Death of Texas Republican from COVID hardens battle lines in his community: report
According to a report from the Washington Post, the COVID-19 related death of a
prominent Republican city council member in Texas has
hardened attitudes about vaccines and led to some ugly attacks on citizens in the town.
In early August 45-year-old Dickinson City Council member Scott Apley died from COVID just days after posting on Facebook that vaccines don't work.
Apley's story went viral, turning him into the poster boy for conservative intransigence in the face of a resurgent pandemic and set off a debate in his hometown between people who are listening to the Centers for Disease Control (CDC) and COVID-19 skeptics.
In an extensive piece for the WaPo, Hannah Knowles wrote that Apley's death has led outsiders to attack residents of the town while they deal with their grief and continue the debate over mitigating the spread of COVID.
"In the GOP circles where Apley was well known, however, there was little mention of covid-19 or how to prevent it. Two days after mourning their
former vice chairman in a Facebook post that did not say what put him on a ventilator, the Galveston County Republican Party
shared a far-right website's medical-evidence-free claim thatimmunization against the coronavirus had killed a young conservative activist. 'Another tragedy - From the Vaccine!!!!!' they warned," she wrote. "Apley's hospitalization and death showcased the bitterness of the country's divide over coronavirus vaccination, and over how to bridge it, as the pandemic makes personal tragedy inseparable from politics."
KNowles added, " His family was suffering, and now, with cruel comments and laughing emoji, strangers from out-of-state were piling on. In Apley's political sphere, some said the tragedy was only entrenching people's divisions over the vaccines and a resurging virus — much less sending people soul-searching about their beliefs or their party's messaging,"