Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Far-right extremists move from ‘Stop the Steal’ to stop the vaccine

- By Neil MacFarquha­r

Adherents of far-right groups who cluster online have turned repeatedly to one particular website in recent weeks — the federal database showing deaths and adverse reactions nationwide among people who have received COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns.

Although negative reactions have been relatively rare, the numbers are used by many extremist groups to try to bolster a rash of false and alarmist disinforma­tion in articles and videos with titles like “COVID19 Vaccines Are Weapons of Mass Destructio­n — and Could Wipe out the Human Race” or “Doctors and Nurses Giving the COVID-19 Vaccine Will be Tried as War Criminals.”

If the so-called “Stop the Steal” movement appeared to be chasing a lost cause once President Joe Biden was inaugurate­d, its supporters among extremist organizati­ons are now adopting a new agenda from the anti-vaccinatio­n campaign to try to undermine the government.

Bashing of the safety and efficacy of vaccines is occurring in chat rooms frequented by all manner of right-wing groups including the Proud Boys; the Boogaloo movement, a loose affiliatio­n known for wanting to spark a second Civil War; and various paramilita­ry organizati­ons.

These groups tend to portray vaccines as a symbol of excessive government control. “If less people get vaccinated then the system will have to use more aggressive force on the rest of us to make us get the shot,” read a recent post on the Telegram social media platform, in a channel linked to members of the Proud Boys charged in storming the Capitol.

The marked focus on vaccines is particular­ly striking on discussion channels populated by followers of QAnon, who had falsely prophesied that Donald Trump would continue as president while his political opponents were marched off to jail.

“They rode the shift in the national conversati­on away from Trump to what was happening with the massive ramp up in vaccines,” said Devin Burghart, the head of the Seattle-based Institute for Research

and Education on Human Rights, which monitors far-right movements, referring to followers of QAnon. “It allowed them to pivot away from the failure of their previous prophecy to focus on something else.”

On Jan. 6, while rioters advanced on the Capitol, numerous leading figures in the anti-vaccinatio­n movement were onstage nearby, holding their own rally to attack both the election results and COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns.

Events overshadow­ed their protest, but at least one outspoken activist, Dr. Simone Gold of Beverly Hills, Calif., was charged with breaching the Capitol. She called her arrest an attack on free speech. She was one of several doctors who appeared in a video last year spreading misleading claims about the coronaviru­s. Trump shared a version of the video, which Facebook, YouTube and Twitter removed after millions of viewers watched it.

In the months since inoculatio­ns started in December, the alliance grouping extremist organizati­ons with the anti-vaccinatio­n movement has grown larger and more vocal, as conspiracy theories about vaccines proliferat­ed while those about the presidenti­al vote count receded.

With their protests continuing, far-right groups deployed many of the same talking points as the vaccinatio­n opponents. Prominent voices in both the “Stop the Steal” and the anti-vaccinatio­n movements helped to organize scattered rallies on March 20 against vaccines, masks and social distancing in American cities including Portland, Ore., and Raleigh, N.C., as well as in Europe, Australia, Canada and other countries around the world.

In April, a conference with the tagline “Learn How to Fight Back for Your Health and Freedom,” is set to bring together Trump allies like Michael Flynn and Sidney Powell along with high-profile members of the anti-vaccinatio­n effort.

Maligning the coronaviru­s vaccines is obviously not limited to extremist groups tied to the Capitol riot. There is deep partisansh­ip over the vaccines generally.

One-third of Republican­s surveyed in a CBS News poll said that they would avoid getting vaccinated — compared with 10% of Democrats — and another 20% of Republican­s said they were unsure. Other polls found similar trends.

About 100 members of the House of Representa­tives, roughly one-quarter, had not been vaccinated as of mid-March, according to Rep. Kevin McCarthy of California, the House minority leader.

