Quite frankly
Quite frankly The arrogance of Anthony Fauci, and what it means for the rest of us Alex Berenson Dr. Anthony Fauci has had himself a year (or two). As 2020 began, he was a senior federal bureaucrat best-known for helping defang the AIDS crisis. A week before, he had turned 79, well past the standard retirement age for government employees - though he controlled a multi-billion research budget and no one was publicly suggesting he step down. The novel coronavirus changed everything for him. Within months, practically every American knew his name. People worldwide viewed him as their best hope to defeat Covid. As President Trump fumbled, Fauci’s authority grew. “How Anthony Fauci Became America’s Doctor,” the New Yorker wrote in April 2020. The nickname stuck. Once Joe Biden replaced Donald Trump, the title essentially became official. Fauci is now “Chief Medical Advisor to the President” in addition to his day job as head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. He