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Misleading Virus Video, Pushed By the Trumps, Spreads Online (nytimes.com) 566

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The New York Times: In a video posted Monday online, a group of people calling themselves "America's Frontline Doctors" and wearing white medical coats spoke against the backdrop of the Supreme Court in Washington, sharing misleading claims about the virus, including that hydroxychloroquine was an effective coronavirus treatment and that masks did not slow the spread of the virus. [...] The members of the group behind Monday's video say they are physicians treating patients infected with the coronavirus. But it was unclear where many of them practice medicine or how many patients they had actually seen. As early as May, anti-Obamacare conservative activists called the Tea Party Patriots Action reportedly worked with some of them to advocate loosening states' restrictions on elective surgeries and nonemergency care. On July 15, the group registered a website called "America's Frontline Doctors," domain registration records show. One of the first copies of the video that appeared on Monday was posted to the Tea Party Patriots' YouTube channel, alongside other videos featuring the members of "America's Frontline Doctors."

The video did not appear to be anything special. But within six hours, President Trump and his son Donald Trump Jr. had tweeted versions of it, and the right-wing news site Breitbart had shared it. It went viral, shared largely through Facebook groups dedicated to anti-vaccination movements and conspiracy theories such as QAnon, racking up tens of millions of views. Multiple versions of the video were uploaded to YouTube, and links were shared through Twitter. Facebook, YouTube and Twitter worked feverishly to remove it, but by the time they had, the video had already become the latest example of misinformation about the virus that has spread widely. That was because the video had been designed specifically to appeal to internet conspiracists and conservatives eager to see the economy reopen, with a setting and characters to lend authenticity. It showed that even as social media companies have sped up response time to remove dangerous virus misinformation within hours of its posting, people have continued to find new ways around the platforms' safeguards. [...] At least one version of the video, viewed by The Times on Facebook, was watched over 16 million times.

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Misleading Virus Video, Pushed By the Trumps, Spreads Online

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  • Video is here (Score:5, Informative)

    by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:05AM (#60342763) Homepage Journal

    You can still watch it here: https://banned.video/watch?id=... [banned.video]

    • Re:Video is here (Score:5, Interesting)

      by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:56AM (#60343113)

      "Dr. Stella Immanuel" .. here is some info about her from Daily Mail https://www.dailymail.co.uk/ne... [dailymail.co.uk]:

      * She has claimed that gynecological problems like cysts and endometriosis are in fact caused by people having sex in their dreams with demons and witches.

      * She has given sermons attacking progressive values and promoting conspiracy theories including ‘the gay agenda, secular humanism, Illuminati and the demonic New World Order.’

      * She uses 'alien DNA' as a cure.

      * Blames witchcraft for illness.

      * Immanuel warned that the Disney Channel show Hannah Montana was a gateway to evil, because its character had an ‘alter ego.’

      * She has claimed that schools teach children to meditate so they can ‘meet with demons.’

      * She also urges that ‘children need to be whipped’.

      This is who the president thinks is credible?

  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:06AM (#60342767)

    Why do people more readily believe harebrained bullshit than evidence based facts? Even religiosity cannot explain that sufficiently.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      Probably because the doctors in the video are Medical Doctors from major American Universities. Same reason people believe Sanjay Gupta. These are the "experts" you guys always talk about. You can watch the video here if you like: https://banned.video/watch?id=... [banned.video]

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by sycodon ( 149926 )

        Seems someone doesn't want others to watch it and decide for themselves. Hence the moderation.

      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

        Probably because the doctors in the video are Medical Doctors from major American Universities. Same reason people believe Sanjay Gupta. These are the "experts" you guys always talk about. You can watch the video here if you like: https://banned.video/watch?id=... [banned.video]

        All I see are people standing in white coats talking. No names, no credentials posted. Plenty of popups directing people to the infowars store, though.

      • by tk77 ( 1774336 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:42AM (#60343009)

        Sure, most of them are Doctors. But lets take a look at the leading one, Stella Immanuel.

