Fact Checking Covid-Denier Nonsense

The latest tactic of the anti-vaxxers is to create images of fake Tweets falsely attributed to doctors and know personalities --- and then distribute these fake images on social media. At some point the abusive clowns creating and distributing these "cheap fakes" with the deliberate intent to harass and abuse people need to be held legally responsible.

A fake tweet spurred an anti-vaccine harassment campaign against a doctor
Despite the overwhelming success of the covid vaccines, an aggressive and politicized anti-vaccine community has persevered and is using new tactics to try to smear doctors.
https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/misinf...-vaccine-harassment-campaign-doctor-rcna64448

When Dr. Natalia Solenkova woke up Monday morning, she was greeted with a flood of Twitter notifications on her phone. The Miami critical care physician had hundreds of new followers, and they, along with thousands of others on Twitter, were angry with her.

In tweets, comments and direct messages across Twitter and other social platforms, strangers demanded to know why she had deleted a tweet that read: “I will never regret the vaccine. Even if it turns out I injected actual poison and have only days to live. My heart and is was in the right place. I got vaccinated out of love, while antivaxxers did everything out of hate. If I have to die because of my love for the world, then so be it. But I will never regret or apologize for it.”

Solenkova hadn’t deleted the tweet. In fact, she hadn’t written it at all. It was what misinformation researchers call a “cheap fake,” a term for a piece of fake media such as an image or video that takes little effort to produce. Someone had clumsily altered one of Solenkova’s posts to portray a blind, even deadly, zealotry for Covid vaccines and a vilification of anti-vaccine activists.

Over the next few days, despite Solenkova’s protestations and pleas to Twitter to stop the spread of the image, the fake tweet would go viral across the right-wing internet and serve as fodder for a popular and increasingly rabid anti-vaccination movement. The tweet would even make it to the popular podcast of Joe Rogan, who would later apologize for discussing it.

Solenkova knew what was coming next — a wave of harassment
. She didn’t pay much mind to the comments and messages saying she was a terrible doctor, that she shouldn’t be practicing, that she was murdering people. She ignored the hateful direct messages in her private, personal accounts.

“I purposefully didn’t spend a lot of time reading them, because I just wanted to find the original tweet and get it removed,” she said. “This time I didn’t come across death threats, but I’m not looking. I’ve probably blocked a thousand accounts.”

Solenkova, like many other medical professionals, had become a minor public figure during the pandemic. Before the fake tweet, Solenkova had built a following of 30,000 on Twitter by reporting her observations from working in underserved areas during the pandemic and used her account to debunk misinformation about Covid, vaccines and unproven cures.

“I started tweeting because people were dying and hospitals were unprepared,” she said. “And then disinformation became rampant.”

Despite the overwhelming success of the covid vaccines — which have prevented millions of severe infections and deaths — an aggressive and politicized anti-vaccine community has persevered.

Online harassment has become increasingly common for doctors during the pandemic, according to Dr. Ali Neitzel, a physician researcher who studies misinformation.

“The targeting of individual physicians is a well-worn tactic,” Neitzel said. “But this cheaply-done fake — trying to frame a doctor who is doing unpaid advocacy work — that’s a new low.”

Neitzel said that she sees the use of fake tweets like the one that targeted Solenkova as a sign of desperation among anti-vaccination activists who have struggled to advance a false narrative about vaccines being unsafe.

“And demonizing an outspoken doctor gives them the enemy they’re looking for,” she said.

There were obvious tells that the tweet attributed to Solenkova was a fake, likely fabricated with what’s known as a tweet generator. The absurdity of the message notwithstanding, the font was off, and it was 53 characters over Twitter’s 280-character limit.

One of the first tweets of the doctored image was posted on Sunday evening by Paul Ramsey, an Oklahoma vlogger and frequent speaker at white supremacist conferences who goes by Ramzpaul. Ramsey added to his tweet, “COVID really was a cult.”

