They can, like Ronald Reagan, fall under the spell of astrology and the horoscope of the day. According to Lou Cannon, in his book, President Reagan: The Role of a Lifetime, Reagan’s presidential program established in consultation with an astrologer. With his wife Nancy, Reagan attended the weekly astrology categories and the couple gave the impression at the zodiac festivities in Hollywood.
Cannon uncovered sufficient evidence that Reagan is “a government of, through and for the stars.” He’s incapable of thinking analytically. I fervently believed in satisfied endings. He found it difficult to distinguish between fantasy and reality.
But Reagan is one of the most successful American presidents in history. He is credited with breaking the back of the Soviet Union by attracting the Russians to an arms race with the United States and his Star Wars project. Speaking in Berlin in front of the Berlin Wall, Reagan told Mikhail Gorbachev, “Take down this wall.” And then, through magic, the wall fell, and successively all of Eastern Europe and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics. At that time, all foreign communism and the Cold War died.
None of the many Reagan biographers Reagan saw all this in a horoscope.
Unsurprisingly, due to the dying experience that all mankind is going through, there have been many crystalline predictions and reflections on how and when the pandemic will end.
Some have recently been very ambitious in their forecasts.
Is it just that President Donald Trump of the United States and President Rodrigo Duterte of the Philippines, less than a week apart from this month, have published big predictions about a coronavirus vaccine that will prevent the pandemic? Do you consult a crystal ball or an astrologer in control of their respective countries?
1. On 1 August, at a data meeting on Covid-19 in the Philippines. President Duterte said the country would “return to normal” until December. He said he hopes to get a vaccine against Chinese coronavirus until then.
“I promise you, by the grace of God, that I hope that until December we will return to normal,” he told his compatriots at the briefing.
“Let’s just wait for a vaccine. Let’s wait until December, if we can be patient … We’ll go back to a ‘new normal’. This will return to normal,” he said, widening restrictions in the Manila metropolitan area. domain until mid-August.
He said it was smart for the Philippines to have had smart relationships with China, as he expressed hope that China’s major pharmaceutical and study corporations will be in a position with a coronavirus vaccine before the end of the year.
2. On August 6, President Trump told an interviewer that a vaccine against American coronavirus was “possible” in November. He said a vaccine could occur before the November 3 presidential election, a more positive schedule than his leading infectious disease doctor gave him.
When Geraldo Rivera was asked, through the radio show, if a vaccine could come from the election, Trump said, “I think in some cases, yes, imaginable before. But at that moment.
Trump said the vaccine would be in a position “before the end of the year.” Maybe it’s a lot sooner.
“We have a lot of vaccines under study, by the way. We feel like we’re also very interested in vaccines and curative products,” he said.
A more cautious note issued Wednesday through Dr. Anthony Fauci, the leading medical officer of the U.S. combat who opposes the coronavirus pandemic.
Fauci said he was “cautiously optimistic” about good fortune and that “sometime towards the end of the year, in early 2021, we will know if they have an effective vaccine.”
Of several articles I’ve discovered on the subject, the revealing maxim and the recent high is that of Andrew Trunsky on the Daily Caller website on August 2, 2020. It’s titled: “Everything We Know About a Coronavirus Vaccine So Far.”
“Vaccines have shown promising results, leaving open the ones that exist before the end of 2020.
“But there are other barriers that may be just the benefits of a vaccine, such as a shortage of essential supplies, an underdeveloped distribution plan, and growing skepticism about vaccines.
“Researchers, governments and pharmaceutical corporations around the world have worked temporarily to expand an effective coronavirus vaccine.
“The tests have progressed and there is optimism that a vaccine will develop by 2021. But there are also fears that a vaccine may not be properly stored or effectively distributed. There is also fear that the development of distrust of vaccines will result in a giant number of injection rejections, making it less beneficial.
“The progression of the vaccine has progressed since the coronavirus genetic code was first discovered and shared internationally on January 10. Two months later, the National Institutes of Health administered their first human test.
“In April, Trump’s management presented Operation Warp Speed, a government effort to supply three hundred million doses of an effective vaccine opposed to Covid-19 through January 2021 as a component of a broader strategy to drive the development, manufacture and distribution of vaccines, therapies and diagnostics,” according to the Health and Human Services Decompotor website.
“And on July 27, a trial conducted through the NIH and Moderna, a Massachusetts pharmaceutical company, was initiated with 30,000 American volunteers, who, if successful, may be their ultimate test.
“In the UK, a study from the University of Oxford also yielded promising results, leaving open the option that the vaccine will be obtained faster than expected.
“President Donald Trump has touted positive effects in the United States and the United Kingdom, tweeting that a vaccine will be available until the end of the year.
“Despite the positive effects and statements of the president, Dr. Anthony Fauci, who has led the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases since 1984, said at a congressional hearing Friday that while it is ‘cautiously positive’ that a successful vaccine will be developed before the end of the year, it is unlikely to be available to the public.
“To effectively distribute the vaccine to Americans nationwide, the United States would want more than 700 million syringes and auger, assuming it will be given in two separate doses,” the Hill said. There are considerations that the scarcity of these materials would possibly save you the sufficient distribution of a vaccine.
“Awi Federgruen, a control professor at Columbia Business School, said the limited margin of error means the government will need to be ready to make sure that mandatory supplies, distribution channels and awareness campaigns are in place, despite what would possibly be loaded in the short term.
“You have to invest too much in this situation,” Federgruen told The Hill. “Additional investment prices in this area have nothing to do with having to delay the distribution of the vaccine for 3 or 4 more months.”