The World Health Organization put out questionable guidance on how to deal with the Coronavirus.
It was slow to communicate the magnitude of the threat, and it whitewashed the Chinese government's
early handling of the crisis. It destroyed much of its credibility, damaged the field of public health,
and failed to contain the pandemic. Now is not the time. That's a bit too early to consider that this event
is a public health emergency of international concern. WHO's response in part stems from its overly deferential
stance towards China, which is its second biggest contributor among 194 member states.
A phenomenal collective action and cooperation by the people of China to this response.
We would have seen many more cases outside China by now if it were not for the government's efforts
to protect their own people and the people of the world. The Chinese government is to be congratulated
for the extraordinary measures it has taken to contain the outbreak.
WHO whitewashed the authoritarian governments overall record. It praised China for releasing the
virus's genome while neglecting to mention that it took them at least 17 days to do so.
It didn't report human to human transmission until late January, even though Chinese doctors suspected
at least a month earlier. Although the extreme lockdown of Wuhan likely did save thousands of lives,
WHO scientists weren't allowed into Wuhan until three weeks after the outbreak first came to light.
Meanwhile, the WHO praised the Chinese for their openness. China took action massively at the epicenter,
and that helped in preventing cases from being exported. If we say there's a pandemic of coronavirus,
we're essentially accepting that every human on the planet will be exposed to that virus.
And China has clearly shown that that's not necessarily the natural outcome of this event.
As the virus continued spreading across Europe and reached America, WHO recommended
that the travel industry maintained the status quo. There is no reason for measures that unnecessarily
interfere with international travel and trade. One country that ignored this advice was Taiwan,  which also warned
the WHO that it suspected the virus was spreading through human to human transmission,
and was ignored. Taiwan, which has one of the lowest rates of known COVID infections per capita
among countries impacted by the virus, was prevented from joining the WHO as a member country in 2015
by China, which refuses to acknowledge its independence. In late March, World Health Organization
Epidemiologist Bruce Aylward, declined to answer a Hong Kong reporter's question about Taiwan,
or even acknowledge its existence.
As Taiwan was distributing facemasks to its citizens the WHO was advising the rest of the world that
they were unnecessary and initially the
CDC and US Surgeon General followed its
lead mask should only be used by
healthcare workers caretakers or by
people who are sick with symptoms of
fever and cough if you do not have these
symptoms you do not have to wear masks
because there is no evidence that they
protect people who are not sick but
health experts pointed to mounting
evidence that masks can help slow the
spread of respiratory diseases
especially among asymptomatic carriers a
population that the w-h-o maintains is
virtually non-existent despite mounting
evidence to the contrary in mid-february
the w-h-o trumpeted good news from China
China continued to show a decline in new
confirmed cases once again encouraged by
this trend ignoring evidence that it may
have been a statistical anomaly and US
intelligence believes that China has
entirely misrepresented both case
numbers and death tolls according to
Bloomberg News finally on March 11th
after Italy was already in full national
lockdown with more than 10,000 cases
w-h-o finally acknowledged the true
magnitude of the crisis declaring a
global pandemic corvid 19 can be
characterized as a pandemic
they could have called it months earlier
they should have known and they probably
didn't know so we'll be looking into
that very carefully and we're gonna put
a hold on money spent to the w-h-o
Donald Trump and other world leaders
aren't absolved for their failures by
the wh o--'s bungling of this crisis but
it's important to remember that if the
World Health Organization had done its
job
the nightmare were living through might
not have happened at all
