The Maine Wire
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
  • Support the Maine Wire
  • Store
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending News
  • The FBI Showed Up at His Door When He Was 14 | The Pastorโ€™s Office Ep. 15
  • Community-Driven Pedestrian Safety Campaign Launches in Portland, Lewiston, and Auburn
  • Pedo Maine Disbarred Lawyer, Nearly Elected Governor, Back In Jail
  • Boston Lemonade Stand Robbed At Gunpoint, Cops Search For Two Juvenile Suspects
  • Gubernatorial Primaries, CD2 Democratic Primary Move to Ranked Choice Voting Tabulations
  • Social Security Administration to Halt Issuance of Paper Check by the End of the Year
  • Elon Musk Nears Trillionaire Status as SpaceX IPO Sends Fortune Soaring
  • Lewiston Juvenile Charged With Conspiracy to Commit Murder After Arrest With Two Loaded Handguns
Facebook Twitter Instagram
The Maine Wire
Saturday, June 13
  • News
  • Commentary
  • The Blog
  • About
  • Support the Maine Wire
  • Store
The Maine Wire
Home ยป News ยป Commentary ยป The atrocious ethics of Fauci’s lockdown defense
Commentary

The atrocious ethics of Fauci’s lockdown defense

Jon MiltimoreBy Jon MiltimoreSeptember 26, 2022Updated:September 26, 2022No Comments7 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Email LinkedIn Reddit
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email

On February 7, 1968, after American military forces rained rockets, napalm, and bombs on the village of Ben Tre in South Vietnam, killing hundreds of civilians, Associated Press reporter Peter Arnett quoted a military officerโ€™s justification of the event.

โ€œIt became necessary to destroy the town to save it,โ€ a US major was quoted as saying.

Arnett, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter whoโ€™d go on to become one of the last western journalists in Saigon until its capture in 1975, never revealed the source of the quote, which some US officials doubted was authentic. Nevertheless, the quoteโ€”which eventually morphed into the pithier “We had to destroy the village in order to save itโ€โ€”became a symbol of an absurd military strategy in a failed war.

While the reasoning is absurdโ€”destroying a town is no way to save itโ€”the ethics that underpin the quote are surprisingly common and convey a simple and popular idea: a wrong, evil, or unjust action can be morally justifiable because it ultimately brings about a greater good.

โ€˜You Have to Do Something Draconianโ€™

The latest public official to employ such reasoning is Dr. Anthony Fauci, who recently offered this justification for the governmentโ€™s pandemic response, which included lockdowns, widespread business closures, and other โ€œdraconianโ€ public policies.

“You have to do something that’s rather draconian, and sometimes when you do draconian things, it has collateral negative consequences,” the National Institutes of Health director explained. โ€œJust like when you shut things down, even temporarily, it does have deleterious consequences on the economy, on the school children, you have to make a balance.โ€

Fauci, who in August announced his intention to retire before the end of the year, continued:

โ€œWe know the only way to stop something cold in its tracks is to try to shut things down. If you shut things down just for the sake of it, thatโ€™s bad. But if you do it for the purpose to regroup and open up in a safe way, thatโ€™s the way to do it.โ€

FAUCI: "You have to do something that's rather draconian, and sometimes when you do draconian things, it has collateral negative consequences." pic.twitter.com/fEGAbM588a

— Townhall.com (@townhallcom) September 21, 2022

Fauciโ€™s phrasing in this last partโ€”that lockdowns are the only way โ€œto stop something cold in its tracksโ€โ€”is odd because itโ€™s clear that lockdowns did no such thing. The official data plainly show the virus circulated and people died regardless of the presence of lockdowns and other non-pharmaceutical interventions. Not only was the virus not stopped โ€œcold in its tracks,โ€ an abundance of research shows lockdowns do little to reduce virus spread and Covid mortality.

But letโ€™s put aside the empirical results of lockdowns and analyze the ethics Fauci uses to justify them, particularly his use of the word โ€œdraconian,โ€ which means โ€œexcessively harsh and severe.โ€

The word traces back to the Greek legislator Draco (or Drakon) who in about 621 B.C. laid out the very first written Athenian constitution. As you can probably guess, these laws were quite harsh. Those who fell into debt were forced into slavery to their creditors, for example (unless one was of noble birth), while those caught stealing were sentenced to death, even if it was something as simple as a head of cabbage from the marketplace.

โ€œIt is said that Drakon himself, when asked why he had fixed the punishment of death for most offenses, answered that he considered these lesser crimes to deserve it, and he had no greater punishment for more important ones,โ€ the historian Plutarch wrote.

One can see how Draco earned title to an adjective that means โ€œexcessively harsh and severe,โ€ which is what makes Fauciโ€™s invocation of this term so troubling. Dracoโ€™s treatment of petty criminals was harsh and excessive, but at least punishment was meted out against people convicted of crimes.

Fauci, on the other hand, is defending โ€œdraconianโ€ public policies that harm innocent people. During the pandemic, people were arrested for leaving their homes, driving their cars, paddling a boat, or going to a park. Moreover, Fauci admits these draconian policies also had other โ€œdeleterious consequences.โ€ These included mental health deterioration, record drug overdoses, systemic fraud of taxpayers, millions of jobs lost, increased self-harm (especially among teenage girls), and more.

