, choose forgiveness versus like, derision. Like the people that you know have messed up, like give them a pass, because that's how, it feels like that's how improvement starts. Funny, I've been thinking this is like, I told you I'm Christian, right?
Starting point is 02:22:41 So like God has given me many opportunities to forgive people Learn learn to practice how to do that. Give you a gift. It's a very humble thing. Yes. Is there a memory? When you were young that was very formative to you So you just gave advice to some young people. Is there something that stands out to you that? A decision you made an event that happened that made you the man you are today. I actually grew up in a relatively poor environment. I was born in India and I moved when I was four. My dad had eight brothers and sisters and my mom
Starting point is 02:23:21 had four brothers and sisters. She grew up in the slum in Calcutta. My dad, his dad died when he was young and he supported his family, his brothers and sisters with the University of Scottish money. Came to the US and my dad worked in a McDonald's, even though he's an electrical engineer, couldn't find a job in 1971. And so he worked in McDonald's.
Starting point is 02:23:43 We lived in a, like this, this, this basically like, the housing port, like development in, in, in Cambridge, it's like this middle building on the 17th floor, this like housing development. I mean, I, I think that was transformative for me. Like I didn't realize so much at the time, well, how that experience of being essentially poor, lower middle class, what effect it had on my outlook.
Starting point is 02:24:10 You mentioned to me offline that you listened to a conversation that I had with my dad. What impact did your dad have in your life? What memories do you have about him? He was a rocket scientist, actually. He helped design rocket guidance systems. I mean, died when I was 20 and I still miss him to this day. And I think that experience of seeing him sacrifice his himself for his family, brilliant man, but in many ways frustrated with like the his opportunities in the world, which is partly what led him to come to the US in the first place.
Starting point is 02:24:47 That's transformed, that's had a transformative effect on me. I wish I could tell him that looking back. Do you think about your own mortality? Do you think about your death? Your dad is no longer with us. You're the the old wise sage that represents. It's funny that I've only worried about death once in this pandemic. Although I've
Starting point is 02:25:14 had two of my cousin who's 73 and my uncle who's 74 die in India during the pandemic. And I grieve them both from COVID. Like the fear of COVID really is only hit me, only really, literally once during this. And it wasn't for me. And I recognize it as irrational. So on the eve of the Santa Clara County Ciro prevalence study, it was, it was a really interesting thing. There's so many people volunteered to help. And my daughter, who's 20, I guess was 19 at the time,
Starting point is 02:25:51 and my wife also volunteered to help with various aspects of the study. And so the eve of the study, they were going to go out in public. And I didn't know what the death rate was because we hadn't done the study. And I suspected it was lower than people were saying, but I didn't know. I knew about the age gradient because I'd seen the Chinese data and my
Starting point is 02:26:10 daughter's young, but my wife is my age. And I didn't know the death rate. And I couldn't sleep the night before. Like, what if I'm putting my family, my kid, my daughter and my wife at risk because of some some activity that I'm doing. It was kind of, I don't know, I mean, it was actually worried about the well-being of others. Yeah. When you look in the mirror. If I die, I die. I mean, like, I just, it's not, again, I'm Christian, so death is not the end for me, I believe.
Starting point is 02:26:42 And so I don't, I don't particularly worried about my own death, but I do, I mean, I just think we can't help but we worry about the well-being of our loved ones. So, from the perspective of God, then let me ask you, what do you think is the meaning of this whole journey we're on? What do you think is the meaning of life? No, it's very simple. Love one another. Treat your neighbor as yourself. It's love. Yeah. Simple as that. Well, I'd love to see a little bit more of that in this pandemic. It's an opportunity for the best of our nature to shine.
Starting point is 02:27:19 I've seen some of the worst, but I think some of that is just good therapy. And I'm hoping in the end, what we have here is love. And at the very least, make your dad proud with some incredible rockets. They were watching. I think you get along well with my dad Lex. Definitely. Thank you so much. This is an incredible honor to talk to you. Jay, you've been an inspiration to so many people and keep fighting the good fight. Thank you so much. This is an incredible honor to talk to you. Jay. He's been an inspiration to so many people and keep fighting the good fight Thank you so much for spending your valuable time with me. Thank you for having me here. Appreciate it Thanks for listening to this conversation with Jay about a Korea to support this podcast Please check out our sponsors in the description and now let me leave you some words from Alice Walker
Starting point is 02:28:04 The most common way people give up their power is by thinking they don't have any. Thank you.

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