Recently, a self-publisher republished a news report documenting that back on January 11, 2017, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Anthony Fauci, M.D., declared that Trump’s term would face a major outbreak of infectious diseases. Apollo.com commentator Lin Feng asked several pointed questions about this.
According to the netizen’s self-published information, Apollo.com reporter Li Chenyu investigated and found that USA Today and Hialeah, a website founded in 2012 and based in New Jersey, USA, which serves as an in-depth professional clinical information, both published articles on January 11, 2017, “Fauci: ‘No doubt’ Trump will Face a Sudden Infectious Disease Outbreak”. The article describes how, at a pandemic prevention forum at Georgetown University, Fauci said that the Trump administration will be challenged not only by ongoing global health threats such as the flu and HIV, but also by surprising disease outbreaks.
Fauci added, “Preventing disease pandemics usually starts overseas, and an appropriate response means cooperation not only between the United States and other countries, but also among the public and among the private health sector.” He said, “We’re certainly going to be surprised in the next few years.”
One user saw the story in his own media and thought, “How did Fauci know on Jan. 11, 2017, that Trump would face a sudden “outbreak”? The only explanation is that he knew the inside story.”
During the 2020 U.S. election, President Trump’s (Nov. 10) adviser on the Chinese Communist virus (coronavirus), Scott Atlas, attacked chief U.S. virologist Anthony Fauci for politicking, accusing him of being inconsistent on the issue of the outbreak and that his real goal was to undermine President Trump.
In an interview with Fox News host Laura Ingraham, Atlas said that Fauci had been bad-mouthing Trump’s epidemic prevention policies before, but after the election, Fauci’s attitude has changed and he is “optimistic”.
Commentator Lin Feng analyzed that Fauci even declared as early as 2017 that Trump would face a major outbreak of infectious diseases during his tenure, so conclusive and accurate was his “prediction”. How did he know it would come from overseas? This question needs to be answered by Forsythe! Another question is what did he do to prevent the epidemic? What was the reason for Forsythe’s change of attitude before and after the election? Did he really come to the conclusion that there was a major outbreak from a professional standpoint only? Or did he know something that was not known to the public…? It all feels so confusing and ghostly.
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