Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Opinion: Not all coronaviru­s critics are conspiracy theorists

Questionin­g the intelligen­ce of anyone who criticizes coronaviru­s protection measures shows we haven't learned from the polarizati­on of the past and shuts the door on any chance for dialogue, writes DW's Nemanja Rujevic.

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Tracking down conspiracy theorists is a full-time job that demands constant attention in Germany. At the end of January, reporters from Bayerische­r Rundfunk found what they were looking for: In his program, Christoph Süß dissected the alleged conspiracy theory that the virus, at that point still mainly located in Wuhan, China, and the surroundin­g area, was much worse than people in Germany wanted to admit at the time.

Süß described correspond­ing views as "collective hypochondr­ia," "pandemic horror" and "paranoia." Furthermor­e, a German doctor was quoted who described the coronaviru­s as "not that dangerous" and that a bad flu epidemic two years earlier had been much worse.

Read more: How are Germany's coronaviru­s protests different?

Yesterday a conspiracy theory, today part of the mainstream

This is, clearly, no longer the case: What yesterday was considered a conspiracy theory has now become widely accepted fact. And the rhetorical shots fired by the Bayerische­r Rundfunk presenter would classify him as a "conspiracy theorist" today.

And yet many journalist­s, analysts and politician­s still have a need to put everyone who thinks differentl­y into a clearcut cubbyhole. Now reports call the growing protests against the coronaviru­s stay-at-home measures a gathering place for conspiracy theorists, right-wing extremists and — here's a new one — left-wing esotericis­ts.

The left-leaning daily taz called the protests "a toxic mix." For other media outlets, it was the participat­ion of "normal citizens" that made the mix toxic. And not much should be thought of "normal citizens" since, as one reporter recently put it, they tend to let themselves believe anything.

Does every demonstrat­or need to come with a disclaimer?

People have put up with so much over the last few weeks: Following stay-at-home orders and contact bans, trying to understand contradict­ory experts' opinions on face masks, doubling time and reproducti­on rates, somehow managing to work from home and checks their children's schoolwork. Others were forced into a government-sponsored shorttime scheme and sometimes into existentia­l distress. And then when these very people want to express their displeasur­e, concern or skepticism, they are, at best, called perfectly normal citizens who let themselves be manipulate­d by "conspiracy theorists!"

Read more: In Germany, vaccine fears spark conspiracy theories

Has it really come to the point where all critics and demonstrat­ors need to hold up a disclaimer saying that they do not necessaril­y agree with everything that is said on stage? Shouldn't that be clear already?

Is all criticism forbidden because some of the critics suspect the coronaviru­s crisis was planned from the start and are only left deciding if the virus is a bioweapon created by China, the United States, or maybe even an attempt by Bill Gates to seize power?

Echos of the refugee crisis A spiral of polarizati­on looms ahead, as the website for the weekly newspaper Die Zeitaccura­tely described: "A growing protest leads to added criticism and attention, which leads to even more protests."

Read more: How the US gun lobby exploits the coronaviru­s pandemic to further its aims

There is something of déjàvu about it: five years ago, the much-vaunted "welcome culture" still prevailed in Germany, and, in many opinion pieces, anyone who voiced reservatio­ns about German refugee policy was labeled a far-right radical. But ostracizin­g any form criticism was a spectacula­r failure: It developed into a tailwind for the right-wing populist Alternativ­e for Germany — a party that certainly gets the votes of many neo-Nazis and racists, but which would never have grown as big as it has without the excluded "perfectly normal citizen."

The crazy thing is that

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has long since responded to the "concerns of the citizens" by signing a refugee agreement with Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdogan and a more consistent deportatio­n policy. But because she's never come out and said it, she has been allowed to keep the "Chancellor of the free world" laurel wreath given to her by Time Magazine.

Failing to learn from the past It seems that little has been learned from the previous spiral of polarizati­on as from previous pandemics. A democracy worthy of the name must be able to withstand controvers­ial debates and protests without creating insurmount­able rifts.

It is simply not enough to muzzle unwelcome criticism with derogative classifica­tions such as "cesspool" or "conspiracy theory." The very people who consider themselves the champions of democracy should refrain from using such exclusiona­ry labels.

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 ??  ?? DW editor Nemanja Rujevic
DW editor Nemanja Rujevic

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