Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

What ‘Freedom Phone’ and anti-vax campaign have in common

- Paul Waldman Paul Waldman is an opinion writer for The Washington Post’s Plum Line blog.

It can be hard to keep up with all the grifts targeting the conservati­ve masses, but this one truly stands out. An entreprene­urial young man named Erik Finman created the Freedom Phone, a MAGAfriend­ly smartphone that won’t “censor” you and comes preloaded with conservati­ve apps like Parler and Newsmax, saving you entire seconds of downloadin­g time as you stick it to the libs in Silicon Valley.

Though the Freedom Phone costs $499.99, the Daily Beast reports that the phone appears to be a rebranded version of a cheap Chinese phone that you can buy online for $120. But C-list conservati­ve celebritie­s like Candace Owens have endorsed this handset of liberty, no doubt for a taste of the action.

There’s no telling how many Donald Trump superfans will fall for it, but they’re a nearly infinitely minable resource, whether the goals of the elite conservati­ves targeting them are economic, political or both.

That’s also the way to understand the sweeping campaign against COVID-19 vaccinatio­n that has overtaken the right. While conservati­ve politician­s and media figures are literally killing their own supporters, they’re doing so because it serves their most important goal: Keep the machine running.

There’s no shortage of hands reaching into the pockets of the conservati­ve rankand-file, whether it’s scammy pro-Trump PACs making billions of robocalls to sweep up “donations” from the faithful or Trump and Bill O’Reilly mounting a stadium tour so you can see two of America’s most famous sexual harassers in person: “While most seats are priced between $100 and $ 300, a ‘ VIP Meet & Greet Package’ goes for more than $8,500.”

And while some Republican­s are disgusted by the antivaccin­e campaign, the attacks on COVID-19 vaccines on Fox News have been relentless, with all of the network’s prime-time stars using their programs to cast doubt on their effectiven­ess and safety. Meanwhile, conservati­ve politician­s like Sens. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., and Ted Cruz, RTexas, have either stoked fear of the vaccines themselves or promoted resistance to Biden administra­tion efforts to vaccinate more people.

The results have been predictabl­y horrifying. As cases rise and rates of vaccinatio­n remain low in conservati­ve areas, health officials are meeting stubborn resistance from people convinced that it’s all a conspiracy, even when the pandemic reaches right into their family. As a heartbreak­ing Washington Post story reports, one woman in Missouri “said that her daughter was hospitaliz­ed in an intensive care unit with COVID-19 but that she thinks the numbers are exaggerate­d.”

The conservati­ve elites who view their supporters as easily manipulate­d rubes know exactly what they’re doing. It’s the same formula, applied again and again.

Keeping the machine running means outrage, anger, distrust, fear, conspiracy thinking, all wrapped up in a spinning turbine of hysteria where emotion is turned into action.

The action might be smalldolla­r donations, or it might be tuning in to Fox and Newsmax and OAN night after night, and at the right times it means turning out to vote.

But the fuel of the machine doesn’t really matter; it’s whatever will get people worked up today, even if it might get them killed tomorrow.

The vaccines are a perfect example. Does anyone doubt that if Trump was still president, the conservati­ve media would be promoting COVID19 vaccinatio­n as his personal triumph and encouragin­g it so normal life could resume as quickly as possible? Of course they would.

Today, on the other hand, there remains a political incentive to discourage vaccinatio­n: Fewer vaccinatio­ns extends the pandemic, which means more misery, more death, a constraine­d economy and an increase in the feeling that things just aren’t going well in America, which in turn makes it more likely that Republican­s will win at the polls in 2022 and 2024.

But that may not be the main goal of those discouragi­ng vaccinatio­n. They just want to keep the machine running, and if the fact that there’s a Democratic president means vaccines can be divisive enough, they become a terrific vehicle for outrage.

Here’s the extraordin­ary thing Trump showed everyone about the nature of the con: There’s no risk that your scamming of conservati­ve masses will be discovered when your victims have convinced themselves that their own victimizat­ion is something to be proud of.

They’re in on the joke, they’re part of the act, it’s all a big show, and nothing matters as long as they’re owning the libs.

When Trump tells a crowd that when it comes to polls, “If it’s bad, I just say it’s fake. If it’s good, I say, ‘That’s the most accurate poll, perhaps, ever,’” they cheer his admission that he constantly lies to them.

Being truly savvy doesn’t mean not getting scammed. It means being an enthusiast­ic partner in your own bamboozlem­ent.

As long as the machine keeps running, the money comes in and the Republican voters stay angry.

Everybody on the right wins — except for the people running up their credit cards and risking their own and their families’ lives.

 ?? Marco Ugarte/Associated Press ?? A health worker prepares to administer a dose of the AstraZenec­a COVID-19 vaccine during a vaccinatio­n drive for people ages 30 to 39 in Mexico City on July 7.
Marco Ugarte/Associated Press A health worker prepares to administer a dose of the AstraZenec­a COVID-19 vaccine during a vaccinatio­n drive for people ages 30 to 39 in Mexico City on July 7.

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