Stanford's Jay Bhattacharya has served as an expert witness in many cases opposing mask mandates and other Covid restrictions. Multiple judges have pointed to major flaws in his testimony. A thread.
A judge in Tennessee called his testimony on masks in schools "troubling and problematic" and found that he "oversimplified conclusions" of at least one study. tennessean.com/story/news/pol…
US District Judge Crenshaw went on to say Bhattacharya was "not qualified to speak" on the issue, and that he may have been "advancing a personal agenda."
In Florida, Bhattacharya was the state's only scientific expert witness defending its ban on mask mandates.
Leon County Circuit Judge Cooper said his position was in a "distinct minority" & (again) concluded his interpretation of a study was incorrect. apnews.com/article/lifest…
Similar concerns were raised by Court of Queen's Bench Chief Justice Joyal in a case regarding restrictions on religious services. Judge notes several instances where Bhattacharya's testimony is contradicted by further evidence, including his own sources. winnipeg.ctvnews.ca/manitoba-churc…
The judge also notes several cases where Bhattacharya's testimony failed to consider the policies that were actually in effect in Manitoba.
The judge concludes that Bhattacharya's views are "not supported by most of the scientific and medical community" and that these views may be "justifiably challenged" bc of his lack of "consistent and more specialized long-term academic focus" on "immunology and virus spread"
The judge also talks about the Great Barrington Declaration, which Bhattacharya co-authored.
"Insufficiently nuanced and unduly simplistic"
"Raises significant ethical and moral questions"
Not judges, but the plaintiffs in a Cobb County, GA school mask case (parents of medically vulnerable kids) refer to Bhattacharya as a "widely discredited pseudoscientist, whose opinions have been denounced by the public health and medical community.” eastcobbnews.com/cobb-county-sc…
Context for TN case. Bhattacharya referenced the Bangladesh mask RCT, but his conclusions contradicted those of the pre-print's authors, including a lead author who was an expert witness for the other side. ewscripps.brightspotcdn.com/7e/16/573e8a1c…
"Replete with contradictions that undercut his credibility"
Bret Weinstein, member of Florida's Public Health Integrity Committee, appears to endorse AIDS denial in this clip. It seems very important to clarify his stance on whether HIV causes AIDS. AIDS deniers have advised governments before. Over 300K South Africans died because of it.
The committee, "will review research, data, and policies and provide recommendations and guidance to the Florida Department of Health." Weinstein is one of seven members.
From what I can gather, there's been some internecine feuding of late.
McCullough and Malone's Twitter accounts were recently reinstated, having been removed for violating Covid misinfo policies. McCullough immediately blocked Malone.
Malone threatened to sue a bunch of (vaccine opposed) people/orgs for defamation. He is suing for $25M in damages, claiming defendants tarnished his reputation in medical community, losing him "business and income" and "prospects for career advancement."
Defendants include Red Voice Media, which publishes the Stew Peters Show. Peters made the Died Suddenly conspiracy doc, which also spurred infighting (@annamerlan). According to the legal complaint, Peters has accused Malone of being a "mass murderer."
Martin Kulldorff is part of Ron DeSantis committee issuing public health recs to "counter the CDC" and comes up in the Twitter Files.
He was an advisor to the FDA and CDC on vaccine safety when the Covid vaccines were first evaluated.
He was removed from the position advising the CDC because he published an op-ed making policy recommendations prior to complete review of data (according to a statement published in the Federalist).
The public statement in question included recommending that people under 50 get mRNA vaccines, which he now seems to believe were the "wrong vaccines." He didn't bring up those concerns at the time, when he was helping the federal government evaluate Covid vaccines.
The @COVIDOversight Committee just released a report on the Trump admin's embrace of a herd immunity strategy, outlining the role of Scott Atlas and other Stanford Professors in promoting the strategy. Reading now and thread to follow here! coronavirus.house.gov/sites/democrat…
As a start, Atlas' first contact with Trump admin on Covid was March 21st, calling their initial response "a massive overreaction" to a pathogen that would only kill "about 10,000". His source for that was Dr. John Ioannidis of Stanford.
That's a reference to Ioannidis' STAT op-ed, where he also predicted 1% of people would end up infected. statnews.com/2020/03/17/a-f…
SCOTUS on Monday will hear arguments in a dispute that could restrict or even eliminate the EPA’s authority to control the pollution that is heating the planet.
This effort is supported the same groups that fought Covid precautions like vaccine mandate. nytimes.com/2022/02/27/cli…
And yes, direct links to the Great Barrington Declaration and Brownstone Institute too.
The New Civil Liberties Alliance fought to lift the eviction moratorium. With affidavits from Jay Bhattacharya & Martin Kullforff, it's brought multiple cases against vaccine mandates.
Americans for Prosperity is the main Koch lobbying group. Its former VP (who now works for another Koch-backed lobbying group), submitted an amicus brief to SCOTUS against the federal vaccine mandate with Jay Bhattacharya
Hoover Fellow and climate change denier Fred Singer was a textbook example of how contrarian scientists work with right wing thinktanks to stoke denialism for decades — literally, Merchants of Doubt by @NaomiOreskes and @ErikMConway focuses on his work. desmog.com/s-fred-singer/
Hoover's John Cochrane also has some opinions on climate change. If you think about it, it could actually be good. Because Texas. johnhcochrane.blogspot.com/2021/09/climat…