Chattanooga Times Free Press

AN EPIDEMIC OF ERROR

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A persistent and pernicious infection is tearing through America as the new year dawns. But it’s not called delta or omicron. It’s not caused by a virus. And it cannot be prevented by wearing a mask or standing 6 feet away from the next customer at the grocery.

This plague is an epidemic of error, an infection of informatio­n — or rather, disinforma­tion — and it’s not spread casually or accidental­ly. It’s being transmitte­d deliberate­ly and cynically. And it’s crippling our ability to confront two lethal threats to our national health: one medical, the other political.

The first threat comes from the rapidly mutating COVID-19 virus and the adamant refusal of a militant minority to get vaccinated. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, only 62% of all Americans and 73% of adults are fully inoculated, and the biggest reason for the resistance is a shadowy conspiracy of confusion that turns reality on its head.

Vaccines are dangerous, goes their mendacious message, when the exact opposite is true. Avoiding a jab is far riskier than getting one.

Yes, Donald Trump pushed hard for the developmen­t of those vaccines, and has even urged his followers to get immunized, but he still bears a huge responsibi­lity for this miasma of misinforma­tion.

For months, he fostered the falsehoods that the virus would disappear with the changing seasons, that quack cures could work, that medical experts couldn’t be trusted. No wonder his own followers booed him recently when he promoted vaccinatio­ns. And no wonder the resistance to scientific evidence falls heavily along partisan lines.

The second threat from the plague of propaganda is political: the Big Lie that the election of 2020 was rigged by the Democrats and stolen from Trump. He continues to perpetuate his deceit at every opportunit­y, and his followers have embraced it enthusiast­ically.

“There’s a very sophistica­ted infrastruc­ture of disinforma­tion by design — including both right-wing TV and social media rabbit holes — so if people want to live in this narrative, they can, very happily,” writes CNN’s Donie O’Sullivan.

Rep. Adam Kinzinger, a dissident Republican who has broken with Trump, says of that infrastruc­ture, “The thing that’s most concerning is that it has endured in the face of all evidence. I’ve gotten to wonder if there is actually any evidence that would ever change certain people’s minds.”

The implicatio­ns of this insanity are enormous. It leads more than half of Republican­s to tell CBS that the violent insurrecti­onists who stormed the U.S. Capitol last Jan. 6 were “defending freedom.” And it justifies a concerted effort by Republican state legislatur­es across the country to weaken the safeguards that prevented Trump and his followers from perverting the democratic process a year ago.

Distributi­ng the disease of disinforma­tion is nothing new for Trump. During his campaign, and then from the White House, he became a super-spreader of untruths while trying to undermine and discredit every individual or institutio­n that tried to hold him accountabl­e — from journalist­s, judges, intelligen­ce analysts, scientific advisers and — ultimately — his own attorney general and vice president.

He became the Lord of the Lies, leading Rep. Liz Cheney, the conservati­ve Republican from Wyoming, to warn on Twitter: “The Republican Party has to make a choice. We can either be loyal to our Constituti­on or loyal to Donald Trump, but we cannot be both.”

Democracy can only function if it bases decision-making on a common set of facts, a shared understand­ing of reality. The epidemic of error is already eroding the foundation of that system.

 ?? ?? Steven Roberts
Steven Roberts

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