The Guardian (USA)

Five anti-vaccine groups got loans via US government relief program – report

- Amanda Holpuch in New York

A US government economic relief program provided loans to five prominent anti-vaccine organizati­ons that have spread misinforma­tion about Covid-19, the Washington Post reported.

Five anti-vaccine groups received more than $850,000 from the paycheck protection program (PPP), according to the Center for Countering Digital Hate, a UK-based group which fights misinforma­tion and hate speech online.

Congress created PPP loans to help small businesses hit by the Covid-19 pandemic. But documents obtained via a lawsuit brought by multiple news organizati­ons showed groups that have promoted anti-vaccine misinforma­tion and conspiracy theories online also received the funds.

The groups are the National Vaccine Informatio­n Center, Mercola Com Health Resources, Informed Consent Action Network, Children’s Health Defense Co and the Tenpenny Integrativ­e Medical Center.

Two Covid-19 vaccines, made by Moderna and Pfizer-BioNTech, have received emergency use authorizat­ion in the US. Trials for both involved tens of thousands of people and showed both had 95% efficacy.

But misinforma­tion and conspiracy theories abound. The World Health Organizati­on partnered with Facebook last year to help counter misinforma­tion, though conspiracy theories are still spreading on the site.

Twitter and YouTube have also tightened policies on vaccine misinforma­tion.

The Children’s Health Defense Co was founded by Robert Kennedy Jr, the son of the former attorney general, senator and presidenti­al hopeful Bobby Kennedy and nephew of President John F Kennedy.

The group says it is not anti-vaccine but is committed to raising questions about safety. Still, it has shared conspiracy theories on social media and sued Facebook last year after the platform restricted its ability to advertise.

“I’ve never heard anybody say that a loan is only available to people who don’t question the government,” Kennedy told the Post.

PPP loans have been subject to significan­t criticism since they were introduced last spring.

Few restrictio­ns were set regarding who could receive a loan. Among the more controvers­ial recipients were debt collectors, the Los Angeles Lakers NBA team (who ultimately returned the money) and more than 5,600 companies in the fossil fuel industry.

Many of the small businesses the program was intended to help struggled to access it.

Congress said PPP loans were meant to prioritize businesses in “underserve­d” markets, which includes low-income communitie­s, rural areas and businesses owned by people of color, women and veterans. But according to a Center for Public Integrity analysis published last month, most went to businesses in communitie­s that already had more access to resources.

 ??  ?? Congress’s PPP loans were intended to help small businesses hit by the pandemic, but some anti-vaccine groups received them. Photograph: Cheney Orr/Zuma Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
Congress’s PPP loans were intended to help small businesses hit by the pandemic, but some anti-vaccine groups received them. Photograph: Cheney Orr/Zuma Wire/Rex/Shuttersto­ck

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