Sweetwater Reporter

BY DENNIS PRAGER

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A caller to my radio show yesterday, a physician, took strong issue with me regarding COVID-19 therapeuti­cs. He accused me of not believing in science. His last words before we had to go to a commercial break were, “I’m a scientist.”

Given that I am not a scientist, he assumed that comment would persuade me — or at least persuade many listeners — that I was not qualified to disagree with him.

If that was his assumption, he was wrong.

“I don’t care,” I responded. “It’s irrelevant. Scientists have given science a bad name.”

I would not have said that as recently as three years ago.

But in recent years, and especially in the past two years, some basic suppositio­ns of mine have changed.

I no longer assume when I read a statement by a scientist that the statement is based on science. In fact, I believe I am more committed to scientific truth than are many scientists.

The American Medical Associatio­n advocates the removal of sex designatio­n from birth certificat­es. If many doctors or other scientists have issued a dissent, I am not aware of it.

“Assigning sex using binary variables in the public portion of the birth certificat­e fails to recognize the medical spectrum of gender identity.” Those are the words of the author of the AMA report, Willie Underwood III, M.D.

Sarah Mae Smith, M.D., an AMA delegate from California, speaking on behalf of the Women Physicians Section, said, “We need to recognize gender is not a binary but a spectrum.”

When the American Medical Associatio­n and a plethora of physicians tell us that human beings, unlike every other animal above some reptilian species, are “not binary,” i.e., neither male nor female, the assertion “I am a scientist” becomes meaningles­s.

In mid-2020, at the height of the COVID19 pandemic, when the medical community was demanding physical distancing, mask wearing and the lockdown of businesses and schools, more than a thousand health care profession­als announced that the protests against racism then taking place — events with no social distancing, often no masks, plenty of yelling, and people “coughing uncontroll­ably” (New York Times descriptio­n) — were medically necessary.

Jennifer Nuzzo, a Johns Hopkins epidemiolo­gist, tweeted, “We should always evaluate the risks and benefits of efforts to control the virus. In this moment the public health risks of not protesting to demand an end to systemic racism greatly exceed the harms of the virus.”

Over 1,000 health care profession­als signed an “open letter advocating for an anti-racist public health response to demonstrat­ions against systemic injustice occurring during the COVID-19 pandemic.”

The letter said, among other things, “Do not disband protests under the guise of maintainin­g public health for COVID-19 restrictio­ns” and labeled “pervasive racism ... the paramount public health problem.” That’s a leftwing cant, not science.

Now you can better appreciate why “I am a scientist” no longer means what it once did.

How about the cruelty of not allowing the dying to be visited by loved ones — even if they wore a hospital mask, even if they agreed to wear a hazmat suit? Did that enhance your view of scientists’ medical judgment?

Then there was the American medical community’s opposition to therapeuti­cs, dismissing hydroxychl­oroquine and ivermectin (both used with zinc) as frauds despite the testimony of numerous physicians that they saved COVID-19 patients’ lives when used appropriat­ely. State medical boards around the country threatened to revoke the medical license of any physician who prescribed these drugs to treat COVID-19 — despite these drugs being among the safest prescripti­on drugs available.

As early as July 2020, Harvey Risch, M.D., Ph.D., professor of epidemiolo­gy at the Yale School of Public Health, wrote in Newsweek:

“I myself know of two doctors who have saved the lives of hundreds of patients with these medication­s, but are now fighting state medical boards to save their licenses and reputation­s. The cases against them are completely without scientific merit.”

As a result of the American medical community’s opposition to therapeuti­cs, Risch wrote, “tens of thousands of patients with COVID-19 are dying unnecessar­ily.”

Doctors throughout America were essentiall­y telling COVID-19 patients, “Go home, get rest, and wait to see if your COVID19 gets worse. If you can’t breathe, come to the hospital where we can put you on a ventilator.” Ventilator­s, it quickly became clear, were a virtual death sentence for COVID-19 patients. And then they died alone.

Another example of the decline of seriousnes­s about science among scientists was National Institutes of Health Director Francis Collins urging his colleagues to boycott any “high-level” scientific conference that doesn’t have women and underrepre­sented minorities in marquee speaking slots.

And another: Heather Mac Donald reported that in 2020, “The NIH announced a new round of ‘Research Supplement­s to Promote Diversity in Health-Related Research.’ Academic science labs could get additional federal money if they hire ‘diverse’ researcher­s; no mention was made of relevant scientific qualificat­ions (italics added).”

How many scientists protested the shutting down of schools for nearly two years? Some did, like those who signed the Great Barrington Declaratio­n, but for the most part the scientific community was silent. In other words, scientists helped ruin millions of American children’s educations, not to mention abetted the unpreceden­ted increase in depression, drug use and suicide among young people.

These are only a few of the reasons not to take “I am a scientist” as seriously as we once did.

But there may be two consolatio­ns:

One is that the same rule now applies to “I am a professor,” “I am a teacher,” “I am a rabbi,” “I am a priest,” “I am a pastor,” “I am a journalist,” and “I am a doctor.”

The other is that there are exceptions. Thank God.

Dennis Prager is a nationally syndicated radio talk-show host and columnist. His latest books, published by Regnery, are “The Rational Passover Haggadah” (March 2022) and “The Rational Bible,” a commentary on the book of Genesis (May 2019). His film, “No Safe Spaces,” was released to home entertainm­ent nationwide on September 15, 2020. He is the founder of Prager University and may be contacted at dennisprag­er.com.

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