The Daily - From Opinion: Anthony Fauci Is Pissed Off
Episode Date: June 26, 2021On this episode of Sway, a podcast from NYT Opinion, America’s chief immunologist responds to the recent leak of his emails, being compared to Hitler, and weighs in on the Wuhan lab-leak theory. Ev...ery Monday and Thursday on Sway, Kara Swisher investigates power: who has it, who’s been denied it and who dares to defy it. Subscribe to the show wherever you listen to podcasts.
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Hey, it's Michael. Today, I want to tell you about an interview with the country's
top infectious disease expert, Dr. Anthony Fauci, conducted by my colleague, opinion
columnist Cara Swisher, on her podcast, Sway. In the conversation, Cara asks Fauci about
the politicization of the pandemic response, the potential origins of the virus, and the content
of Fauci's newly released emails, including an exchange with the CEO of Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg.
Take a listen. You walk in a room, do you have sway?
I'm Kara Swisher and you're listening to Sway.
In the past year and a half, Dr. Anthony Fauci has become a hero to some,
including the owners of a deli in my neighborhood that sells a cocktail called the Fauci Pouchy. But he's become a hero to some, including the owners of a deli in my neighborhood that sells a cocktail called the Fauci Pouchie.
But he's become a villain to others,
people who hang on his every word to discredit him
and question his motivations.
To them, he's Dr. Flip Flopchi, the leader of Fauciism.
Those types have gotten some fuel
after BuzzFeed and The Washington Post
published thousands of Fauci's emails
from the early days of the pandemic.
I find the emails mostly anodyne,
but the right and conspiracy theorists are using them as more fodder, saying that Fauci lied about
the need to wear masks and downplayed the Wuhan lab leak theory. To parse the politics from the
science, I invite him to speak with me today. Dr. Fauci, welcome to Sway. Thank you. It's good to
be with you. So let's just start with the news, the most recent thing, which is the lab leak theory,
which posits that COVID-19 originated in a lab in Wuhan, China.
The theory has become deeply politicized, muddled with former President Trump's anti-China and really anti-Chinese rhetoric.
It became a thing that some on the right glommed on to and the left kind of dismissed outright.
In April of last year, President Trump announced that his administration had evidence that proves the lab leak theory, but never put it forth. Did you see any evidence?
I mean, I haven't seen it because I'm not sure it exists. What we're seeing right now
is a major increase in incidents of interest, that is, of tweeting, of speculation,
that is, of tweeting, of speculation, but no real increase in definitive data or evidence whatsoever. And I think that the people who look carefully at that really come away with saying,
well, what is different now than what was known or being said a year ago. You know, there is this so-called intelligence
that three members of the Wuhan lab were ill,
requiring hospitalization.
And I really wonder what the strength of that intelligence is,
what the confidence in it is.
It certainly has gotten banded around.
And I have said that if the intelligence is firm and real, then you should make sure we
find out what the health records of those sick people are.
But if it's very weak, flimsy intelligence, then there's nothing there.
I always keep an open mind.
then there's nothing there.
I always keep an open mind. I feel, as do the overwhelming majority of scientists who have knowledge of virology
and knowledge of evolutionary biology, that the most likely explanation for this is a
natural leap from an animal reservoir to a human.
A zoonotic leap.
Right, exactly.
So what is the Biden administration now doing?
Because one of it will require investigation.
Well, you know, I'm really not sure, Cara,
exactly, to be quite honest with you,
I don't know exactly what the nature of that intelligence,
because the president has asked the intelligence community
to look into this and given them 90 days
to come back with information.
I mean, it's important. I support
what the president's done. And we all do because we all want to find out really what the origins
were. But again, I get back to saying, if you talk to the scientists with knowledge about viruses,
because we hear a lot of people making statements that are really completely debunked. Well, there's a lot of expert
virologists on Twitter, but I'm teasing. But there's some reputable scientists, including
epidemiologists like Dr. Ralph Baric and Dr. Mark Lipsish, seem to think it's possible it originated
in a lab, or at least they think the theory is we're checking out, which is what you're saying
here. But what makes you think the lab leak theory is improbable?
