Buying, for the moment, the official story about the "pandemic," there were two basic choices:
Let people go about their lives and develop, through contact, natural
immunity to the disease; or imprison populations in their homes.
Why was the second choice made?
This is my second article about Neil Ferguson, the UK professor whose
computer model of COVID-19 changed the world and drove that second
choice.
Ferguson's model predicted a worst-case estimate of 510,000 deaths in the UK, and 2.2 million deaths in the US.
At that point, anybody who was anybody stood up and saluted.
Both heads of government, Trump and Johnson, radically changed course.
Instead of allowing people to go about their lives and develop natural
immunity, they took the lockdown approach, devastating their economies.
Below, I'll reprint quotes from my first article, exposing Professor
Ferguson's track record of abysmal and destructive failures in
predicting the spread of diseases.
This record was available to anyone---including Trump, Fauci, Deborah
Birx, Boris Johnson---but of course these important people have no time
to read or think.
Apparently, a key White house conversation went something like this:
FAUCI: Mr. President, we have a new report from the UK. A computer
model is predicting the spread of the epidemic. There could be 2
million deaths in the US, if we don't take drastic action. There must
be heavy lockdowns. The state governors will have to
carry that ball, but your position on this needs to be unequivocal.
TRUMP: Two million deaths. You're sure?
FAUCI: Yes, sir. Quite sure.
TRUMP: No way out? Except lockdowns?
FAUCI: That's right.
TRUMP: Well, then. Okay.
The sheer brilliance in the Oval Office that day must have been blinding.
So, first up, let's take a peek at a recent article from Nature, the venerable British medical journal. April 2,
"Special report: The [computer] simulations driving the world's response to COVID-19":
"...it's natural to wonder how reliable any of the [computer]
simulations are. Unfortunately, during a pandemic it is hard to get data
- such as on infection rates - against which to judge a model's
projections."
This is called a clue. Computer models predicting the spread of disease
may be an interesting academic exercise, but in the real world, where
lives and nations are on the line, THE DATA, on which the projections
are based, are elusive. Without accurate data,
what do you have? How about opinion, bias, and conjecture?
Nature: "'You can project [via computer models] forwards and then
compare against what you get. But the problem is that our surveillance
systems are pretty rubbish', says John Edmunds, who is a modeller at the
LSHTM [London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine].
'The total numbers of cases reported, is that accurate? No. Accurate
anywhere? No'."
I see. Rubbish. Total number of cases---inaccurate everywhere. Bad
data. No data. In other words, the computer models are sophisticated
tripe.
Nature: "'Forecasts made during an outbreak are rarely investigated
during or after the event for their accuracy, and only recently have
forecasters begun to make results, code, models and data available for
retrospective analysis,' Edmunds and his team noted
last year in a paper that assessed the performance of forecasts made in
a 2014-15 Ebola outbreak in Sierra Leone. They found that it was
possible to reliably predict the epidemic's course one or two weeks
ahead of time, but no longer, because of the inherent
uncertainty and lack of knowledge about the outbreak."
Computer predictions are rarely investigated for accuracy. Can't make
accurate predictions for more than two weeks ahead. Do you suppose
Fauci, who has served as a public health dictator since medieval times,
is aware of this, but is ignoring it? That's
a rhetorical question, Your Honor. I withdraw it. The answer is
obvious.
Finally, Nature provides us with this startling factoid: "The 16 March
simulations that the [Neil Ferguson] team ran to inform the UK
government's COVID-19 response used an agent-based model built in 2005
to see what would happen in Thailand if H5N1 avian flu
mutated to a version that could spread easily between people."
That's like saying, "This year, the driver in the Indianapolis 500 is
sitting in a car built 15 years ago. He's dusted it off and hopes it
works and doesn't crash into the wall."
You may think this is an unkind comparison, but we know something about
that dusty Ferguson 2005 computer model of avian flu. Here is a quote
from the Business insider, 4/25:
"...he [Ferguson] was accused of creating panic by overestimating the
potential death toll during the 2005 Bird [avian] Flu outbreak. Ferguson
estimated 200 million could die. The real number was in the low
hundreds."
THIS is the basic model Ferguson has now used to project deaths from COVID-19.
Are your eyeballs popping? They should be.
Without further ado, here is the Business Insider, 4/25, reporting Neil Ferguson's other grotesque prediction failures:
"Michael Thrusfield, a professor of veterinary epidemiology at Edinburgh
University, told the paper he had 'déjà vu' after reading the
[Ferguson] Imperial paper [on COVID], saying Ferguson was responsible
for excessive animal culling during the 2001 Foot and
Mouth [actually, Mad Cow disease] outbreak."
"Ferguson warned the government that 150,000 people could die. Six
million animals were slaughtered as a precaution, costing the country
billions in farming revenue. In the end, 200 people died."
"In 2009, one of Ferguson's models predicted 65,000 people could die
from the Swine Flu outbreak in the UK - the final figure was below 500."
Want more? The Business Insider raises the level of shock even higher.
"Ferguson co-founded the MRC Centre for Global Infectious Disease
Analysis, based at Imperial [College], in 2008. It is the leading body
advising national governments on pathogen outbreaks."
"It gets tens of millions of dollars in annual funding from the Bill
& Melinda Gates Foundation, and works with the UK National Health
Service, the US Centres for Disease Prevention and Control (CDC), and is
tasked with supplying the World Health Organization
with 'rapid analysis of urgent infectious disease problems'."
Getting the picture?
Bill Gates wants a COVID vaccine before planetary lockdowns end. The
lockdowns, of course, are already making a wreck of the Earth's
economies.
Bill Gates' money goes to Ferguson.
Ferguson supplies, to the CDC and WHO, a vastly worthless but
frightening computer projection of COVID deaths. Ferguson thus
communicates a justification for the Gates global vaccine plan.
The CDC and WHO act, based on what Gates wants, as expressed by Ferguson.
National governments surrender to WHO and CDC. LOCKDOWNS.
What say you, Trump, Johnson, Merkel, Macron, et al? Are you merely
clueless idiots, no brighter than some passerby on a street corner who's
handed a sign for a protest, and joins the line, having zero idea what
he's supporting? Are you that stupid, as you
point to Ferguson's farce of a computer model, with eyes glazed?
Are you simply in fear of experts who, on their best day, should be
consigned to modelling numbers of cockroaches in motel rooms?
Or are you hostile idiots, who intend to destroy countless lives as economics sink further into ruin, day by day?
P.S. Perhaps you're thinking, "These governments couldn't be THAT crazy
and stupid and vicious. They couldn't have acted based on Neil
Ferguson's computer model..."
Business Insider, 4/25: "Ferguson's team warned Boris Johnson that the
quest for 'herd immunity' [letting people live their lives out in the
open in the UK] could cost 510,000 lives, prompting an abrupt U-turn
[massive national lockdown in the UK]...His [Ferguson's]
simulations have been influential in other countries as well, cited by
authorities in the US, Germany, and France."
"On March 23, the UK scrapped 'herd immunity' in favor of a suppression
strategy, and the country made preparations for weeks of lockdown.
Ferguson's study was responsible."
"Dr Deborah Birx, coronavirus response coordinator to the Trump
administration, told journalists at a March 16 press briefing that the
Imperial paper [Ferguson's computer projection] prompted the CDC's new
advice to work from home and avoid gatherings of 10
or more."
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