        First, she is not from a medical university. She runs a small clinic right next to the church that she runs. She also believes that various gynecological issues such as fibroid tumors and cysts happen after having dream sex with demons and witches. She claims alien dna is used in current medicine, and that a vaccine is in the works to prevent people from believe in Jesus / being religious.

        She also threatened Facebook with server crashes and that it would go down in the name of Jesus.

        https://www.thedailybeast.com/... [thedailybeast.com]

        The group (America's Frontline Doctors) is also backed by the Tea Party Patriots.

        https://www.businessinsider.co... [businessinsider.com]

        The groups website was also just created a couple weeks ago:

        Domain Name: AMERICASFRONTLINEDOCTORS.COM
        Registry Domain ID: 2546369396_DOMAIN_COM-VRSN
        Registrar WHOIS Server: whois.tucows.com
        Registrar URL: http://www.tucows.com/ [tucows.com]
        Updated Date: 2020-07-16T01:27:54Z
        Creation Date: 2020-07-16T01:27:49Z

        I'll let others decide if this is enough to place some of these doctors into the same category as other experts.

        • Credentials (Score:5, Informative)

          by MikeMo ( 521697 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:48AM (#60343063)
          For anyone that is interested in the credentials of all the “ white coat doctors “ that are being discredited and banned.... Here you go!!!

          The panel of doctors that were banned

          Simone Gold, MD - Emergency Medicine Specialist in Los Angeles, CA and has over 31 years of experience in the medical field. She graduated from Rosalind Franklin University Of Medicine Science/The Chicago Medical School medical school in 1989. She is affiliated with Centinela Hospital Medical Center.

          Dr. Bob Hamilton - pediatrician from Santa Monica, California. Medical School UCLA Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA. Internship UCLA Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA. Residency UCLA Geffen School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA.

          Dr. Stella Emmaneul - primary care doctor in Houston, Tx. Went to medical school in West Africa, Nigeria. Has practiced in Louisiana and now resides in Texas where she has treated more than 350 Covid patients.

          Dr. Dan Erickson, DO - Emergency Medicine Specialist in Bakersfield, CA and has over 16 years of experience in the medical field. He graduated from Western Univ Of Health Sciences/College Of Osteopathic Medicine Of The Pacific, Western University Of Health Sciences medical school in 2004. (While both degrees mean your doctor is a licensed physician, their training differs slightly, and each has a unique perspective on care. “An M.D. follows an allopathic medical training path, whereas a D.O. follows osteopathic,”)

          Dr. James Todaro, MD - a Ophthalmology Specialist received his medical degree from Columbia University, Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons in NY, and completed his surgical training with four additional years of residency in ophthalmology.

          Dr. Joe Ladapo MD, PhD - Physician at UCLA and clinical researcher. Internal Medicine, American Board of Internal Medicine, 2011. Residency Internal Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Med Ctr-East Campus, 2009-2011. Internship Internal Medicine, Beth Israel Deaconess Med Ctr-East Campus, 2008-2009. Degree Harvard Medical School, MD, 2008 Harvard University Grad. School of Arts, Sciences, PhD, 2008.
          • Re:Credentials (Score:5, Informative)

            by tk77 ( 1774336 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @09:01AM (#60343137)

            Here's some more details on those that appeared in the video:

            https://gizmodo.com/who-are-am... [gizmodo.com]

          • Re:Credentials (Score:4, Insightful)

            by JasterBobaMereel ( 1102861 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @10:43AM (#60343641)

            Paediatricians, Ophthalmologists, and non-practising doctors ... Where are the Epidemiologists ?

