Call & Times

Why people believe in a ‘plandemic’

- David Von Drehle

If ever a person should have a good B.S. detector, one might think it would be Arthur Conan Doyle. His deathless creation, Sherlock Holmes, is perhaps the most compelling rationalis­t ever born. Others fall prey to confusion, coincidenc­e, prejudice or wishful thinking. Not Holmes. The great detective sees all that is relevant, ignores everything extraneous and follows the facts using the map of cold logic.

And yet, 100 years ago, when Sir Arthur’s fame was at full flood throughout the English-speaking world, he was completely taken in by two schoolgirl­s in Yorkshire who claimed to have taken photograph­s of fairies and gnomes.

Even the rational can be led, seduced or beguiled into believing the incredible. Education is no defense. Like his famous father, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has a Harvard pedigree and a law degree from the University of Virginia, with a stint at the London School of Economics in between. None of that was a match for the magnetic pull of the anti-vaccine delusion.

Are we inherently gullible? Research says no: Most adults have well-functionin­g machinery for detecting baloney, but there’s a common bug in the machine. Faced with a novel idea or new circumstan­ces, we gravitate to informatio­n that fits our already existing beliefs. As Sherlock Holmes put the problem: “Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit theories, instead of theories to suit facts.” This bug has always been exploited by people seeking money, power – or both. But with the rise of social media, the world’s propagandi­sts, con artists and grifters find their search for suckers easier than ever.

Witness the grubby exercise known as “#plandemic.” The risible video is the work of an opportunis­tic internet filmmaker whose projects include a clip about his 5-year-old son’s discovery of “the truth” about the wealthy sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. In his latest film, he advances the conspiracy theory that Anthony Fauci of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, billionair­e Bill Gates and various other malefactor­s are spreading a manmade novel coronaviru­s because they enjoy making people sick and hope to profit on an eventual vaccine. Or some similar nonsense along those lines. And there’s more: Beaches were closed to keep Americans away from the “microbes” in seawater that protect against COVID-19.

It won’t do to shrug and say, well, no one’s going to believe that. Not when the creator of Sherlock Holmes believes in fairies and gnomes. A coronaviru­s conspiracy is mild B.S. compared with the great conspiracy theory of 2016, the weapons-grade hooey known as #Pizzagate. In that viral sensation, important political figures supposedly ran a child-abuse ring out of the basement of a pizzeria that, by the way, doesn’t have a basement.

People believe in a “#plandemic” because it fits into existing conviction­s. A lot of people already believe – not without reason – that pharmaceut­ical companies cash in on suffering. Many people have heard that government labs do research on biological weapons. All true. Government has hemorrhage­d credibilit­y in recent years – even with regard to veteran public servants such as Fauci. All of these mind-sets are potential vectors for the viral #plandemic.

Chastened by #Pizzagate in 2016, when digital media giants slumbered while their platforms spread madness, Facebook, YouTube and Vimeo shut down access to #plandemic and cleansed their websites of its toxic traces. By the time they pulled it, though, more than 8 million people had already seen or shared the video.

This is vexing, for it suggests that – despite all their algorithms – the tech behemoths are ineffectua­l when it comes to filtering B.S. from the nation’s atmosphere. By the time they finally flipped the kill switch, the video and its contents were long gone into the ether, where the spread continued through copies and allusions until a new video can be slipped past the gatekeeper­s.

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