Yeah, I mean, I think if you look at the history of how viruses evolve, look at SARS-CoV-1,
look at MERS, look at Ebola, we still haven't found the natural source of Ebola. And that's been since 1976. So this is what happens. Look at influenza. Look at bird flu, H5N1, H7N9, that jump species.
This is a very, very natural thing. And if you look at the virus itself, again, I'm not an
evolutionary virologist, but those who are, look at the virus and they say it's absolutely, totally compatible
with something that evolved from bat viruses because of the closeness to it. We don't have
that extra link that's come in, but there's nothing they see in there that makes you think
it was something that came from a lab. So you support the investigation into this, correct?
that came from a lab.
So you support the investigation into this, correct?
You know, I think we should definitely try. Indeed, I have said that as a scientist, I have always kept an open mind about things
until they were definitively proven.
So if an investigation gets us closer to that, then I certainly am in favor of that.
The one thing that I feel we need to do, we've better make sure that any investigation includes people who have real scientific knowledge about this
and get the political aspects out of it. And also, there needs to be a combination of diplomacy
together with scientific investigation, together with, I guess I would call forensics.
They've all got to be together because if you go in in an accusatory way,
you will put the Chinese off even more than they are right now.
Well, they haven't been particularly forthcoming on lots of issues.
I mean, even when they're not hiding anything, they act that way. I mean, if you look
at the first SARS in 2002, they were not particularly forthcoming in what was going on.
And what it was, was proven of being a natural occurrence. Yet, if you look the way they acted
early on, that's the nature of the way the Chinese, when they have something that goes on in
their own country, they just act in a very put-offish way. They're not forthcoming with
information. Does that mean that they're really lying and hiding something? I don't know.
So Dr. Shi Zhengli, who's a top virologist at the Wuhan Institute, claims her lab never
held any source of the new coronavirus before the pandemic
erupted. It's not entirely clear if that's the case. Do you believe her?
I don't know her. In fact, I've never met her. But I talked to virologists who interact with her,
and they say she's a scientist who's very talented, has a high degree of integrity,
and is someone whose major purpose is to prevent outbreaks from occurring.
As a matter of fact, she is one of the investigators who discovered the ultimate
connection of SARS-CoV-1 to the animal kingdom. I don't think very many people recognize that.
And she is a member of the American Academy of Microbiology.
So she is a very well-recognized scientist.
So do you believe her on this?
I mean, because they have pressures in China
and the government does shut things down.
You know, Cara, I don't know her.
I can tell you from her reputation,
her reputation would have people believe her.
Okay. All right. And do you ever think we're going to find the source given
Chinese are not being cooperative? It's politicized here in this country.
I hope so. If you look at the definitive proof that SARS-CoV-1 was the cause of the SARS outbreak in 2002, 2003, that took several years of scouting
around in bats and other animals that come into the wet market to finally see the connection.
It may take years. And here's the thing when I say if we're going to get the answer, we have to do it with some
degree of diplomacy.
Because if we want to be part of the team that goes out there and finds out, is there
a connection with an animal that might have been brought in from many, many, many miles
away into the Wuhan markets.
We're going to have to do that in collaboration with the Chinese.
The mainstream media reported on this theory with a lot of skepticism,
calling it a conspiracy theory and using words like debunking.
There's virtually no chance it could be true.
Did the media add to this mess?
Yeah, I think what's happened now, this certainly has become political.
And again, I want to repeat, Cara, because what I said, I gave you the reason why.
I want to make sure, and you'll have to excuse me for that, because there's a lot of people
just waiting on every word to pounce, okay?
And a lot of it is anti-science, and I've said that before, and I'll say it right now.