          • Re:Credentials (Score:5, Informative)

            by tragedy ( 27079 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @10:44AM (#60343651)

            So, we have Simone Gold M.D./J.D. who is a doctor/lawyer/republican speechwriter who is no longer affiliated with Centinela Hospital Medical Center.
            Bob Hamilton M.D. who is a pediatrician/missionary/author appears to be something of a self-promoter. Thinks that children are basically immune to Covid-19 and also that they can't spread it to adults.
            Stella Emmaneul M.D. who is a doctor/minister who has a private practice in the same stripmall as "firepower ministry" which she runs and preaches at. She believes that certain health issues are caused by astral sex with demons and witches in dreams. She thinks that the government is infested with reptiloids and that it's important for children to be whipped. She believes that Jesus will take personal revenge against social media companies on her behalf. She thinks it's appropriate for parents to stop loving their transgendered children, etc. etc. etc.
            Dan Erickson, D.O. who is an Osteopath Doctor who previously made waves when he did a news conference with his partner on a similar theme about how coronavirus fears are overblown. Osteopathy is a belief system that all illnesses can be cured by joint manipulation and skull massage. Technically Osteopaths are supposed to get actual modern medical training and are considered to be real doctors, but the qualification definitely has roots in outright quackery.
            James Todaro M.D. who is an Ophthalmologist/Blogger
            Joe Ladapo M.D. who is a doctor/frequent editorialist.

            Overall, it seems to be a mixed bag. Definitely some real quacks in there along with some people who are definitely putting politics over public health. Those members who might be reasonable are drowned out by the ones that are clearly quacks.

        • by nightflameauto ( 6607976 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:53AM (#60343093)

          Sure, most of them are Doctors. But lets take a look at the leading one, Stella Immanuel.

          First, she is not from a medical university. She runs a small clinic right next to the church that she runs. She also believes that various gynecological issues such as fibroid tumors and cysts happen after having dream sex with demons and witches. She claims alien dna is used in current medicine, and that a vaccine is in the works to prevent people from believe in Jesus / being religious.

          How do I donate to that last effort?

        • A vaccine can cure the belief in god?

          Guess the omnipotence of that guy is severely overrated when he can be cured with a flu shot.

      • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:53AM (#60343095)
        Or worse, paid shills selling out. Seeing as the entire rest of the medical community is telling these guys to get bent I think that's pretty likely.

        But that's not the point. The point is to move the goal post. We're taking about this instead of how Trump's incompetence and malice are in track to kill 230,000 Americans by election day. Mission accomplished.
    • Let that come out in the wash. For now this is the Streisand Effect. Somebody says you are not permitted to watch it, so...

      We'll leave social media giants censoring under threat from legislators in both parties via changes to section 230, or breakup, as a discussion for another day. Hopefully not too long.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:17AM (#60342825)

      The explanation I have come up with after being puzzled for a long time by this utterly stupid behavior is that many people seem to think that really believing something changes reality. Hence they chose to believe what they want to be true and then feel they have fixed the problem. In actual reality, they are just creating a filter-bubble and do not see reality anymore (at least for a time). What still gets through, they just deny, because they have no understanding what a "fact" actually is. One reason for that is that they misuse that term routinely themselves and see it as malleable, just as they see reality as malleable.

      The same approach is also a favorite of climate-change deniers, anti-vaxxers, flat-earthers, etc.: If Science comes up with things you do not like, just ignore them or classify them as "opinions".

      Yes, that is utterly dysfunctional. But look at how well humanity does in general on things and it makes a lot of sense.

      • Magical thinking, lack of self-awareness, and unbounded entitlement make a politician very good at gaslighting, which helps them get into office and stay there. I don't agree with going so far as to say that "in politics perception is reality" since politics has huge real-world consequences on people's lives. Look at Stalin, a very popular guy. Plenty of prisoners in his death camps were sure that if only Papa found out what was happening to them, he'd put a stop to it right away.
    • by PsychoSlashDot ( 207849 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:20AM (#60342853)

      Why do people more readily believe harebrained bullshit than evidence based facts? Even religiosity cannot explain that sufficiently.

      Because they want to.

