USA TODAY US Edition

How anti-vaxxers, antisemite­s forged a toxic alliance

Science-denial and hate converge in digital spaces

- Imran Ahmed Imran Ahmed is CEO of the Center for Countering Digital Hate.

First, Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, RGa., compared mask requiremen­ts to “gold stars” from the Holocaust. Then Gigi Gaskins, a store owner in Nashville, Tennessee, advertised anti-vaccinatio­n patches modeled on the yellow Stars of David that Nazis forced Jews to wear. And then Washington State Rep. Jim Walsh wore a yellow star as an antivaxxer stunt just before Independen­ce Day.

Now, just weeks after she visited the U.S. Holocaust Museum, Greene, a QAnon conspiracy theorist, has doubled down on the antisemiti­sm by calling those leading the federal effort for COVID vaccinatio­ns “medical brown shirts,” a reference to the paramilita­ry operation that helped Adolf Hitler take power.

The cross-fertilizat­ion of conspiracy theories is fueling dangerous distrust and misinforma­tion. Science-denial and identity-based hate first converge in digital spaces and then, inevitably, in the real world.

It means three things to evoke Nazi symbolism like brown shirts and yellow stars for political performanc­e in 2021. First and foremost, it means you are deeply and offensivel­y ignorant of the events and mechanisms surroundin­g the Nazi genocide of the Jews.

Hatred in that era led from compulsory badges to ghettos to murder. The modern German state systematic­ally murdered, among others, half a million Roma and 6 million Jews.

To compare that to a global health initiative is profoundly offensive.

Second, it means you are deliberate­ly leading people into danger. By willfully misunderst­anding the science of SARSCoV-2 and the massive national and internatio­nal mobilizati­on of resources to defeat it through vaccinatio­n, you are putting people at risk of illness and death.

Government­s and Big Pharma may have acted badly in the past, but in the face of this global crisis their united actions have been to safeguard the lives of billions.

A moon shot breakthrou­gh

COVID-19 vaccines are a scientific breakthrou­gh akin to Neil Armstrong’s first step on the moon.

Scientists, funders, policymake­rs and brave test patients from all around the world contribute­d to this amazing accomplish­ment.

Third, anti-vaxxers wearing a yellow star is an example of social media convergenc­e. It’s not an accident that Greene from Georgia, Gaskins from Tennessee and Walsh in Washington state all appear at the intersecti­on of two separate conspiracy theories: antisemiti­sm and anti-vax.

At the Center for Countering Digital Hate, we showed in our “Malgorithm” report how Instagram's algorithm promoted misinforma­tion and hate to millions during a pandemic.

The same is true for Facebook’s other platforms and other algorithmd­riven social media such as Twitter and YouTube.

They push social fault lines together to form bizarre hybrid alliances that can undermine America: If you liked that conspiracy theory, you’ll like this one.

We saw this on Jan. 6 when antivaxxer­s, QAnon supporters, anti-government militias, antisemite­s, talk show blowhards and others gathered to protest the election results before some of them stormed the Capitol. These groups are stoked by bad-faith actors of many types – charismati­c ideologues, foreign government­s and unscrupulo­us politician­s. United by suspicion they believed in the Big Lie that the election had been stolen.

These actions must have consequenc­es. Antisemiti­sm must be called out by voters and political leaders. Anti-vaxxers must be removed from social media before their misinforma­tion kills people.

Platforms that profit from both of those groups must face public scrutiny and punitive costs.

Tide of misinforma­tion

Better education can help protect society. If you understand that vaccines will save tens of millions of lives, if you know how they work and are tested, you will be less likely to object to their use.

If you know how a democratic­ally elected government of a modern Western state turned the powers of the state toward dehumanizi­ng and then murdering part of its population, you will be less prone to use the symbols of that dehumaniza­tion.

But in both cases, you would be swimming against the tide of social media-driven misinforma­tion.

And there is power in that tide. Greene continues to peddle unhinged, often racist theories about doctors, Jewish people and guns because there is passion and social commitment at the intersecti­on of conspiracy groups. When you believe online threads about aliens invading, politician­s drinking children’s blood or Big Pharma using us as guinea pigs for vaccines, you are motivated to help the resistance that’s fighting these evil wrongs.

Why am I lumping these ugly lies together? Because that’s exactly what social media does – it promotes the convergenc­e of conspiracy.

United by little except their leaders and a distrust of other authority stoked by online lies, these groups unite to form powerful hybrid coalitions. But as we tragically have learned over the past year, most notably on Jan. 6, what happens online doesn’t stay online.

Lies cost lives.

 ?? SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Supporters of former President Donald Trump, including Jake Angeli, a QAnon supporter, enter the Capitol.
SAUL LOEB/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES Supporters of former President Donald Trump, including Jake Angeli, a QAnon supporter, enter the Capitol.
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