The fact is, I just gave you the reasons from speaking with and dealing with knowledgeable
virologists and evolutionary biologists for years and years and years. Still, I do keep an open mind
that it's a possibility. So that's the reason why you say, well, this person says it's a possibility
and that person says it's a possibility, almost in the context that I'm disagreeing with them. I'm not. I'm saying
it is a possibility. I think it's a very, very, very, very remote possibility, but it's a possibility.
Right. And so as the theory is being reexamined with more credibility, say, in the media,
and then it enters into politics, Republicans like Marco Rubio have accused you of downplaying the idea of a lab leak. Lindsey Graham, Rand Paul sent you a letter
demanding answers. What's your response to them? Is that it's a possibility and I'm happy to look
at it or a remote possibility? Of course. No, I say that. I say it over and over again.
If you look back at the January 31st, when I was approached by some virologists saying, you know,
there's a possibility that this may, you know, we haven't looked at it as carefully as we should.
He says, we really want to let you know, what should we do? They were asking my advice. And I
said, well, let's keep an open mind. So from the very beginning, I called a group together of
international people. One of them was a good
friend and a very established scientist. Jeremy Farrar was with us. We asked him to go and contact
the WHO to let them know. I let the Department of Health and Human Services know, the leadership.
So that's the reason why I get frustrated when people say, well, he was hiding it from the public. Look at the facts. The facts say I was not.
One of the things that did happen is people dismissed Tom Cotton, who very early on pointed
to the possibility. And when you actually go look at what he said, he wasn't particularly
being political. He was talking about the possibility. Did he get pulled into the same
thing? You know, I don't actually recall exactly the circumstances of when he came out and said that.
But I think when a person in good faith comes out and says, I have some doubts and I would like to pursue this further, that's nothing incompatible with what we're saying right now.
The way you're presenting it, Cara, I have no problem with what Cotton said
when he said, let's look into it.
It's when they get it into the political arena
and say, ah, you were lying about this.
It has to be this.
It's unquestionably this.
They don't know what they're talking about
when they say that.
That becomes a political issue.
Okay, so I'm going to move on to your emails.
Thousands of your emails dating from
January to June of 2020 have recently been released by BuzzFeed and the Washington Post.
That's given your critics, particularly on the right, more material to work with.
Your redacted emails with Mark Zuckerberg have added fuel to the fire. Representatives Jim
Jordan and James Comer and Senator Marsha Blackburn have alleged you worked with Facebook
to censor speech. You're just laughing at me, right?
No, no.
The reason I'm laughing, Cara, because every single one of those emails can be explained
in a way that is perfectly normal, perfectly innocent, and completely above board.
Were you trying to get help with your Instagram?
What was happening?
No, well, you know, I don't know who redacted that.
When people ask for my emails, I don't look through my emails and say, okay, I'll give
you this one and redact this.
It's completely out of my control.
So you want to know what the email was really about?
Hey, big scoop here.
We're going to go.
Mark said, hey, is there anything that we can do to help out to get the messages out, the right public
health messages? I have a very important medium here in Facebook. Can I help? And as a matter of
fact, if you guys don't have enough resources and money to do some of the things you want,
just let us know. It was about as friendly and innocent an email as you could possibly imagine.
So not about whether to censor speech related to COVID, anything else?
Oh, absolutely 100%. And any thought of that is total conspiracy theory and total flight of
fantasy. Did you sense that these emails were going to be released before they were published?
fantasy. Did you sense that these emails were going to be released before they were published?
You know, I actually get so many FOIA requests for things. I mean, it's just a big institution. We're a very visible group. Quite frankly, I didn't know that there were thousands and thousands
of emails that got sent out. I didn't even know that. So I didn't get worried about it because
I never, I didn't say anything in the email that I was worried about. But once I knew that it got out there and it was going to get very carefully scrutinized by very far-right, radical people who clearly are trying to discredit me, no doubt about that, that's political, it's clear, it's anti-sciencecience and it's anti-me. I said to myself, it is likely, I know, that you can pull out sentences from emails or take emails out of context or take an email that is perfectly innocent, followed up by an explanation and only show one aspect of it.
