Alex has made all the money he can off this crisis, so he doesn't really give a shit anymore. He stopped selling the food buckets, most likely because he caused a run on his supplier who couldn't keep up with the artificially inflated demand. According to Infowar's website, as of March 25th, they're opening back up orders, quote, for a very limited time, but it's also being called pre-orders and there's like a 12-week delay on deliveries. So this is no longer going to be something he can push with the same intensity. If the whole idea is that the shit is about to hit the fan, so you need to act now to get this food, it's hard to balance that with buy this now and you'll get the food in like three months. At the same time, the New York Attorney General's letter clearly has had its effect, and he knows better than to try and insinuate that his products are protection from or a solution to the virus, which is how he was marketing them for a stretch where he was more interested in making the audience afraid of the virus. There's no financial incentive in Alex making the audience afraid that way anymore, so he's not doing it. As it stands now, he has nothing to gain from making the audience afraid of the virus, so he's moved the rhetoric to the some people will get it, there'll be some deaths, but it's like the flu talking point because that's where it is.