Los Angeles Times

Vaccine foes and far- right groups align

Experts worry that focus on coronaviru­s shots will further fuel government mistrust.

- By Anita Chabria

STOCKTON — As California and the nation begin rolling out coronaviru­s vaccines, anti- vaccine campaigner­s are aligning with small- business owners and far- right groups, an effort that some experts fear could supercharg­e mistrust of government at a crucial moment for public health.

In California, the movement toward businesses is being led by a group calling itself Freedom Angels 2.0. Originally founded by three women in response to a 2019 state bill tightening vaccine requiremen­ts for attendance in schools, the organizati­on was best known for its protests at the state Capitol against that measure and other vaccine legislatio­n, often f illing hallways and disrupting hearings with children in tow.

But as the coronaviru­s has spread, so has the group’s message — encompassi­ng a more mainstream, values- driven ideology that centers on government overreach. That broader approach has helped the organizati­on interest a new audience in the business community, along with others worried about schools, the economy and the social toll of isolation for seniors.

“There is this strategic mission creep into other groups that might feel disaffecte­d,” said Richard Carpiano, a professor of public policy and sociology at UC Riverside, who has followed the anti- vaccine movement.

At the same time, extremist experts have warned that militant groups who have been protesting election results and lockdowns across the country have also turned their attention to the anti- vaccine movement, where they see a cause that could unite followers after a presidenti­al transition.

Eric Ward, senior fellow at the Southern Poverty Law Center, said he has tracked a deliberate “altright attempt to politicize the ... anti- vaxxer movement,” with the pandemic providing “fertile ground for that organizing because folks are fearful right now.”

Devin Burghart, a socialjust­ice campaigner who specialize­s in research on white nationalis­m, said anti- vac

cine activists appear to be adopting the language and beliefs of militia causes along with reopen rhetoric, an attempt to radicalize existing anti- vaccine networks, including mothers concerned about their children’s health.

“What started as essentiall­y wine moms and health- conscious yoga types has become in short order the militant wing of the COVID- 19 insurrecti­on,” said Burghart, executive director of the Institute for Research and Education on Human Rights. “They have been inundated with this larger far- right base of activism that has inexorably altered their trajectory.”

Burghart said he has tracked crossover between chapters of the Freedom Angels in other states and groups including People’s Rights, founded by antigovern­ment activist Ammon Bundy, which has suggested the need for violent noncomplia­nce with coronaviru­s public health measures. In California, Freedom Angels members have posted pictures online holding guns, and its founders have offered firearm safety training and advice on circumvent­ing lockdown orders.

As the different factions have come together online and at protests, Carpiano and others said, they are potentiall­y “cross- pollinatin­g ” ideologies and spreading unfounded conspiraci­es and inaccurate informatio­n, especially to audiences that have not previously taken part and who may not fully understand the far- right alliances.

“It is more concerning now to see how they have been legitimize­d more by expanding into these new areas and getting these new allies,” Carpiano said.

Already, less than half of Americans said they will definitely get the vaccine, and about a quarter said they would not, according to a recent poll by the Associated Press- NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. About 70% of Americans need to take the vaccine in order to control spread of the virus, according to health experts.

Ward said the Freedom Angels have only recently come on his radar but that their inf luence has grown quickly.

“They’re an organizati­on that has sought to resist state efforts to mandate vaccinatio­ns and their recent activity has really kind of ground them as an essential leadership group across the United States,” he said.

When coronaviru­s lockdowns first were announced in spring, anti- vaccine groups, including the Freedom Angels, were quick to join with anti- lockdown protesters, f inding common ground in suspicion of government motives, and the idea that personal freedoms were at risk because of the public health rules. Colorado, Florida, Texas and Wisconsin are a few of the states that have seen the “odd bedfellows” of anti- vaccine groups with those angered by public health measures to combat the virus, as Carpiano describes it.

In California, rallies at the Capitol in Sacramento organized by the Freedom Angels at times drew thousands of supporters from across a spectrum of discontent, ranging from church leaders to tea party types to Blue Lives Matter advocates unhappy with protests over police shootings.

The Capitol rallies also drew alt- right groups including the Proud Boys, which, along with proTrump protesters who continue to falsely dispute the election of Biden as president, have been involved in multiple violent clashes with antifascis­t groups in recent weeks in Sacramento.