We know that's being done. Right. So in 2020,
in February, you advised Sylvia Burwell, the former Health and Human Services Secretary,
that she did not need to wear a mask while traveling, especially since she was flying
to a low-risk location. That is something that people are focusing on. And let me just be clear,
my brother, who's a doctor, said the same thing to me at that time, like, probably it's not going
to help and this and that, and you should save them for healthcare workers was his, he's an anesthesiologist.
So did you worry at the time in hindsight that you should have waited for commenting on these issues?
Okay. So Cara, allow me to explain that plus one other thing that gets thrown around by people who
all they want to do is give ad hominems and quite frankly have
no idea what they're talking about. Back early on, when we were talking about masks and whether
you should wear masks, we're at a time that there were very, very few infections here.
And there were three aspects that dictated that discussion. One, we were told right in the situation room
that there would be a shortage of masks
if everybody went out and bought a mask
because people were going to buy N95s.
And given the personal protective equipment,
we did not want to create a situation
where healthcare providers who absolutely needed masks
wouldn't get it. Point number two,
at the time, there was no real evidence that masks worn outside of the setting of the hospital
actually worked to protect you. And number three, we did not know at the time that about half or maybe more of infections were transmitted by people who had no
symptoms. So those are three things. Hold on to that. At the time that I said to Sylvia that you
don't necessarily need to wear a mask and where I even said publicly, you don't need to wear a mask.
You know who agreed with me? The entire Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the CDC, and the Surgeon General
of the United States.
Yet, that is being fashioned as an anti-Fauci thing.
Okay, now, let's fast forward.
What did we learn in the subsequent month or two when I changed and said everybody should wear a mask?
A, there was no shortage because we found out that cloth masks actually work. Number two,
analyses that were published that showed for the first time that, guess what? Outside of the hospital setting,
masks actually work to protect you and to prevent you from spreading. And three, we learned to our
horror that about 50% of the infections were being transmitted by people who didn't even know they
were infected. So that is the reason why I changed my mind.
So the people who are giving the ad hominems are saying, ah, Fauci misled us. First he said no
masks, then he said mask. Well, let me give you a flash. That's the way science works. You work
with the data you have at the time. It is essential as a scientist that you evolve your opinion and your recommendations based
on the data as it evolves.
That is the nature of science.
It is a self-correcting process.
And that's the reason why I say people who then criticize me about that
are actually criticizing science. It was not a change because they felt like flip-flopping.
It was a change because the evidence changed. The data changed.
Right. One of the things I was thinking about is that the idea of public health is things evolve,
right? But that's impossible in this twitchy, noisy culture now.
Is there another way you're going to have to go through public health?
Because for the most part, people had trust in what you said.
And if you say, I made a mistake or things have changed, people accepted it.
They don't accept it now.
Do you think you can now, these days, be wrong in public health or not have enough information?
You can be wrong if you're dealing with
information that it's evolving. I mean, if all of a sudden I started to say that smoking is not
deleterious to your health, that would be dead wrong because all the data show it's highly deleterious to your health.
But when you're dealing with a rapidly evolving pandemic, things change.
So it isn't a question of being wrong.
It's a question of going with the data as you have and being humble enough and flexible
enough to change with the data. So if you want to say, was I wrong back then
when I said you don't necessarily need to wear a mask? Well, based on what we know now,
that definitely was wrong. But based on what we know then, it wasn't wrong.
And when you're dealing with an evolving situation that has politics, it's even worse. Well, politics clouds the whole thing. I mean, it's so obvious. You know, I know,
obviously, in this interview, you can't in any way take sides. But the nonsense that's going on
now, the stuff that's being thrown around, criminal charges, blood on your hands, what in
God's name are you talking about? Are we surprised?
Did you think it was going to stop
when President Trump left office?
No.
Or did you imagine it would get worse?
No, I didn't think it was going to stop
because the same people
who are out there lying about other things,
why should they stop lying now?
Yeah.
Let me just be clear.
Roger Stone recently compared you to Hitler.
