'Anti-Vax Facebook Groups Ushered in Our Current MAHA* Nightmare'
"In 2007, Oprah Winfrey featured Jenny McCarthy, the former Playboy model turned anti-vaccine activist, on her show to talk about her son Evans autism diagnosis. 'The University of Google is where I got my degree from,' she said during that appearance. McCarthy would go on to become one of the most visible purveyors of disinformation around vaccines and autism, encouraging countless parents to believe that vaccines give children developmental disabilities."
"Before she embarked on this dangerous new path, McCarthy was like other moms and a majority of caregivers for autistic people are women, particularly moms trying to figure out how to help their children through the diagnosis. The medical community has a history of marginalizing and discrediting womens health concerns, and for many years, scientists blamed autism on unloving mothers. So its understandable that women like McCarthy went online to try to learn more about the complex, largely misunderstood condition."
"McCarthy is an easy target given her large media profile. But throughout the 2000s and through the 2010s, scores of less famous families and solo bloggers spread misinformation through their smaller platforms. These so-called 'mommy bloggers' frequently focused on autism and vaccines, even as scientists repeatedly debunked the theory that vaccines played a role in autism. All of this made mainstream media efforts to push back against the lies around vaccines and autism all the more difficult."
"The field tilled by disinformation mongers created the perfect soil for sowing doubt about vaccines during the COVID-19 pandemic. It even meant that despite the fact the Trump administration conducted the successful Operation Warp Speed, many right-wing online activists pre-empted the rollout of the vaccine."
Continued at link:
https://talkingpointsmemo.com/tpm-25/anti-vax-facebook-groups-ushered-in-our-current-maha-nightmare
*MAHA (Make America Healthy Again) initiative and commission, a political and public health movement led by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Brainstormy
(2,507 posts)Never seen an anti-vax post.
genxlib
(6,027 posts)Every single person on it gets a personalized feed that caters to what is known about them.
You have not shown signs of being susceptible to that message so the algorithm didn't take you down that path.
What makes social media so insidious is that we often don't even know what BS is being fed to people so it is very difficult to respond to.
Big tech doesn't care what it is doing to people. They are designed to encourage engagement. Outrage, controversy and conspiracy is more engaging that simple truth and facts.
FadedMullet
(555 posts)......population of anti-vax loons that threaten the herd immunity aspect of public health, like we do? Just came across this European Journal article that tells me that they do have folks with "vaccine hesitancy" (a milder term?) and attribute it to "anti-elite world views and culturally closed rather than cosmopolitan positions". So it seems that they do indeed share this problem but, as usual, have a clearer appreciation of the sources. https://academic.oup.com/eurpub/article/32/4/636/6581964