In an email sent Friday in response to an NBC News inquiry, Ramsey said he first came across the fake tweet on another website. “I respond to tweets I see on various message boards and newsgroups. If I learn that the tweet is not legitimate, or it is satire, I delete it,” he wrote. The tweet was deleted seconds later.

By Wednesday, the false tweet had gone viral, shared by many popular accounts that garnered millions of views and hundreds of thousands of likes and shares.

Ian Miles Cheong, a rightwing Twitter commentator to whom Twitter's owner, Elon Musk, frequently replies, tweeted it, adding “She deleted the tweet. I wonder why.” Cheong has since deleted his tweet.

Jenna Ellis, a right-wing political commentator and former lawyer for President Donald Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election, tweeted it, with the comment, “Delusional justification.”

In response to harassing messages, Solenkova did what she could to stop the pile-on and changed her Twitter account to private. But some took that not as evidence that their swarm was causing harm, but as proof that the tweet was authentic.

“At first, I thought it had to be a parody account,” tweeted Canadian lawyer and YouTuber David Freiheit. “Then I went to check out her profile, and her tweets were protected, indicating it was not parody. And now I am blocked, confirming it was not parody!”

Solenkova said she repeatedly reported the tweets to Twitter and asked her 30,000 followers to do the same. Replies from Twitter shared with NBC News said the company determined the tweets did not violate the company’s policies. “In order for an account to be in violation of the policy, it must portray another person or business in a misleading or deceptive manner,” the message said.

Amid a takeover by Musk in November, critics have questioned the company’s ability to stem misinformation, hate and impersonation on the platform. Twitter did not respond to a request for comment on Solenkova’s experience. Ella Irwin, Twitter’s vice president of trust and safety, did not respond to an email requesting comment.

By Wednesday, the fake tweet had made its way to the Spotify podcast “The Joe Rogan Experience,” which aired an 11-minute segment dissecting the tweet, displaying it during the discussion.

“It’s a fascinating perspective,” Rogan said to his guest, Bret Weinstein, a former biology professor at Washington’s Evergreen State College who has promoted unproven Covid cures including ivermectin.

“This woman’s take on this is this perfect encapsulation of this ideological capture that you see on social media,” Rogan said.

On Thursday, Rogan temporarily took down the episode, explaining on Twitter that he had been duped. “My sincere apologies to everyone, especially the person who got hoaxed,” he tweeted.

The episode was later republished without the discussion of the fake tweet.

Weinstein tweeted that the takedown was the only way to “protect the person who was being impersonated.” Still, videos of the segment remain online, circulated by accounts not associated with Rogan. One video on Twitter has been viewed more than 5 million times.

Rogan’s publicist did not return a request for comment. Weinstein did not return a request for comment.

“You spend 11 minutes butchering my name, showing my picture, and then people Google me,” Solenkova said, adding that she feared for the lasting impact the fakery and its amplification might have on her career as a traveling physician.

“I’m doing my best,” she said. “I just know that I didn’t write this. But will it pop up in a complaint to a medical board? In my Google results? I’m trying to stay calm and think, ‘they made idiots of themselves and twitter lost credibility,’ but people need to know that this can happen to any of us.”
76lp4r.jpg
 
Here's some disinfo (meaning goverment stats that prove the narrative is wrong.)
Every single person hospitalized for the 'Rona in New South Wales, Australia was vaccinated.
That's right - all 1779 persons hospitalized for C19.
Every.
Single.
One.

Three letter guys? What do you think?
Still hanging on by your evidence denying fingernails to Uh-fish-al nar'tive?

99dfdc07-bd2d-483c-855f-dcc486c4c2f1_903x1081.png
 
Here's some disinfo (meaning goverment stats that prove the narrative is wrong.)
Every single person hospitalized for the 'Rona in New South Wales, Australia was vaccinated.
That's right - all 1779 persons hospitalized for C19.
Every.
Single.
One.

