Friday, January 06, 2023

Why Giving Anti-Vaxxers No Quarter Matters.

Pushback
Ville


Some of you all have likely become a little tired of me going on and on (and on) about how scurrilous and, frankly, gutless anti-vaxxers immediately began to use weasel words, sans evidence, to infer that the Covid vaccine had something to do with the sudden cardiac arrest that a professional football suffered on the field on Monday night.

After all, you are probably muttering to yourself, why not just ignore these loons until they go away?

Well, there are serious consequences for public health when their codswallop is wurlitzered around the web, not to mention the wider world, as Mike Wending and Rachel Schraer explain in their piece for the BBC:

...Research by the Center for Countering Digital Hate (CCDH), a non-profit campaign group based in London and Washington, found that mentions of an anti-vaccine film quadrupled after the player's collapse.

CCDH chief executive Imran Ahmed said activists were "cynically exploiting tragedy to baselessly connect any injury or death of a notable person to vaccinations".

The day after the match the documentary Died Suddenly, which was released in November last year, was mentioned nearly 17,000 times, the CCDH says. The BBC previously looked into the claims in the film and found little or no evidence behind many of them.

Caroline Orr Bueno, a researcher on misinformation who has spent a decade looking at the anti-vaccination movement, says the film gave rise to communities of people across several social media platforms primed to hunt for news events to back up their views.

"They believe the anti-vaccine rhetoric that they are seeing," she says, "and they are joining in out of genuine concern without necessarily knowing that they're being misled."...



But, still, you may be starting to shout...This, too, is just a bunch of loons and the mis-led lemmings who follow them, right?

Well, where large flocks of loons and massive slices of lemmings congregate the political hucksters and their stooges soon swoop in and, in the worst case scenario, enact truly harmful policies to capitalize on the lunacy.

Jack Stripling has that story in the Washington Post:

...Joseph A. Ladapo, a professor of medicine at the University of Florida and the state’s surgeon general (appointed by governor Ron De Santis), relied upon a flawed analysis and may have violated university research integrity rules when he issued guidance last fall discouraging young men from receiving common coronavirus vaccines, according to a report from a medical school faculty task force. But the university says it has no plans to investigate the matter.

Ladapo recommended in October that men younger than 40 not take mRNA vaccinations for Covid, pointing to an “abnormally high risk of cardiac-related death.” Doctors and public health officials swiftly pounced, dismissing the underlying research for its small sample size, lack of detail and shaky methodology.

In its new report, a task force of the University of Florida College of Medicine’s Faculty Council cites numerous deficiencies in the analysis Ladapo used to justify his vaccine recommendation. A summary said the work was “seriously flawed.” The report’s authors say Ladapo engaged in “careless, irregular, or contentious research practices.”


OK?

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4 comments:

Evil ERye said...

Anti-vaxers, today's Luddites.

Anti science is gaining ground, why? From my perspective, religions have a lot to do with it because those interested in science tend to be smart, able to grasp concepts, and able to speak in a rational way, but if one follows this, then one will question many of the religions in today's world and the world wide religious business will suffer.

Imagine all those tele-evangelicals lacking the rubes that buy into their snake oil routine.

That being said, politicians also love stupid people (stupid people tend to be anti-vaxers) because stupid people only ask stupid questions and seldom can utter a coherent sentence, which ensures the election of stupid politicians.

Stupid is the new religion, with many branches, reaching across the globe and sadly, stupid is very, very dangerous.

Anonymous said...

Ok, I'm giving anti-vaxxers No Quarter, although it's much more than they deserve. https://youtu.be/sRP2We4FRP4

Graham said...

These anti’s have been around for quite some time I suppose, operating on the fringes of our information networks. I blame trump for making it safe and acceptable for these attention seeking bad people to come out of the woodwork and prey on the easily deluded and wilfully ignorant. I get that some people have some legitimate concerns but the anti everything at any cost are purposely taking advantage of peoples fears and using it for their own profit or to shake public opinion or government itself.
They deserve the equivalent of a social media or public announcement punch in the nose. Hard!

RossK said...

EE--

Great to hear from you!

I actually think that the bigger issue is the fine folks and organizations that exploit religion to push the stupid.

And then there is the weird, flip-side new agey aspect of some of this (when it comes specifically to significant chunk of the anti-vax contingent). Locally, Daphne Bramham had a good piece on that in the VSun awhile back.

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Anon-Above--

Nice one. JP Jones playing the tune without the other three guys on a stage in Seattle in 1999.

Funny story...Back in the summer of 1977 I refused to pay 'twelve bucks to watch four jerks way, way far away on a stage' in the Kingdome. My three friends who did go, and who formed the rest of our nascent garage band at the time, never let me forget it.

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Graham--

Those doing the worst of the wurtlitzering are actually quite few in number (D Bramham goes into that in the piece cited above). Those people, and the follow-on exploiters like Mr. Trump and Mr. De Santis and, yes, Mr. Poilievre, are the ones who need to pay a price/be held accountable.

Because if they are not, held accountable I mean, things will only get worse on all fronts.

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