Despite these consequences, Dr. Fauci has consistently defended lockdowns, insisting that the draconian policies served a greater good.

The Danger of Pursuing โ€˜the Greater Goodโ€™

Justifying actions not on their morality but on their potential outcomes is a dangerous philosophy for individuals, because it allows humans to rationalize their actionsโ€”even evil ones. The great Russian author Fyodor Dostoevsky demonstrates this well in his classic novel Crime and Punishment, which centers on a young idealist named Raskolnikov who justifies killing an unprincipled old woman who works as a pawnbroker because it would lift him from poverty and allow him to become a great man, and perform great deeds for humanity.

While pursuing a greater good instead of acting ethically is dangerous individual philosophy, history shows itโ€™s far more dangerous collectively.

โ€œMany of the most monstrous deeds in human history have been perpetrated in the name of doing goodโ€”in pursuit of some ‘noble’ goal,โ€ noted the great thinker and FEE founder Leonard Read.

Read was right, and the examples are ubiquitous.

When Franklin Rooseveltt issued Executive Order 9066 in February 1942, which led to the internment of more than 100,000 Japanese-American men, women, and children, virtually everyone conceded it violated the Bill of Rights, including FDRโ€™s own Attorney General Francis Biddle. The order was carried out anyway, however, because it was seen as serving a greater good: winning World War II.

Forced sterilization policies and government experiments on prisoners and unsuspecting subjects, including the notorious MKUltra Project and the Tuskegee Study, were also clearly ethically bankrupt, but they were carried out nevertheless because each served a โ€œgreater purposeโ€โ€”scientific progress and the creation of โ€œpurerโ€ gene pools.

Itโ€™s an objective truth that many of the greatest atrocities of the twentieth centuryโ€”from Hitlerโ€™s Final Solution to Maoโ€™s Great Leap Forward to the Killing Fields of Cambodiaโ€”were ushered in by governments violating the individual rights of civilians for a greater good: a better collective society.

This is precisely why Read said one of the greatest philosophical mistakes people make is to judge the ends they seek, not the means they use.

“Ends, goals, aims are but the hope for things to comeโ€ฆThey are not a part of the reality,โ€ Read explained in Let Freedom Reign. “Examine carefully the means employed, judging them in terms of right and wrong, and the end will take care of itself.”

This is the great and grave mistake made by Dr. Fauci. He failed to distinguish ends from means. Like the Army major who told Peter Arnett it was necessary โ€œto destroy the town to save it,โ€ Fauci rationalized a draconian action to pursue a greater goodโ€”and caused irreparable harm to the American people and Constitution as a result.

Itโ€™s never too late to learn from a mistake, however.

Indeed, even the people of Ancient Greece saw that Dracoโ€™s constitution was deeply flawed, and most of his laws were repealed by the Athenian statesman Solon (630โ€“560 B.C.) the following century.

Let us hope Americans learn a similar lesson.

This article was originally published on FEE.org. Read the original article.

anthony fauci Commentary coronavirus COVID-19 dr. anthony fauci dr. fauci Featured lockdowns Opinion pandemic
Previous ArticleMaine unemployment ticked upward in August
Next Article Pandemic unemployment fraud estimated to exceed $45 billion
Jon Miltimore

Jonathan Miltimore is the Managing Editor of FEE.org. His writing/reporting has been the subject of articles in TIME magazine, The Wall Street Journal, CNN, Forbes, Fox News, and the Star Tribune.

Latest News

The FBI Showed Up at His Door When He Was 14 | The Pastorโ€™s Office Ep. 15

June 12, 2026

Graham’s Ex-flames Now Coming Forward To Dish On The Infamous ‘Sperm King,’ Janet Is Secretly Jealous

June 11, 2026

Field Notes: Graham Platner & Shenna Bellows Rally

June 11, 2026

Comments are closed.

Recent News

Community-Driven Pedestrian Safety Campaign Launches in Portland, Lewiston, and Auburn

June 12, 2026

Pedo Maine Disbarred Lawyer, Nearly Elected Governor, Back In Jail

June 12, 2026

Boston Lemonade Stand Robbed At Gunpoint, Cops Search For Two Juvenile Suspects

June 12, 2026

Gubernatorial Primaries, CD2 Democratic Primary Move to Ranked Choice Voting Tabulations

June 12, 2026

Social Security Administration to Halt Issuance of Paper Check by the End of the Year

June 12, 2026
Newsletter

News

  • News
  • Campaigns & Elections
  • Opinion & Commentary
  • Media Watch
  • Education
  • Media

Maine Wire

  • About the Maine Wire
  • Advertising
  • Contact Us
  • Submit Commentary
  • Complaints
  • Maine Policy Institute

Resources

  • Maine Legislature
  • Legislation Finder
  • Get the Newsletter
  • Maine Wire TV

Facebook Twitter Instagram Steam RSS
  • Post Office Box 7829, Portland, Maine 04112

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.