      Humans don't (generally) like feeling out of control, and prolonged periods of danger are really stressful. Finding any shred of evidence that says you can stop feeling bad is a powerful motivation.
      Also, there's a feeling of superiority that comes from being in a correct minority. Notice conspiracy theorists are usually kind of slow individuals? They're not able to feel smart for being smart, so they find solace in theories that tell them they're smart.

      It all comes back to the fact that people believe - and do - what they want to, whenever possible.

    • by grasshoppa ( 657393 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:21AM (#60342861) Homepage

      I wonder that myself: https://c19study.com/ [c19study.com]

      • And now let's compare the graph of the countries that use chloroquine with some other countries in Europe that don't. Whoopsie, same graph.

        If you pick and choose the graphs that fit your narrative, you will be able to prove anything. From the efficiency of chloroquine to 5G causing covid.

    • Lately there has been a lot of nut jobs coming out of the woodworks who whole heartedly believe the Corona Virus pandemic is a hoax, all planned by the WHO and Gates and Soros... All New World Order BS. Just check out Guardian Science page on FB and check the comments of the nut jobs. Anything from "mainstream media" is propaganda, only sites like off-guardian, GlobalResearch.ca and numerous other small conspiracy psuedo-science news sources are trusted. The mind boggles.
    • by hey! ( 33014 )

      This is the rock-solid *behavioral* foundation of bullshitting: while you can shape someone's emotions by feeding him facts, it's more efficient to reprogram his beliefs by feeding him attitudes.

      This is particularly effective if you can can employ high status spokesmen. Everyone *knows* that athletes endorse products because they're paid to, but endorsements are highly effective at shaping consumer beliefs.

      That's why fact checking bullshit doesn't work: bullshit works even when people know it's bullshit. P

  • Isn't this a crime? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:06AM (#60342769) Homepage Journal

    Isn't there some law against the President of the United States personally disseminating information that will result in direct harm to the citizens he is supposed to be protecting? Doesn't he have a duty to protect the population, or at least not actively try to harm them for his own political benefit?

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

      It doesn't matter. Trump has proven that he cannot be punished for his crimes while sitting. He has his very own AG and DoJ...

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      My guess would be that no individual completely lacking in personal integrity or honor was ever expected to fill that role. Turns out that expectation was wrong.

    • Politicians actively harm you for their own political benefit all the time. Every time a politician threatens price controls on new medicine (as opposed to other methods to make everyone have access) they harm you by slowing medical development just as surely as if they put price controls on new video games would to video games or telling Apple they could only charge $50 for new iPhones.

    • by Shotgun ( 30919 )

      No more than there is a law against hyperventilating on the internet about a comparatively minor illness as if it is the black plague.

    • Isn't there some law against the President of the United States personally disseminating information that will result in direct harm to the citizens he is supposed to be protecting? Doesn't he have a duty to protect the population, or at least not actively try to harm them for his own political benefit?

      I'm not a lawyer but I would think there'd be some sort of fraud involved. There's no way Trump hasn't been presented the facts. In his position to willfully ignore the facts is misrepresentation of the facts.

      This isn't like a movie where a soldier has a hunch based on years of experience and countermands his superior officers' orders and saves the day. This is a CEO whose engineers have informed them clearly that the product does not function as designed and will result in customer harm, and declares

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward

      He's defending the federal buildings around the US that AnfiFa and BLM are actively attacking because that helps George Floyd or something.

      But you attack Orange Man Bad for protecting the US for that.

      But that's ok - because the CDC only lied at the beginning about the masks being ineffective. This time it's the truth and they wouldn't lie to you again so we must all wear them to be SAFE!

    • No, it would be a crime if the President didn't say something.
      Fact of the Matter is the world was gung ho over the Drug till Trump said something about it. Then cause Orange man bad syndrome, it was suddenly gona kill you if you take it. Even though its been in use over 50 years.

      By your Logic Every Democrat holding any office local, state or Federal should be in jail.

      • by jeff4747 ( 256583 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @10:56AM (#60343701)

        Fact of the Matter is the world was gung ho over the Drug till Trump said something about it.

