Marin Independent Journal

Conspiracy theorists flock to bird flu, spreading falsehoods

- By David Klepper

Brad Moline, a fourthgene­ration Iowa turkey farmer, saw this happen before. In 2015, a virulent avian flu outbreak nearly wiped out his flock.

Barns once filled with chattering birds were suddenly silent. Employees were anguished by having to kill sickened animals. The family business, started in 1924, was at serious risk.

His business recovered, but now the virus is back, again imperiling the nation's poultry farms. And this time, there's another pernicious force at work: a potent wave of misinforma­tion that claims the bird flu isn't real.

“You just want to beat your head against the wall,” Moline said of the Facebook groups in which people insist the flu is fake or, maybe, a bioweapon. “I understand the frustratio­n with how COVID was handled. I understand the lack of trust in the media today. I get it. But this is real.”

While it poses little risk to humans, the global outbreak has led farmers to cull millions of birds and threatens to add to already rising food prices.

It's also spawning fantastica­l claims similar to the ones that arose during the COVID-19 pandemic, underscori­ng how conspiracy theories often emerge at times of uncertaint­y, and how the internet and a deepening distrust of science and institutio­ns fuel their spread.

The claims can be found on obscure online message boards and major platforms like Twitter. Some versions claim the flu is fake, a hoax being used to justify reducing the supply of birds in an effort to drive up food prices, either to wreck the global economy or force people into vegetarian­ism.

“There is no `bird flu' outbreak,” wrote one man on Reddit. “It's just Covid for chickens.”

Other posters insist the flu is real, but that it was geneticall­y engineered as a weapon, possibly intended to touch off a new round of COVID-style lockdowns. A version of the story popular in India posits that 5G cell towers are somehow to blame for the virus.

As evidence, many of those claiming that the flu is fake note that animal health authoritie­s monitoring the outbreak are using some of the same technology used to test for COVID-19.

“They're testing the animals for bird flu with PCR tests. That should give you a clue as to what's going on,” wrote one Twitter user, in a post that's been liked and retweeted thousands of times.

In truth, PCR tests have been used routinely in medicine, biology and even law enforcemen­t for decades; their creator won a Nobel Prize in 1993.

The reality of the outbreak is far more mundane, if no less devastatin­g to birds and people who depend on them for their livelihood.

Farmers in states like Wisconsin, Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota have already culled millions of fowl to prevent the outbreak from spreading. Zoos around the U.S. have moved exotic bird exhibits indoors to protect their animals, and wildlife authoritie­s are discouragi­ng backyard bird feeding in some states to prevent the spread by wild birds. The disease has also claimed bald eagles around the country.

The first known human case of the H5N1 outbreak in the U.S. was confirmed last month in Colorado in a prison inmate who had been assisting with culling and disposing of poultry at a local farm.

Most human cases involve direct contact with infected birds, meaning the risk to a broad population is low, but experts around the country are monitoring the virus closely just to be sure, according to Keith Poulsen, director of the Wisconsin Veterinary Diagnostic Laboratory, an agency that tracks animal disease in part to protect the state's agricultur­al industries.

“I can guarantee you, this is the real deal,” Poulsen told The Associated Press. “We certainly aren't making this up.”

Poultry farms drive the local economy in some parts of Wisconsin, Poulsen said, adding that a devastatin­g outbreak of avian flu could create real hardships for farmers as well as consumers.

While the details may vary, the conspiracy theories about avian flu all speak to a distrust of authority and institutio­ns, and a suspicion that millions of doctors, scientists, veterinari­ans, journalist­s and elected officials around the world can no longer be trusted.

“Americans clearly understand that the federal government and major media have lied to them repeatedly, and are completely corrupted by the pharmaceut­ical companies,” said Dr. Joseph Mercola, an osteopath whose discredite­d claims about vaccines, masks and the coronaviru­s made him a prominent source of COVID-19 misinforma­tion.

Mercola's interest in the bird flu dates back years A 2006 book for sale on his website, which Mercola uses to sell unproven natural health remedies, is titled “The Great Bird Flu Hoax.”

 ?? LINDSEY SHUEY — REPUBLICAN-HERALD ?? A chicken in the barn at Honey Brook Farm in Schuylkill Haven, Pa.
LINDSEY SHUEY — REPUBLICAN-HERALD A chicken in the barn at Honey Brook Farm in Schuylkill Haven, Pa.

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