Three letter guys? What do you think?
Still hanging on by your evidence denying fingernails to Uh-fish-al nar'tive?

View attachment 303124

Here is the official web pages for New South Wales.
https://covidbaseau.com/nsw/#line8

https://www.health.nsw.gov.au/Infectious/covid-19/Pages/weekly-reports.aspx

https://www.health.nsw.gov.au/Infectious/covid-19/Documents/weekly-covid-overview-20221231.pdf

Let's give you a glimpse of reality.

NSW-vax-critical.jpg
 
It's time to fact check the latest nonsense being pushed by the demented anti-vax Covid-deniers for the past couple of weeks.

Anti-vaccine activists are using faulty data to claim cardiac arrests are increasing in athletes. They’re not.
Medical professionals in sports cardiology rejected the claim and reaffirmed that they have seen no increase in cardiac arrests among athletes.
https://www.poynter.org/fact-checking/2023/heart-issues-athletes-covid-vaccines-damar-hamlin/


Vaccines are not making COVID strains like ‘Kraken’ stronger. Here’s how the four shots battle variants
https://fortune.com/well/2023/01/09/covid-vaccines-not-making-kraken-xbb-1-5-variant-stronger/
 
It's time to fact check the latest nonsense being shoveled by Robert Malone.

Fact Check: Robert Malone – Young and healthy people get benefits and low risk from COVID-19 vaccine, despite claims to contrary
https://theparadise.ng/fact-check-r...-covid-19-vaccine-despite-claims-to-contrary/

As a highly transmissible coronavirus variant begins to dominate new infections in the U.S., social media users are sharing a video clip from vaccine scientist-turned-anti-vaccine activist Dr. Robert Malone.

In a TikTok clip of Malone’s remarks shared Jan. 3 on Instagram, Malone falsely called COVID-19 vaccines “experimental genetic therapy” and said they “provide zero benefit relative to risk for the young and healthy.”

He didn’t define young.

The Instagram post was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)

The COVID-19 vaccines are not gene therapy; they do not alter DNA.

COVID-19 generally poses more of a health threat as people age, but experts say younger people still share in vaccination’s benefits, including a reduced chance of serious illness if they contract the virus.

As for the risk of vaccination, myocarditis, a rare heart muscle inflammation, occurs far more often among young people who get COVID-19.

Studies back up the experts on both points.

Who is Malone?

We’ve written about Malone before. He has promoted several false and misleading claims about the COVID-19 vaccines and the pandemic.

In January 2022, Malone was banned from Twitter for violating its COVID-19 misinformation policies; YouTube removed videos of a controversial interview he did with podcast host Joe Rogan. Malone’s Twitter account was restored in December.

Malone didn’t reply to our requests for information for this fact-check.

Serious COVID-19 less common among young

It’s long been known that serious illness and death from COVID-19 is much less common among young people, even though the largest number of cases is among 18- to 29-year-olds. The latest data from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention back that up.

For example, as of Dec. 28, the COVID-19 hospitalization risk among people ages 85 and older was 15 times higher than among people ages 18 to 29; the COVID-19 death rate was 350 times higher for the older cohort.

Serious COVID-19 less common among young


It’s long been known that serious illness and death from COVID-19 is much less common among young people, even though the largest number of cases is among 18- to 29-year-olds. The latest data from the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention back that up.

For example, as of Dec. 28, the COVID-19 hospitalization risk among people ages 85 and older was 15 times higher than among people ages 18 to 29; the COVID-19 death rate was 350 times higher for the older cohort.

But Wachter said there is evidence that vaccines for young people lower the risk of a severe case, the probability of long COVID and the probability of transmitting the virus to others.


Clear benefits of vaccination


Dr. Matthew Laurens, a pediatric infectious disease specialist and researcher at the University of Maryland’s Center for Vaccine Development, said vaccination protection against serious COVID-19 complications, including hospitalization and death, apply to both healthy people and those with underlying illnesses.

