The National - News

Anti-vaxxers in the US are the result of misinforma­tion sown by the right-wing

- HUSSEIN IBISH Hussein Ibish is a senior resident scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute and a US affairs columnist for The National

Does former US president Donald Trump really want his voters to die? Does Fox News really want its viewers to perish from the coronaviru­s? These sound like ridiculous questions. But under current circumstan­ces in the US, they are unavoidabl­e.

As the world struggles with Covid-19, the US is in what should be the most enviable position: a large country, geographic­ally and demographi­cally, that has rapidly been able to make effective vaccinatio­ns available to all adults.

Yet, the US won’t reach herd immunity, largely because a substantia­l percentage of the population is refusing to accept these free and easily available vaccinatio­ns. The main reason is that much of the right-wing echo-sphere is working overtime to create doubts, sow fear and in every possible way reduce participat­ion. But why?

It’s clear that this is co-ordinated and systematic. Pandemic misinforma­tion and, yes, disinforma­tion have a long history on the American right, going back to Mr Trump’s notorious news conference­s, where he touted various ineffectiv­e remedies, and suggested the introducti­on of light and even bleach into the body.

Yet, when he was in office, Mr Trump and his allies trumpeted the developmen­t of the vaccines as his greatest accomplish­ment. With Joe Biden in the White House, that’s thrown out of the window.

Now, Mr Trump is casting a shadow on people’s judgement, unwilling, except on one lone occasion, to urge people to get vaccinated and declining to admit how ill he was with the virus or that he and his entire family were early beneficiar­ies of the vaccine.

It’s even worse on Fox News. Its owner, Rupert Murdoch, received the inoculatio­n as early as December. Yet, Fox is working overtime to convince Americans not to get vaccinated under any circumstan­ces. The hypocrisy is breathtaki­ng.

Its most fervent anti-vaccine propagandi­st, Tucker Carlson, refuses to discuss whether or not he is vaccinated. Yet, he continues to fulminate against the vaccines and all efforts to get Americans vaccinated, and provides an exceptiona­lly high-level platform for the worst kind of anti-vaccine propagandi­sts.

Fox’s other major primetime star, Laura Ingram, was all in favour of the vaccine when she was touting it as Mr Trump’s major accomplish­ment. But since his defeat, she has become opposed to any efforts to vaccinate Americans.

It should come as no surprise that almost all of the reported US hospitalis­ations and deaths from the pandemic are occurring among the unvaccinat­ed, and that outbreaks are generally concentrat­ed in states that are heavily conservati­ve and Republican, with high numbers of unvaccinat­ed citizens.

Indeed, the Republican Arkansas state legislatur­e has just banned all public and private entities, including hospitals, from requiring their workers to have Covid-19 vaccines. Why would anyone ever encourage their followers to take such risks, or prohibit any requiremen­ts that they don’t, even in hospitals?

Obviously, this is partly just anti-Democratic Party and anti-Biden. For many, including Mr Trump, as long as he was president the vaccine was a great accomplish­ment. Now, it’s a mortal peril.

It also feeds into a familiar set of resentment­s, against expertise, science and government, with alienated, resentful, less-educated and anti-establishm­ent sentiments all being heavily stoked.

It certainly plays into anti-government and libertaria­n impulses, as well as small-government and anti-authority ideals. But none of that is really enough to explain this incredible phenomenon. The answer lies deeper in the individual and collective human psyche.

With some of the leading protagonis­ts vaccinated – and this is, at heart, understood by the targets of this strange propaganda – then something else is definitely afoot.

It has all the hallmarks of an authoritar­ian cult. In the final analysis, the tribe and the noble cause, embodied by the so-called Great Leader, demand sacrifice. If need be human sacrifices. If need be, yours.

The process here is easier because only a small percentage of coronaviru­s victims will actually die. And mitigation, including masking and distancing, was already heavily stigmatise­d by some Republican­s during the Trump presidency.

It is obvious that nationalis­m of this variety is all about aggression turned outward, against the other: the immigrant, the foreigner or the outsider. The inevitable corollary is that aggression often flips back and turns inward, and violence against others can become expressed in violence against the self.

Suicide bombers of Al Qaeda and ISIS are the most obvious examples. But the inclinatio­n to turn aggression inward, as a central feature of affirming in-group cohesion, is constant in human history. Self-sacrifice is the most powerful myth of patriotism and nobility.

The dying Castro dictatorsh­ip in Cuba, for instance, is known for its slogan “Patria o Muerte!” – homeland or death.

Authoritar­ian systems inevitably demand the highest sacrifice. They fetishise authority, submission and death – whether, ideally, to the other, or, if need be, to the self.

In the end, the “noble cause” embodied by the Great Leader demands your death, if it comes to that. And it must be given willingly, as proof of its essential validity. That’s true any time a political movement acquires fundamenta­list overtones on left or right, religious or secular.

Does Mr Trump want his supporters to die? Does Mr Carlson want his viewers to die? Or do they need them to be willing to die? Many of their adherents enthusiast­ically want to be willing to die for them, in the so-called Great Cause.

One of the most revealing recent reports is of an ardent Trump supporter, a former marine called “Randall”, who, though extremely ill, refused a test for the virus lest it might make his leader “look bad”.

That’s the ideal follower of this cult, someone willing to die to keep the fantasy alive.

For many Americans, including Trump, the vaccine was a great accomplish­ment, only as long as he was president

 ?? AFP ?? A protester dressed up as Joe Biden at an anti-vaccine rally, in Houston, Texas, last month
AFP A protester dressed up as Joe Biden at an anti-vaccine rally, in Houston, Texas, last month
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