Thoughts

Farber Knows Fauci

I never considered myself a journalist. After graduating from college, I worked for about seven months as a reporter for the weekly newspaper in my hometown in Maine. About five years later, I began a year-and-a-half stint as staff writer for the weekly newspaper of the Archdiocese of Denver. My big story at The Katahdin Times was on Bob Irwin, blind man and recovered alcoholic who hiked the entire Appalachian Trail with his Guide Dog, a beautiful German shepherd named Orient. A picture book about Irwin and Orient sits on the shelf upstairs in Stella’s room, and the story I wrote got picked up by Reuters or some other wire service. In my days of writing for The Denver Catholic Register, I was collecting fans from all over the six-story building in Cherry Creek: if the Vocations Office or Respect Life Office or the Archbishop himself needed a propaganda piece, I was the one to compose it.

I have favorite books and favorite authors, but never a favorite journalist until I discovered Celia Farber in April of 2020. If it weren’t for Celia’s amazing piece on PCR testing and Covid that I just happened to catch a link to on Twitter, I might have worn more than a dozen times a real mask (not the crocheted one with giant holes I asked my daughter Bridget to make for me). It still pisses me off that I ever conceded and put one on, but we needed groceries and Mask Monitor Matt, who knew what was up and loved my crocheted one, wasn’t always stationed at the front of the store. I was also forced to wear one when Henry had to get tested for Lyme disease and our dog, Andi, was dying of it.

Celia led me to Kary Mullis’s autobiography, Dancing Naked in the Mind Field, Peter Dueberg’s Inventing the AIDS Virus, the documentary House of Numbers, and her own 1989 article on the criminal Anthony Fauci and the part he played in killing hundreds of thousands of AIDS patients (and others) who were convinced—by him, Luc Montagnier, and Robert Gallo—that they were on the fast track to death from a harmless retro virus.

In this brand new interview (part one and part two), Greg Reese gets Celia talking about her days at Spin Magazine, Fauci’s dirty dealings, the AIDS PSYOP that was the trial run for Covid, and the republishing of her book, Serious Adverse Events; An Uncensored History of AIDS, which I’ve just pre-ordered. It has a foreword written by one of my heroes, Mark Crispin Miller, and in the interview, Celia even talks a little about the 1985 Live Aid PSYOP (can’t wait to read this article) and mentions that physicist Richard Feynman was asking uncomfortable questions about the space shuttle Challenger explosion. My information collection is growing, and that pleases me.

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