        Uh, no.

        A doctor in France with a history of fabricated studies came out with a study showing it worked in 3 patients. "the world" responded with "that's interesting, we'll look at it more closely". Further studies showed no benefit, and the expected increased mortality from heart problems caused by high doses of it.

        At which the rest of the world said, "this doesn't work".

        At which point you, Trump's fans and everyone else looking to miracle their way out of the pandemic said the evil deep state doctors are suppressing it to hurt Trump.

  • Just ask this scientician.
  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:07AM (#60342779)

    "But it was unclear where many of them practice medicine or how many patients they had actually seen."

    They are apparently the top of the medical professionals, this doctor is even the main authority about having sex with demons.

    https://www.washingtonpost.com... [washingtonpost.com]

  • I would not want to commit wrong think!

    In addition to scrubbing the video you managed to take down their website too!

    Now, what else can we delete from the internet in order to protect people!

  • Facebook, YouTube and Twitter worked feverishly to remove it, but by the time they had, the video had already become the latest example of misinformation about the virus that has spread widely.

    Good to know. I'll add "The Streisand effect" as yet another reason for social media to not try to censor comments.

    Really, the spreading of misinformation isn't a root cause of problems in the US. It is a symptom. Censoring misinformation, even if it was successful in the short term, will just teach people that they can trust social media for news because the big corporations will either censor or label misinformation. That's not the right direction. Instead, educate people.

  • by Oh really now ( 5490472 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:14AM (#60342811)

    Conservative checking in. Pay attention

    I watched the video, and the first thing I wanted to do was fact check it. Not with your typical hit squad sites like PolitiFact, but by going back to find the source. Finding out who these people are, what are their credentials to be making their claims, what is this Frontline Doctors organization, whether I can verify their claims, etc. It is exceedingly difficult, you really have to do some digging - and that friends IS THE PROBLEM. This is the information age, but far too much information is controlled and manipulated well before reaching us.

    The content of their message is indeed sketchy, and no I most certainly am not taking their word for it. None of us should, with any source. There's so much conflicting information, so many retractions after the fact, so much emotion and fruitless bickering. It's exceedingly difficult to make an educated decision when the information is difficult or effectively impossible to trust. Maybe that's the point.

    We all should be skeptical of everything we see, read, and hear, and we all need to be talking to each other. Trusting the message we're (collectively, left and right) being fed is leading somewhere we do not want to go.

  • Legality of this? (Score:4, Insightful)

    by K. S. Kyosuke ( 729550 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:16AM (#60342821)
    Is it legal in the US to pretend you're a doctor and give out medical advice?
  • "The president is pushing the coronavirus theories of a Houston doctor who also says sexual visitations by demons and alien DNA are at the root of Americans’ common health concerns."

    https://www.thedailybeast.com/... [thedailybeast.com]

  • The video had some people in the medical profession expressing their views, and people found it interesting. Maybe those people are correct, and maybe they aren't.

    Social Media sites like Twitter, YouTube, and Facebook are places for sharing interesting content. There weren't threats of violence or anything like that.

    Making this out to be a problem, and using some sort of guilt-by-association to discredit it, is as misleading as the video may have been.

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

      The video had some people in the medical profession expressing their views,

      It has people in white lab coats sharing opinions. There's no information presented that they are, in fact, medical doctors possessing medical degrees from accredited medical schools.

    • by bugs2squash ( 1132591 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:40AM (#60342987)
      I think these people are simply out to make a quick buck out of exploiting a crisis in the most cynical way
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by drinkypoo ( 153816 )

      Social Media sites like Twitter, YouTube, and Facebook are places for sharing interesting content. There weren't threats of violence or anything like that.

      What's the difference between threats of violence and disseminating information which you know will cause people to behave in ways that kill people?

