Coronavirus: How do conspiracy theorists get rich?

Caution! The coronavirus vaccine contains microchips in order for Microsoft founder Bill Gates and his company to constantly monitor our lives. The Covid-19 strain was created by pharmaceutical companies that have long been looking for a way to treasure and finally they succeeded, while the virus is in fact no more dangerous than the common flu. According to others, it simply does not exist.

Coronavirus: How conspiracy theorists get rich

It is obvious that conspiracy theories are in full swing. For the past 18 months that the pandemic entered our lives for good, fake news have reached unprecedented levels as the Internet and especially social media helps a lot. An unfounded puppet that someone can think of and write on Twitter e.g. in Italy, within a few minutes it has translated into neighboring Greece or distant Canada causing concern resulting in the strengthening of the anti-vaccination movement. With a simple tour On the Internet, anyone can read what they can imagine about the reasons why the coronavirus appeared, for the “deliberate” way in which it spread and especially for the negative consequences that can be had by those who are vaccinated. But who are the ones who are spreading all this false news? Where does the spread of pseudonyms on the Internet begin?

A dozen people spread the fake news

If you think that’s coming from some graphic type that has a chase craze, you are wrong. According to a survey presented on the state radio NPR in the United States, most of the false news spread by vaccinators comes from just… 12 people around the world. Yes, only so many! This dozen produces 65% of the Covid-19 vaccine propaganda circulating on Facebook, Instagram and Twitter.

In fact, in the past few days, Facebook has taken care to close most of the accounts managed by these twelve people and to download more than 16,000,000 posts, in order to protect public health. Because it is another thing to write that man never stepped on the moon or that the Earth is flat (and yet there is a relevant Facebook page with thousands of supporters who believe it), which after all does not affect the proper functioning of society and to mention that vaccines cause sterilization, carcinogenesis or myriad other diseases.

Fatal consequences

These individuals, for example, are directly blamed for the fact that the United States is in danger of failing to build a wall of immunity, resulting in the grief of thousands of additional victims of the disease.

“Vaccination of Americans is vital to prevent this pandemic. Vaccine misinformation spread over the Internet has deadly consequences. That’s why I asked social media platforms to take action by closing those accounts that spread lies, “said Minnesota Sen. and Sen. Amy Klobuchar.

We are referring to posts that violate the policy of correctness and contradict the findings of the entire medical community and not to texts that are simply about a negative attitude towards vaccines, which, after all, is a matter of opinion and legitimacy, as is perfectly normal suspicion. enough people for a new vaccine. Proponents of the vaccine, however, speak of blatant censorship.

What do conspiracy theorists gain in the end?

What do all these super spreaders conspiracy theorists have to gain in the end by spreading such news that they try to falsely overthrow the scientific data and their positions reach in the blink of an eye in Greece, usually poorly translated? Money, and in fact a lot! These are activists, alternative health entrepreneurs and doctors who usually promote “natural health” and earn either by selling diet supplements and wellness books, or through advertisements on their websites that bring them thousands of euros or sponsorships from their fans or all that.

They are neither paranoid nor deceived ideologues. They seek profit and therefore take a real fact and deliberately distort it, such as e.g. the news of the death of a person (although he is even better known) which they associate with the fact that a few days or weeks earlier, he had been vaccinated.

What was the purpose of the father of the anti-vaccination movement?

The father of the modern vaccination movement is 64-year-old Andrew Wakefield. A former British physician and academic who was removed from medical records when he falsified scientific data to claim that vaccination could cause autism. He was accused of setting up a scam that, if done well, would bring him up to $ 43 million.

According to a 2011 review by the British Medical Journal, the surgeon once set up two companies in his wife’s name (Immunospecifics Biotechnologies Ltd and Carmel Healthcare Ltd) that would take advantage of the panic he had caused by selling a detection test. autism cases. His business led to the reappearance of diseases that had disappeared in Britain and other parts of the world, as some believed him and did not give their children or themselves the required vaccines.

Sell ​​κ toothpastes against coronavirus

For his part, far-right American radio producer Alex Jones had reached the point of gathering two million listeners per show and having at least 20 million unique visitors to his website, convincing his countrymen that the vaccination was a scam of the liberal elites. He then went on to sell a toothpaste, SuperSilver, which not only whitens teeth but also boosts the immune system to fight coronavirus, as he argued. In fact, according to the German magazine Der Spiegel, after a research he did, 80% of the profits of Jones’s company came from the sale of products that promised solutions to phobias that he himself promoted to the citizens. In fact, his profits are said to have reached up to 10,000,000 dollars a year!

Radio producer Alex Jones

And John F. Kennedy’s nephew in fake news

Twelve current “super spreaders” of coronavirus conspiracy theorists include American environmental lawyer and attorney Robert F. Kennedy Jr. (nephew of the assassinated former US President John F. Kennedy). He also initially suggested that vaccines were linked to autism. Then, during the pandemic, he shared unfounded theories linking the coronavirus to the 5G cellular networks with the coronavirus and stated, without evidence, that the death of baseball legend Hank Aaron on January 22 this year was part of a “wave of associated with vaccines. As a result, many believed him and did not come to the vaccination centers. Earlier, his followers on his Instagram account had grown from 121,000 to 454,000 until he was shut down by the media because he repeatedly promoted unscientific positions against vaccines.

US Attorney Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

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