Governor Ron DeSantis is saying that Florida chose freedom over Fauci-ism.
When you're talking about using ad hominem, what are your thoughts of use of your name to denote notions of authoritarian control or mind control or whatever the heck they think you're up to?
do is I'm a public health official and a scientist who's devoted my entire 50-year medical career,
40 of which have been in public health, to saving lives and, in fact, saving millions of lives.
So what I do is I concentrate on my job. And when I concentrate on my job, I put very little weight in the adulation and very little weight in the craziness of condemning me.
Now, the other thing is that it gets preposterous.
And the thing that bothers you most of all is the impact it has on your family.
I mean, getting death threats and getting your daughters and your wife threatened with
obscene notes and threatening notes is not fun.
So I can't say that doesn't bother me.
I mean, the more extreme they get, the more obvious how political it is.
Like Fauci is like Hitler.
Fauci has blood on his hands.
Are you kidding me?
I mean, anybody who is just thinking about this in a dispassionate way has got to say,
what the heck are those people talking about? Here's a guy whose entire life has been devoted
to saving lives, and now you're telling me he's like Hitler? You know, come on, folks, get real.
We'll be back in a minute.
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More with Anthony Fauci after the break. When you are out there as a public face of these things in order to explain
it to the public, is that too much of a cost for public health officials? Well, I know several of
my colleagues are now reticent to talk out about
anything. Now, this is an organized, I mean, I'm telling you things that people with greater
insight than I are convinced of, that this is an organized effort to be able to essentially
discredit the truth. The truth has disappeared. And I mean, people who
think that January 6th was a friendly visit to the gift shop at the Capitol. I mean, come on,
it's complete distortion of reality. So when you're saying it's an organized effort to
discredit the truth and especially about you, do you have proof that they're doing that?
Do you just watching it.
No, I don't have any proof.
I know I don't have any time.
It just seems to me really rather strange that everyone says the same talking points.
You have people who absolutely have no idea of what they're talking about with virology
or talking about furing cleavage sites.
Like who gave you that talking point?
Yeah.
You know, come on.
I'm old enough to be around for the whole AIDS crisis
and your incredible work related to it.
But you vehemently disagreed with the Reagan administration
during the AIDS epidemic,
and they were quite slow to move
with this more marginalized group of people.
And then with Trump during COVID,
how do you compare them?
Because that was a political time.
Yeah, they're very different.
Tell me how.
I mean, it's black and white.
I mean, back at the time during the Reagan administration, when he did not use the bully
pulpit as much as I would have liked him to do to call attention to an emerging outbreak
and had people around him
who clearly were homophobic. It was a tough situation. It was by people who, even though
I disagreed with what they were doing, they never really were completely violating the tenets of
the organization. They had respect for government.
They had respect for the Congress. They had respect for the judicial branch. I mean,
it was government working. You could disagree with them, but it wasn't the complete whatever
it is that's going on right now. To me, that's scary for our democracy, quite frankly.
So in the larger picture throughout the whole pandemic, the political divide has informed
everything from mask wearing to vaccine hesitancy.
Do you think this divide is surmountable or have we gone too far?
What is your hope?
Is it social media that has to be pulled back?
You know, I'm not sure how we're going to get out of this situation.
I do know that social media can be a way of spreading important,
positive information, but the junk that gets put on that is frightening because it's so distorted
that you have people read it and they follow it. I understand people like it. I don't have
a Twitter account, so I don't know. Do you use Facebook? No, I don't.
I mean, you're talking to the wrong person when it comes to social media. There's a lot about you
on it, just so you know, just FYI. Yeah, yeah. And so I hear. I mean, sometimes they put it in
front of me, but now I just don't even want to look at it anymore. So for those of you
who think you're affecting me with it, sorry, I'm not looking at it. I'm interested in your
thoughts on medical disinformation on Facebook. Mark is asking
you what he can do. With this medical disinformation, what should the platforms be doing?
