

The House Select Subcommittee On the Coronavirus Pandemic has concluded its final report after an intensive two year investigation that vindicates many of those who were critical of the official pandemic response.
Chairman Brad Wenstrup released what he calls the “most thorough review of the pandemic conducted to date, including an after action review of the U.S. government’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic along with the lessons learned.
To compile the report, the subcommittee sent more than 100 investigative letters, conducted 38 transcribed interviews or depositions, held 25 different hearings or meetings and reviewed more than a million pages of documents.
Among those findings the committee learned that the National Institutes of Health (NIH) did, in fact, fund gain-of-function research and that Covid emerging from a lab leak is “not a conspiracy theory.”
The report also recommended that EcoHealth Alliance, Inc. and Dr. Peter Daszak “should never again receive U.S. taxpayer dollars.”
The subcommittee also found that “rampant waste, fraud and abuse plagued the Covid-19 pandemic response” and that public health officials lost the trust of the people.
One of the most important findings of the subcommittee was that the Constitution cannot be suspended in times of crisis and that restrictions on freedom sow distrust of public health.
Those who were labeled as “conspiracy theorists” and censored and blacklisted on social media for noticing what they weren’t supposed to notice turned out to have been largely proven right on nearly every issue surrounding the pandemic response.
Senator Mike Lee (R-UT) says this report will stand as a warning for future generations of what not to do.