New York Post

'Doc' Fauci laughs off a lab leak

Scoffs in PBS series at COV theory

- By LEE BROWN

Dr. Anthony Fauci was shown laughing off the widely accepted lab-leak theory as “molecularl­y impossible” in a new documentar­y — while also saying he would have implemente­d quarantine­s and mask mandates sooner.

The then-White House adviser was followed by PBS throughout 2021 and 2022 as he became a polarizing figure while leading President Biden’s response to the pandemic.

In it, he railed against Republican Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul “insidiousl­y” suggesting in Congress in July 2021 that his National Institutes of Health had funded gain-of-function research at the lab in Wuhan, the city where COVID first emerged.

Fauci confirmed that the “number of experiment­s that needed to be done on viruses” include “doing something under certain circumstan­ces that make a pathogen more transmissi­ble or more pathogenic.”

“Which some people refer to as ‘gain of function,’ ” he said with a look of disgust at the term he has always denied.

“Rand Paul was insidiousl­y throwing into his suggestion­s that the work done in the Wuhan lab, funded by a small grant from NIH . . . created a virus that made COVID,” Fauci said.

Chevys & motorcycle­s

The Wuhan lab-leak theory is now eyed as the likely source of the virus by numerous government agencies, including the US Department of Energy and the FBI.

Fauci, however, laughed as he mocked the theory in one of 10 interviews he gave PBS throughout 23 months of filming.

“The microbe that we were working on, not only was not SARSCoV-2, it would be molecularl­y impossible for them to turn it into SARS-CoV-2,” he said, using the virus’ scientific name.

“They were so different, it’s kind of like you have a Chevrolet and you got a motorcycle and you say, ‘I want to make that Chevrolet into the motorcycle.’

“No matter what you do to that Chevrolet, you’re not going to make it into a motorcycle.

“Like, what are you talking about?” he said, presumably addressing the criticism and not his

analogy. “American Masters: Dr. Tony Fauci,” which aired Tuesday, caught Fauci enjoying his then-growing fame while working from his home, which is covered in images of his own face, including on cushion covers and even his own bobblehead.

He was seen wiping away tears while watching President Biden’s inaugurati­on, then saying that the White House “doesn’t approve anything” on COVID “unless I say yes.”

He was seen watching interviews he gave early in the pandemic dismissing masks as ineffectiv­e — and then later being the driving force for mandating them.

“Did you flip-flop? No,” he said of his own change of messaging. “You got additional informatio­n that made you change what you’re saying.”

‘Yeah, I was wrong’

Despite standing behind his change of heart, Fauci admitted that he regretted not ordering quarantine­s and telling people to wear masks sooner, despite numerous studies now suggesting both were ineffectiv­e.

“Maybe I should have done that,” he said. “Yeah, I was wrong.”

 ?? ?? CLOSER LOOK: Ex-White House coronaviru­s adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci is spotlighte­d in the documentar­y series “American Masters.”
CLOSER LOOK: Ex-White House coronaviru­s adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci is spotlighte­d in the documentar­y series “American Masters.”

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