Morning Sun

Anti-vax activists gather in D.C., protest mandate

- By Peter Jamison and Ellie Silverman

WASHINGTON » Protesters from across the country including some of the biggest names in the anti-vaccinatio­n movement - were preparing to gather Sunday for a rally against vaccine mandates in the nation’s capital.

Almost two years into a pandemic that has killed more than 860,000 Americans, the gathering on the National Mall promised to be a jarring spectacle: A crowd of demonstrat­ors decrying vaccine mandates in the middle of a city that recently adopted such a mandate to reduce sickness and death from the surge of the virus’s omicron variant, which has battered D.C. for weeks.

Organizers estimate that 20,000 people will attend the rally, marching from the Washington Monument to the Lincoln Memorial, according to a permit issued by the National Park Service. D.C. police were fully activated from Friday Jan. 21, during the annual March for Life, through today for the anti-vaccine mandate rally, spokesman Dustin Sternbeck said.

The march is billed as a protest of mandates, rather than the medicines themselves. But similar rhetoric - emphasizin­g individual autonomy rather than untenable scientific ideas - has long characteri­zed the broader anti-vaccine movement, and the march’s speakers include movement veterans such as Robert Kennedy Jr. and Del Bigtree, founder of the antivaccin­e group Informed Consent Action Network.

Other speakers include physician Robert Malone, a prominent critic of the coronaviru­s MRNA vaccines, and former CBS News correspond­ent Lara Logan, who in a November appearance on Fox News compared White House chief medical adviser Anthony Fauci to the Nazi doctor Josef Mengele. Public employee associatio­ns that have formed to protest their employers’ vaccine mandates, such as Feds for Medical Freedom and D.C. Firefighte­rs Bodily Autonomy Affirmatio­n Group, are also participat­ing.

“The goal is to show a unified front of bringing people together - vaccinated, unvaccinat­ed, Democrats, Republican­s, all together in solidarity,” said organizer Matt Tune, an unvaccinat­ed 48-year-old from Chicago. He said he wants the event “to help change the current narrative ... which is basically saying that we’re a bunch of weirdos and freaks who don’t care about humanity. And that’s not true at all.”

An overwhelmi­ng body of evidence demonstrat­es

that the coronaviru­s vaccines are safe and effective for most who receive them. As of October, according to the most recent estimates from the CDC, those who received two doses of the Pfizer-biontech or Moderna vaccines and a booster were 40 times less likely to die of the virus than the unvaccinat­ed.

The CDC on Friday released studies showing that the vaccines continue to provide robust protection against hospitaliz­ation from the omicron variant, even if they no longer ward off infection as effectivel­y.

Neverthele­ss, national surveys show about 1 in 5 U.S. adults remain unvaccinat­ed. Among children ages 5 to 11, who became eligible for the shots in November, fewer than 20 percent are vaccinated.

The rally has benefited extensivel­y from publicity in recent weeks on prominent social-media and podcasting platforms. Tune said the march’s website saw a “huge spike” in traffic after Malone mentioned it on Joe Rogan’s popular podcast.

 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People march alongside the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool before an anti-vaccine rally on Sunday in Washington.
PATRICK SEMANSKY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People march alongside the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool before an anti-vaccine rally on Sunday in Washington.

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