A study published in May in the New England Journal of Medicine found that vaccination reduced the risk of omicron variant-associated hospitalization by two-thirds among children ages 5 to 11 years. The same month, a study published in the journal Nature Medicine found that vaccination reduced the probability of long COVID — long-term effects from infection — by 15%.

Other benefits of vaccination to younger people, said Dr. Davidson Hamer, interim director of the Center for Emerging Infectious Diseases Research and Policy at Boston University, include preventing lost time from work or school because of infection and preventing infection spread to other people.

Ten children were being treated for COVID-19 at Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia on Jan. 9 when we called Dr. Paul Offit, director of the hospital’s Vaccine Education Center.

Malone “should come to a children’s hospital and see children suffering,” Offit said, citing the importance of COVID-19 vaccination. “When you see children suffering and it’s preventable, you prevent it,” he said.

Low risks of vaccination


Vaccine critics sometimes cite myocarditis as a COVID-19 vaccination risk, particularly among younger people. But the risk is often overstated.

Hamer said there is “very low risk” among young people of myocarditis and the condition stemming from vaccination tends to be mild to moderate, and temporary. Moreover, he said, cardiac complications “are more common after the disease itself as opposed to vaccination.”

Laurens pointed to a CDC study that found that from March 2020 to January 2021, patients ages 16 to 39 with COVID-19 had seven times the risk for myocarditis compared with patients who did not have COVID-19.

The findings underscored the importance of vaccination “to reduce the public health impact of COVID-19 and its associated complications,” the study said.

News stories in January reported that a new variant, XBB.1.5, was quickly becoming the dominant strain in parts of the United States. The World Health Organization described the strain as the omicron variant’s most transmissible descendant. The strain has been causing 25% of COVID-19 cases in the U.S., up from 10% in December, Johns Hopkins University said Jan. 9.

Our ruling

Malone, an anti-vaccine activist, said COVID-19 vaccines “provide zero benefit relative to risk for the young and healthy.”

Although younger people face less of a health threat from COVID-19, vaccines reduce their chances of developing serious disease from the virus. As for risk, heart inflammation from the vaccines is rare among young people, and occurs more commonly among young people infected by COVID-19.

We rate the statement False.
 
Once again let's take a look at how anti-vaxxers obscenely abuse people who fail to fit their twisted, demented narrative.

TV Reporter Inundated With 'Overwhelming Hatred' After Suffering Medical Emergency On Air
https://www.comicsands.com/reporter-jessica-robb-medical-emergency-2659097663.html

Canadian television reporter, Jessica Robb, had an on-air medical emergency during one of her reports. You would think that would mean people would rally around her to help her and give her support.

Unfortunately, you'd be wrong.

Robb faced an overwhelming amount of hatred on social media after the incident. Robb works for CTV network in Edmonton, Alberta. She was delivering a report when her speech stalled and she became unsteady on her feet.

In the video, you can hear Robb apologize to one of the anchors.

“Sorry, Nahreman. I’m not feeling very well right now and I’m about to ...”

Robb's body wobbled a little before the camera cut away.

The anchor told viewers they will make sure Robb is OK.

“We will make sure that Jessica is OK, and we’ll give you guys an update a little bit later.”

In a later update viewers are told Robb is resting.

You can see the video here:


Instead of the outpouring of support Robb should have gotten from her fellow humans, she received a lot of hate and speculation about what happened from anti-vaxxers.

Robb was forced to respond to the hate with a statement where she confirmed the incident was in no way related to the COVID-19 vaccine.


She wrote:

"I have also received an overwhelming amount of harassment and hatred, tied to false theories about the reason for the incident.""While I will not share private medical information publicly, I can say that there is no cause for concern and that my understanding of my own medical background provides a reasonable explanation for what happened." "I can, however, confirm that the situation was in no way related to the COVID-19 vaccine.”

But anti-vaxxers were undeterred.

(More at above url including obscene tweets from demented anti-vaxxers)
 
Back
Top