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Former Trump adviser fires back at Dr. Birx over her coronavirus accusations: 'It is an Orwellian attempt to rewrite history'
Photo (left): Joshua Roberts/Getty Images; Photo (right): Joshua Roberts/Getty Images

Former Trump adviser fires back at Dr. Birx over her coronavirus accusations: 'It is an Orwellian attempt to rewrite history'

Dr. Scott Atlas, a former medical adviser to former President Donald Trump, fired back at accusations from Dr. Deborah Birx, who also worked in the Trump administration.

On Tuesday, excerpts of congressional testimony from Birx were released where she accused the Trump administration of being too distracted by the election. She also claimed in the comments from early October that 30% to 40% of the coronavirus deaths during Trump's term could have been avoided.

She went on to blame some voices skeptical of social distancing guidelines.

"Do I think that we could have done more on unified messaging coming out of the White House?" Birx asked rhetorically. "Do I think we could have done more on — very early on showing the efficacy of masks? Yes. And I think that would have decreased the confusion."

Atlas immediately fired back at Birx.

"It is an Orwellian attempt to rewrite history to blame those who criticized the lockdowns that were widely implemented for the failure of the lockdowns that were widely implemented," said Atlas in a statement Tuesday.

"The policy recommendations of Dr. Birx as Coordinator of the White House Task Force were implemented by governors throughout nearly the entire nation during 2020. Those policies failed to stop the dying, failed to stop the infection from spreading, and inflicted massive health damage and destruction, particularly on working class and lower-income families and on our children," he continued.

"History's biggest failure of public health policy lies directly at the hands of those who recommended the lockdowns and those who implemented them, not on those who advised otherwise. Period," he concluded.

Atlas went on to deny that he advised to "let the infection spread widely without mitigation to achieve herd immunity."

The denial by Atlas seemed at odds with comments he made in October 2020 advocating for lower-risk people to become infected.

Here's more about the coronavirus in the U.S.:

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