Insights

The Real Reset: Ending the Tyranny of Medical
Lockdowns

Gary Null, PhD

Progressive Commentary Hour, October 19, 2020

With every passing day, new facts about the Covid-19 virus virulence and spread, our susceptibility to infection and the methods for testing are upending many earlier assumptions. Thousands of respected physicians, scientists, university professors and medical researchers are now questioning why the World Health Organization, the CDC, Anthony Fauci and other world health officials would continue to rely upon mathematical modeling that is being repeatedly shown to be devastatingly erroneous for dealing with this pandemic. Hundreds of articles and videos are appearing rapidly to raise very legitimate concerns about the official strategy. These are not being authored by conspiracy theorists; but rather they are by highly respected individuals in the medical community who are also at the heart of the orthodox paradigm.

Examples abound to show that the original projections for Covid-19 and its spread were wrong by substantial measures. The original antibody tests were grossly inaccurate. The PCR test for tracing infection rates is horribly misused and has resulted in the creation of a false scientific narrative.

Demanding quarantine for all citizens, closing schools and entirely disrupting normal human life is the ultimate fool’s errand. Our so-called best and brightest who oversee the pandemic have been either extremely naïve, utterly incompetent – which is doubtful – or more likely complicit in gross negligence.

Fortunately, at this moment, there is an increasing number of people worldwide stepping out of the comfort and safety of their esteemed positions as medical school professors and clinicians, risking their reputations, to challenge our current political and global policies.

In early October, the American Institute for Economic Research convened a meeting that brought together some of the world’s leading epidemiologists, scientists and journalists to examine in the spirit of open conversation and unbiased perspectives the dominant global emergency management for handling the pandemic. The end result is the Great Barrington Declaration. What these medical professionals have presented is a “focused protection strategy,” a scientifically measured approach to bring an end to the lockdowns. In the Declaration, they recommend, “Schools and universities should open for in-person teaching. Extracurricular activities such as sports should resume. Young, low risk adults should work normally rather than from home. Restaurants and other businesses should open. Arts, music, sports and other cultural activities should resume.”
The Declaration’s primary co-signers include:

Dr. Martin Kulldorff, professor of of medicine at Harvard University
Dr. Sunetra Gupta, professor of epidemiology at Oxford University
Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, professor at Stanford University Medical School
Dr. Alexander Walker, former Chair of Epidemiology, Harvard School of Public Health
Dr. Andrius Kavaliunas, epidemiologist at Karolinska Institute, Sweden
Dr. Angus Dalgleish, infectious disease expert and professor, University of London
Dr. Anthony J Brookes, professor of genetics, University of Leicester in UK
Dr. Annie Janvier, professor of pediatrics and clinical ethics, Université de Montréal
Dr. Ariel Munitz, professor of clinical microbiology and immunology, Tel Aviv University
Dr. Boris Kotchoubey, Institute for Medical Psychology, University of TĂŒbingen, Germany
Dr. Cody Meissner, professor of pediatrics, expert on vaccine development, Tufts University School of Medicine
Dr. David Katz, physician and founder of the Yale University Prevention Research Center
Dr. David Livermore, infectious disease epidemiologist and professor, University of East Anglia, UK
Dr. Eitan Friedman, professor of medicine, Tel-Aviv University, Israel
Dr. Eyal Shahar, professor (emeritus) of public health, University of Arizona
Dr. Florian Limbourg, professor at Hannover Medical School, Germany
Dr. Gabriela Gomes, mathematician studying infectious disease epidemiology, professor, University of Strathclyde, Scotland
Dr. Gerhard Krönke, professor of translational immunology, University of Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany
Dr. Gesine Weckmann, professor of health education and prevention, EuropÀische Fachhochschule, Germany
Dr. GĂŒnter Kampf, associate professor, Institute for Hygiene and Environmental Medicine, Greifswald University, Germany
Dr. Helen Colhoun, professor of medical informatics and epidemiology, University of Edinburgh
Dr. Jonas Ludvigsson, epidemiologist and professor at Karolinska Institute and senior physician at Örebro University Hospital, Sweden
Dr. Karol Sikora, oncologist, and professor of medicine at the University of Buckingham, UKL
Dr. Laura Lazzeroni, professor of psychiatry and biomedical data science, Stanford University Medical School
Dr. Lisa White, professor of epidemiology, Oxford University
Dr. Mario Recker, malaria researcher and associate professor, University of Exeter
Dr. Matthew Strauss, assistant professor of medicine, Queen’s University, Canada
Dr. Michael Levitt, biophysicist and professor of structural biology, Stanford University and Recipient of the 2013 Nobel Prize in Chemistry.
Dr. Motti Gerlic, professor of immunology, Tel Aviv University, Israel
Dr. Partha P. Majumder, founder of the National Institute of Biomedical Genomics, India
Dr. Paul McKeigue, professor of epidemiology and public health, University of Edinburgh
Dr. Rajiv Bhatia, physiciant and public policy expert, Veterans Administration, USA
Dr. Rodney Sturdivant, associate professor of biostatistics, Baylor University
Dr. Simon Thornley, epidemiologist and biostatistician, University of Auckland
Dr. Simon Wood, biostatistician and professor, University of Edinburgh, Scotland
Dr. Stephen Bremner,professor of medical statistics, University of Sussex
Dr. Sylvia Fogel, psychiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital and instructor at Harvard Medical School
Dr. Udi Qimron, professor of clinical microbiology and immunology, Tel Aviv University
Dr. Ulrike KĂ€mmerer, professor in virology and immunology University of WĂŒrzburg, Germany

No one is denying that the Covid-19 virus exists or its lethality. However, how the crisis is being managed is rightly being challenged by voices throughout the world. This is because some clear facts are being completely ignored and the mainstream media has been an utter failure to report them to the public.

Fact: People are dying from co-morbidities, such as heart disease, cancer, obesity and impaired immune systems; however, these are being mislabeled as Covid-19 deaths. This has resulted in grossly exaggerated and inflated statistics for the actual cause of deaths. The majority of so-called Covid-19 deaths were people already at the end of their lives, with or without the virus.

Fact: Among those who have tested positive for the virus and are either asymptomatic or have resolved the infection, if in fact it was Covid-19 and not another respiratory infection, have their immune systems to thank for. Health officials on the other hand have conflated the number of people testing positive with the false assumption that they are in turn spreaders or could die. Furthermore, there is no accurate test for confirming whether or not a person in deed is carrying the virus and is infectious.

Fact: The body’s own immune system, complemented by a healthy diet, an active life, stress management and nutrients – such as vitamins C and D, zinc and Omega-3 – has been shown to either prevent or lessen the virus’ impact.

None of these above facts are being shared or advocated by the mainstream. Instead, the entire strategy is based on new drugs and unproven vaccines that will likely be mandated.

This is a moment when we should stop and listen to other independent experts who do not have any corporate, political or ideological biases to pervert their rational thinking.

Announcement