From 'Fringe' to Mainstream

Four years ago, Jay Bhattacharya was ostracized by his colleagues at Stanford and censored on social media platforms thanks to a campaign against him by the public-health establishment. The director of the National Institutes of Health, Francis Collins, sent an email to another NIH official, Anthony Fauci, urging a “quick and devastating published takedown” of Bhattacharya and his fellow “fringe epidemiologists.” 

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Bhattacharya is far from the fringe today. Donald Trump nominated him this week for Collins’s old job, director of the NIH. Assuming the Senate confirms him, it will be a major victory for science and academic freedom—and a serious threat to the universities that suppressed scientific debate and promoted disastrous policies during the pandemic, causing public trust in science to plummet. Academic researchers and administrators have mostly refused to acknowledge their mistakes, much less make amends, but Bhattacharya promised yesterday to “reform American scientific institutions so that they are worthy of trust again.” 

Ed Morrissey

I disagree only in the sense that Dr. Jay Bhattacharya was ever "fringe" at all. The fringe extremists were in control of policy; the true scientists represented the mainstream, which is why the fringe extremists tried to silence them when they spoke up. Tierney gets the formulation backwards; we're sending the "mainstream" back to the fringe where they belong. Otherwise, this is a great article about perhaps the finest appointment yet from Trump. 

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