Ward, an expert in extremist groups, predicts that those forces will remain allied under the new presidenti­al administra­tion, coalescing around mistrust of COVID- 19 vaccinatio­ns. Burghart predicts economic discontent and anger at lockdown measures will also persist as binding forces.

The growing popularity of those grievances can be seen in places such as the San Joaquin Valley, hit hard by both the coronaviru­s and the economic shutdown. As the latest round of lockdowns has closed restaurant­s and services such as salons, the Freedom Angels have again pivoted, turning their attention to local communitie­s and to the idea of “sanctuary cities” for businesses, exempt from lockdown rules.

The push to advocate for mom- and- pops in dire straits has upped the group’s profile and earned it trust from desperate entreprene­urs unaware of its vaccine efforts, as it targets city councils and supervisor­ial boards on behalf of beleaguere­d businesses.

“It gives them popularity. It gives them exposure. It gives them more legitimacy,” Carpiano said.

Their message of government going too far especially resonates in California’s largely conservati­ve inland and Northern areas. Shutdown orders have temporaril­y shuttered thousands of small businesses and many owners say they are on the brink of closing permanentl­y without f inancial aid or the ability to serve customers. At the same time, the closure orders seem arbitrary to some — leaving many big- box stores able to operate while small businesses face more restrictiv­e measures.

Stockton restaurant owner Johnny Hernandez and his partner and fiancee Rocio Arevalo, a nurse, are small- business owners who have joined a Freedom Angels effort in that city, though they had never heard of the group previously and were unaware of its background.

Hernandez and Arevalo have tried to work under state restrictio­ns to keep their gastropub going, but are almost out of money and solutions, they said. They did not qualify for federal loans because they have only been open two years and lost money the first year— knocking them out of eligibilit­y, Arevalo said. Now, they are desperate to be allowed to operate, even if only with outdoor dining, to keep their venture alive.

“It’s news to me who they are,” Hernandez said at a recent rally on the steps of Stockton’s City Hall.

“Not once has anyone spoken about [ vaccines],” Arevalo added.

Neither was concerned about the affiliatio­n.

“It’s about business. It’s about surviving,” Arevalo said.

In a recent interview with The Times, Tara Thornton, a co- founder of Freedom Angels Foundation — the original group that protested vaccine legislatio­n but that has since splintered — said she is not surprised that her new organizati­on has found allies in the business community. She says entreprene­urs feel unheard by government and are out of options.

“They are pushed against the wall where there is no one else to go to,” said Thornton, who lives in Northern California.

Co- founder Denise Aguilar, who lives in Stockton, said that the issue of small businesses closing isn’t a reach for her group, because she views lockdown rules, like vaccine requiremen­ts, as unwarrante­d government intrusion.

“This is the same issue,” she said. “It’s always the same thing. It’s overreach.”

But the group has not abandoned its vaccine opposition.

“You are getting the libertaria­nism with a whole bunch of pseudoscie­nce and conspiracy theories,” Carpiano said.

In a recent interview with The Times, Thornton contended that PCR tests, used to diagnose COVID- 19, are inaccurate and “not capable” of detecting the infection. She and other members of the Freedom Angels have also spoken publicly and on social media repeating larger debunked medical theories, including that the virus is no worse than the f lu. They have stormed local government meetings without masks.

Both Thornton and Aguilar said they were opposed to COVID- 19 vaccines, and expected their group to speak out against them in coming months, and predicted more widespread support for their views as more vaccines rolled out amid restrictio­ns.

“You can see that is something coming from a mile away,” Aguilar said.

Richard Pan ( D- Sacramento), the only doctor in the state Senate who has also been targeted for harassment by the Freedom Angels and other anti- vaccine groups, said he believes the anti- vaccine contingent remains a “loud minority,” but concedes it could have an oversize effect.

“They have been able to seed enough people that they can endanger everyone else,” Pan said. “They are just large enough to ruin it for all of us, and that is the big problem.”

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? TARA THORNTON, right, a co- founder of Freedom Angels Foundation, huddles with other demonstrat­ors detained during a protest against stay- at- home orders.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press TARA THORNTON, right, a co- founder of Freedom Angels Foundation, huddles with other demonstrat­ors detained during a protest against stay- at- home orders.

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