      Answer: The former might never come to anything, the latter causes deaths

    • I watched a good part of the video (could not finish it). I am all for there being a dialogue between people with expertise in the subject, BUT:
      - That Dr (I assume she is one - you may doubt one) is not speaking like a scientist at all. Even when she is saying "sciency sounding" things, she definitely comes off as a politician to me. I do not want to listen to any politicians.
      - While there are several promising treatments, the one that has had the most serious peer-reviewed studies is hydroxychloroquine. Wh

    • The video is choke full of things that are easily disprovable by science and that an overwhelming consensus of scientists and medical professionals would call, in layman's terms, "Bat Shit Crazy".

      Enough debating with bad actors. These are shills trying to force the economy back open before it's safe so the Republican party can win an election. They're violating their Hippocratic oath. They need to be called out in the plainest terms.

      And Twitter is blocking it just as fast as they can because it's fu
  • Morons (Score:4, Insightful)

    by argStyopa ( 232550 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @08:33AM (#60342931) Journal

    It's almost like people don't understand the Streisand Effect in 2020.

    This was a video I believe sponsored by Breitbart (the MSNBC of the right) wherein some people - as BBC puts it with a gentle pre-spin - "calling themselves doctors" were talking about chloroquinine or something like that.

    Of course this was publicized by the Right as "livestream of doctors talking about treatments for covid was cut by facebook!"

    The FACT is that when this hit at the beginning, we knew very little about it (Thanks China! And that shitty band of nearly-worthless time-serving bureaucrats at WHO!). Some things were asserted, some things were speculated, some things were tried, and a lot of guesses were made. We were trying to figure shit out. That's what happens when there's an emergency and you don't know what to do - you hypothesize and test. Even today there is a lot of chaos in the reportage, and the huge majority of us are not qualified to make large scale decisions (nor, honestly, are we asked to).

    I think it's factually irrefutable that there is a general consensus of opinion on some things, with a fair error-bar of dispute - even among experts - on others. There's still a lot we don't know. And, as the saying goes, half of all doctors are below average.

    At some point - like everything in 2020 - the narratives diverged into politics.

    You can say it was an irresponsible president advocating the use of an untested medication (at least from the quote I heard, he /didn't actually advocate/ using it, he advocated 'checking into it' or somesuch).
    Or, you can say it was an innocent speculation (but I think even a moron would understand that EVERYTHING a president says is impactful; they - if they're responsible - can't just blather about the same goofy shit the rest of us speculate on day-to-day because their words resonate).

    Social media, smelling the prevailing winds, has now "taken sides" actively blocking discussions they don't like...you know, to "protect" us from misinformation. Even if you agree with Twitter, Facebook, Instagram that this is a terrible president that we all hope is replaced by someone more competent, THAT HAS TO BE TROUBLING. Sure, capitalistic free-market wise these are their platforms; they are conceivably entitled to manage traffic on them as they will.

    But the modern era is replete with examples of businesses and products which have been deemed ubiquitous in serving a public need, and thus regarded with a different set of rules. Rules that prohibit them from, say, refusing service based on a person's sexual preferences or skin color.

    I think it's been historically proved that the ONLY enduring antidote to stupid speech is MORE SPEECH. This censorship (which is clearly politically motivated, despite the "who, me?" protestations) simply feeds into an aggrieved, victim narrative that's going to have results 180 degrees different from what they think they're accomplishing.

    • I believe you are correct that they have become the de facto public squares of the current era. And, as such they must be held to a different standard in terms of access. Regardless of what opinions each of us personally hold I think it should scare the crap out of everyone that some random unelected middle manager who is totally unaccountable to the public can decide what speech is acceptable. And, that we have moved into a period of time where anyone who's speech is deemed unacceptable must have their
  • by Rick Schumann ( 4662797 ) on Wednesday July 29, 2020 @12:24PM (#60344139) Journal
    This is who you voted for, are you happy now? Trump and his corrupt-as-fuck family are trying to get you all killed. This 'doctor' is a lunatic who actually believes that demons are making you sick, and Trump and company are promoting her. Are you still sure this is who you want running this country? Think hard, GOP.

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

Working...