The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Biden administra­tion makes Facebook pandemic scapegoat

- Jonah Goldberg holds the Asness Chair in Applied Liberty at the American Enterprise Institute and is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times.

Let’s say you’re Joe Biden. For entirely valid and legitimate reasons, you staked much of your presidency on getting the country vaccinated. You had a very good start, but then things started to stall right as a new, more contagious delta variant of the coronaviru­s was spreading.

This is a problem. I don’t just mean it’s a political problem. (I’ll get to that.) It’s a public policy problem. Like national defense and law enforcemen­t, fighting a pandemic is probably one of the few things political thinkers, conservati­ve or progressiv­e, in the past would have agreed was the task of government.

At least until recently. Now, to listen to many of Biden’s conservati­ve critics, getting people vaccinated is just another liberal scheme, like the Green New Deal or pushing critical race theory. That’s really the only explanatio­n for why the audience at the Conservati­ve Political Action Conference cheered when told that the Biden administra­tion failed to hit its vaccinatio­n targets.

It’s a bit like cheering when a war goes poorly because it will make the Democratic commander in chief look bad.

Then there’s the political problem. And Biden, like the typical politician that he is, wants someone to blame. But who?

He can’t directly blame the people not getting vaccinated, as tempting as that might be, because he still needs them to get vaccinated. Moreover, while white Republican pro-trump types are getting all the press for their vaccine hesitancy, the reality is more complicate­d. Black Americans and Latinos are overrepres­ented among the ranks of vaccine resisters, and Democrats can’t insult them, particular­ly since a great many of them reside in blue states.

Enter Big Tech.

For years, Republican­s have gotten an enormous amount of political mileage beating up on Facebook, Twitter and Google (including Youtube) for “censoring” conservati­ves. Their deplatform­ing of Donald Trump after the Jan. 6 riot sent the effort into overdrive.

Democrats have been piling on, too, of course. But from the opposite direction. The right wants the government to enforce less moderation. Senate candidate J.D. Vance of Ohio recently denounced Twitter for banning an anti-semitic white nationalis­t. Democrats want even more moderation, particular­ly since many of them believe Facebook and Twitter let themselves be used by the Trump campaign and/or Vladimir Putin to benefit Trump.

Scapegoati­ng social media for allowing vaccine conspiracy theories to flourish is a great way to shift blame. On Thursday, Surgeon General Vivek Murthy issued a blistering charge that social media platforms “have enabled misinforma­tion to poison our informatio­n environmen­t with little accountabi­lity to their users.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki followed up by announcing that the administra­tion will be “flagging” misinforma­tion for Facebook. On Friday, Joe Biden barked that the platform was “killing people” — but walked that back on Monday, saying he was accusing Facebook users of spreading deadly lies.

For its part, Facebook shot back with a remarkably barbed statement for a company desperate to get out of Washington’s crosshairs. It notes that its users’ vaccine acceptance rate exceeds that of the public at large.

As a constituti­onal matter, the Biden administra­tion’s tactic is problemati­c. The government shouldn’t be in the business of telling private companies what to publish — or not publish — save in a few very narrow circumstan­ces. One could argue that misinforma­tion about vaccines during a pandemic that has cost more than 600,000 lives and trillions of dollars is one of those narrow exceptions.

In practice, however, this is a terrible idea. It fuels the notion that getting vaccinated — or not — is some kind of political statement. It also feeds the right’s claim that social media companies are de facto extensions of the Democratic Party, the Deep State, etc.

Democrats are “going to monopolist­s and saying, ‘You are our tool to censor views we disagree with,’” Sen. Ted Cruz (Rtexas) said on Fox News. Going along with the idea that the vaccine will kill you (or make you magnetic) may be irresponsi­ble and dangerous, but it’s become just another generic political “view.” And it’s good politics for conservati­ves unwilling to rile up parts of their base.

It’s similar for Biden. Many Democrats are as irrational­ly worried about the pandemic as many Republican­s are irrational­ly blasé about it. For instance, the people most worried about the delta variant are vaccinated, while the people least worried about it are not.

There’s a large Democratic constituen­cy eager to blame red state vaccine resisters and the right-wingers who cater to them for the changing course of the pandemic. Whether intended or not, the Biden administra­tion’s attacks on Facebook strike me as a fairly brilliant and (so far) successful trolling operation intended to change the subject.

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