YouTube is not your campaign website

 Conor Friedersdorf, a reactionary wolf in classical liberal sheep's clothing, is shocked, shocked!

What this actually was was a 'panel discussion' between DeSantis, Scott Atlas, and the three authors of the Great Barrington declaration, trying to justify their repulsive actions during the COVID epidemic: the scientifically unfounded claim that one could reach 'herd immunity' via infection alone, along with abandonment of almost all public health measures to combat the disease, and a callous acceptance of a million deaths in the US alone. 

The declaration, as is usual with such attacks on the scientific consensus, once drafted, was signed mostly by people with no experience in the field, with dubious qualifications if not a record of quackery, and a religious or political act to grind. Previous petitions that attacked the theory of evolution and anthropogenic climate change served as a model.

DeSantis, whose record on COVID is disgraceful, was happy to get on board.

There is no reason YouTube needed to agree to host this. And, to their credit, they did not. DeSantis could have put it on his campaign website, where it belongs.

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