If you listen to the Tom Woods Show, you know I cover a wide variety of topics. So I promise, I am not obsessed with Covid.
But I am committed to doing what I can to making sure the wrong story about what happened doesn't take permanent root.
The latest trend is to belittle people who considered lockdowns and restrictions to have been both devastating and unjustified.
So, for example, we have this:
And this (in response to something Supreme Court Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote):
And then the somewhat low-IQ "don't these people know the lockdowns saved lives":
What was done to us was not a mild inconvenience, and it most assuredly did not "save lives."
And just because something is called "public health" tells us absolutely nothing about whether what it recommends actually saves lives, unless we're going to analyze this at the level of a 9-year-old.
For all three years of this -- and let me interrupt myself to say: it is three years and counting, because here's the former Surgeon General three days ago:
At any rate, for all three years of this I chronicled the madness day by day.
As I've looked back on what I wrote, I realized that even I, someone who wrote and thought about thesubject constantly, had forgotten 75 percent of the madness.
That's why I've decided to come out of retirement as an author and write a book on it all,a book that willbe different from the others I've seen in that it will be like a diary, reproducing the experience of watching the lunacy unfold one day at a time.
I will keep you posted.