“It's interesting that there's been a lot of misdirection from what we've seen,” said Dr. Harvey Risch, M.D., Ph.D., Professor of Epidemiology, Yale School of Public Health and the Yale School of Medicine.
“We put out our scientific understandings and evidence, and then we get criticized on things that we didn't say.
I think part of the problem has been that what's been purveyed to our society is plausibility, but not science.
There's a big difference between things that seem plausible and things that are scientific.
And so lockdowns are plausible, but they're not scientific.
The scientific evidence as we've seen is how harmful they've been.”