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Comparing Fauci to a lawyer that has a fiduciary duty to his client suggests to me that you don't actually understand the responsibilities and law surrounding what the poster you're reply to alluded to. These two roles are nothing alike.
I am not claiming they are legally the same thing. I am claiming there are many situations (all of them legally different, yes) where you have no power to force somebody to follow your advice, and yet have the responsibility to give that advice honestly and with the interests of advised in mind. And if you do not do that, you will be considered doing something wrong and likely be open to sanctions. How exactly the sanctions would look like in each particular case, and what laws govern each particular case, is immaterial - what is material is the responsibility.
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Nothing alike legally, perhaps, but laws are just fever dreams BS'd up by some guy in a powdered wig. Whereas: morally? Why is it not analogous?
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