You know, again, Cara, I will get criticized if I make recommendations for things outside of my
area of expertise. I'll stick to the science. I'll stick to the public health. I don't know how
to correct misinformation on social media. I wouldn't know how to do that. I do think they
need to do something more about it. It's a very difficult thing because they've been charged with
running all of society and they're very bad at it. So that's the problem we have is that they're
incapable to the task, Facebook in particular. I'm not sure what they should do, labels, fines,
but they do stop people from getting the treatment they need. But when you're talking about what's
coming next, are you, there's something you're worried about that you're watching for next?
Yeah. You know, 20 years ago, people would ask me the same question and my, if you go back over
the records, which is easy to do, you would see that I
consistently gave the same answer. And that is the emergence of a new virus, a respiratory-borne
virus that would jump species from an animal host to a human that would have two characteristics.
One, it would be highly efficient in transmissibility through the respiratory route.
efficient in transmissibility through the respiratory route. And two, it would have a very high degree of capability of morbidity and mortality for the human population. And unfortunately,
we're living through my worst nightmare. Well, do you have a worse than worst nightmare?
No, no, actually, right now, what I'm saying to myself is that if this happens now, which it is, that it could
happen again and it could even possibly be worse.
This is an unusual virus because, you know, about a third to 40 percent of the people
get no symptoms at all, yet it's capable of killing 600,000 Americans.
We've never had a situation like that where a virus that would be
benign for almost half the people or 40% of the people and yet kill so many people.
So the possibility that can occur in the future, that you could get a pandemic
that would be essentially more uniform in its deleterious effect. We have two ways of preparing.
You've got to prepare at the global level, have universal standards of communication,
of surveillance, of those kinds of things, diagnostic capabilities. And you've got to
make an investment in science. The investment in science that we have made over
decades allowed us to do what some people would have thought was impossible, to go from the
awareness of a new virus in January to a highly effective vaccine in December.
And what about this vaccine technology, the use of mRNA, for example?
How close are we to the same technology for flu or HIV vaccines, cancer vaccines?
Oh, absolutely. Absolutely. I mean, one of the positive, you know, the silver lining, if you want to call it that, of this is that we have been able to show the extraordinary power
of certain vaccine platform technology, for sure it's already
being pursued in the realm of HIV, in the realm of influenza, in the realm of a variety of other
infectious diseases. So the technology that was spectacularly successful with SARS-CoV-2
is absolutely going to put us a step ahead with other infections.
Right. So one last question. If you could go back to February 2020, what's one thing that you would
change that you did right now, knowing what you know now? And I know that's an easy thing to say,
if you could, even not knowing what you know now.
Well, knowing what I know now, Cara, back then, but I don't think it would have worked because
I don't think I would have convinced anybody.
So let's go back to the first case that we recognized was January 21st.
There was a handful of cases as we got into-
Possibly even earlier.
Yeah, yeah, that we didn't recognize, right.
If we had said then, let's shut everything down, if I had said that, people would have
looked at me like I was crazy.
Are you talking about shutting down the government when you've had 17 cases?
No way.
But looking back at what might have stopped this a bit, it would have been that.
But that would have been unacceptable to society.
Even now, when we have absolute proof that this virus has killed 600,000 Americans, we still have people that don't want to get vaccinated.
Yep. Yep. One of my relatives. It's very disturbing. I don't even know what to say at this point.
What do I say to this relative who doesn't who is like herd immunity? I'm not going to get sick. What do you say?
I mean, I think there's a lot of people. Well, let me be clear, Cara. I believe that there are a lot of people who don't want to get vaccinated, that there's
absolutely nothing wrong with them at all.
They just need more information.
So, you know, you get to herd immunity.
You know what the best way to get to herd immunity is?
Get vaccinated. Thank you. Edited by Naeem Araza and Paula Schumann. With original music by Isaac Jones, mixing by Eric Gomez,
and fact-checking by Kate Sinclair and Michelle Harris.
Special thanks to Shannon Busta,
Kristen Lynn, and Lirial Higa.
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