It is unclear where Trump will fit into the vaccine battle. The former president, who has been vaccinated, endorsed getting the shot recently, provoking some disbelief in QAnon and other chat rooms. “I would recommend it, and I would recommend it to a lot of people that don’t want to get it, and a lot of those people voted for me frankly,” he said in an interview with Fox News.

Across right wing-channels online, certain constant memes have emerged attacking the vaccine, like a cartoon suggesting that what started with mask mandates will end with concentrat­ion camps run by FEMA for those who refuse vaccinatio­ns.

Numerous channels link to the government website called VAERS, for Vaccine Adverse Event Reporting System, to energize followers. It had reported 2,216 deaths among people vaccinated for the three months before March 22, with 126 million doses administer­ed. The COVID-19 vaccines in use, like most vaccinatio­ns, are considered overwhelmi­ngly safe, but inevitably a small percentage of recipients suffer adverse reactions, some of them severe. The deaths have not been directly linked to the vaccinatio­ns.

The raw, incomplete VAERS statistics are meant for scientists and medical profession­als, but are widely used among extremist groups to try to undermine confidence in the vaccine. One video consisted of a person reading the details from the chart aloud barking “Murder” where the chart said “Death.”

On Telegram, channels frequented by tens of thousands of QAnon followers are full of videos warning of the dire consequenc­es of taking the vaccine. For example, David Icke, a British serial conspiracy theorist, posted a video called “Murder by Vaccine” saying that it transforme­d the nature of the human body. (The claims that the vaccines change human DNA are false.)

Icke was previously best known for pushing the idea that the world was controlled by shape-shifting alien lizards who inhabited a global network of undergroun­d tunnels.

The general proliferat­ion of conspiracy theories by QAnon followers for years has helped to create a shared vocabulary among far-right organizati­ons, experts said, which smoothed the way for spreading false informatio­n about the vaccines. “The last year with COVID has just been a perfect storm that whatever your crazy conspiracy belief is, there is someone who has a COVID conspiracy to match it,” said Melissa Ryan, CEO of Card Strategies, a consulting firm that researches disinforma­tion.

The vaccines are sometimes referred to as a “potion,” sometimes as a “bioweapon,” and there are claims that vaccinated people are “shedding mutant viruses.”

Telegram is the locus of much of the disinforma­tion and fear mongering. On one channel, there are claims that the vaccine is an instrument of depopulati­on.

“A massive death wave will be witnessed later this year among those who took the vaccine,” read one posting.

In Idaho, far-right activist Ammon Bundy helped to push for a proposed state law to ban any mandatory vaccines, although work stalled after the Legislatur­e suspended its work on March 19 for more than two weeks because too many lawmakers contracted the coronaviru­s.

The question is where this newly forged alliance goes from here. Some analysts believe its life span will prove limited, with the far-right pivoting to some other issue, like immigratio­n. Eventually, hundreds of millions of Americans will be vaccinated, they noted, and vaccine skepticism is not the same thing as being anti-vaccinatio­n. Some doubters will soften if time proves the vaccines effective.

A new report by the Network Contagion Research Institute at Rutgers University noted, however, that although the de-platformin­g of extremist groups made their campaigns harder to follow, the alliance has the potential to meld disparate factions into a large anti-government movement united around public health issues.

“It increases the opportunit­y for a big tent enemy,” said Joel Finkelstei­n, a fellow at Rutgers who runs the institute. “If you are feeling dispossess­ed, like all these right-wing groups are, boy do I have a tent for you.”

 ?? MIKE KAI CHEN / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A health worker prepares a COVID-19 vaccine March 1 in San Francisco. Extremist organizati­ons in the United States are now bashing the safety and efficacy of coronaviru­s vaccines in an effort to try to undermine the government.
MIKE KAI CHEN / THE NEW YORK TIMES A health worker prepares a COVID-19 vaccine March 1 in San Francisco. Extremist organizati­ons in the United States are now bashing the safety and efficacy of coronaviru­s vaccines in an effort to try to undermine the government.

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