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Home / World

Covid 19 coronavirus: Virus conspiracists elevate a new champion

By Davey Alba
New York Times·
11 May, 2020 05:00 AM8 mins to read

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Dr. Judy Mikovits at the Whittemore Peterson Institute for Neuro-Immune Disease in 2011, the year she was fired there. Photo / AP

Dr. Judy Mikovits at the Whittemore Peterson Institute for Neuro-Immune Disease in 2011, the year she was fired there. Photo / AP

A video showcasing baseless arguments by Dr. Judy Mikovits, including attacks on Dr. Anthony Fauci, has been viewed more than eight million times in the past week.

In a video posted to YouTube last week, a woman animatedly described an unsubstantiated secret plot by global elites like Bill Gates and Dr. Anthony Fauci to use the coronavirus pandemic to profit and grab political power.

In the 26-minute video, the woman asserted how Fauci, the director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and a leading voice on the coronavirus, had buried her research about how vaccines can damage people's immune systems. It is those weakened immune systems, she declared, that have made people susceptible to illnesses like Covid-19.

The video, a scene from a longer dubious documentary called Plandemic, was quickly seized upon by anti-vaccinators, the conspiracy group QAnon and activists from the Reopen America movement, generating more than 8 million views. And it has turned the woman — Dr. Judy Mikovits, 62, a discredited scientist — into a new star of virus disinformation.

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Her ascent was powered not only by the YouTube video but also by a book that she published in April, Plague of Corruption, which frames Mikovits as a truth-teller fighting deception in science. In recent weeks, she has become a darling of far-right publications like The Epoch Times and The Gateway Pundit. Mentions of her on social media and television have spiked to as high as 14,000 a day, according to media insights company Zignal Labs.

The rise of Mikovits is the latest twist in the virus disinformation wars, which have swelled throughout the pandemic. Conspiracy theorists have used the uncertainty and fear around the disease to mint many villains. Those include Fauci after he appeared to slight President Donald Trump and Gates, a co-founder of Microsoft, as someone who started the disease. They have also pushed the baseless idea that 5G wireless waves can help cause the disease.

On the flip side, they have created their own heroes, like Mikovits.

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The conspiracy theorists "recast a pusher of discredited pseudoscience as a whistleblowing counterpoint to real expertise," said Renee DiResta, a disinformation researcher at the Stanford Internet Observatory.

Mikovits did not respond to requests for comment.

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Mikovits has a degree in biology from the University of Virginia and a Ph.D. in molecular biology from George Washington University. From 1992 to 2001, she worked at the National Cancer Institute as a postdoctoral fellow, a staff scientist and a lab director, then served as research director of the Whittemore Peterson Institute for Neuro-Immune Disease from 2006 to 2011. In 2011, after her research into chronic fatigue syndrome was discredited, she was fired from Whittemore.

Mikovits' rise to internet notoriety has been sudden. According to data from Zignal Labs, she was rarely mentioned on social media platforms in February.

By April, coverage of Mikovits rose to 800 mentions a day. That month, Darla Shine, the wife of Bill Shine, a former Fox News executive and former top aide to Trump, promoted Mikovits' book in a tweet. Videos by The Epoch Times, a publication with ties to the Falun Gong, and conservative outlet "The Next News Network" interviewed Mikovits about the pandemic, generating more than 1.5 million views on social networks.

Then came the video from Plandemic, which made mentions of Mikovits on social media spike far higher. The video was produced by Mikki Willis, who was involved in making "Bernie or Bust" and "Never Hillary" videos during the 2016 presidential campaign.

Her arguments also began to spill over into the real world, including her baseless assertion that "wearing the mask literally activates your own virus." There is no evidence that wearing a mask can activate viruses and make people sick. On Thursday in Sacramento, California, a woman brandished a sign in front of the state Capitol that read, "Do you know who Dr. Judy Mikovits is? Then don't tell me I need a silly mask."

YouTube and Facebook have removed the Plandemic scene, saying that it spread inaccurate information about Covid-19 that could be harmful to the public. But the video continues to circulate, as people post new copies. Twitter added an "unsafe" warning on at least one link featuring Mikovits on the social network and blocked the hashtags #PlagueOfCorruption and #Plandemicmovie from trends and search.

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Mikovits has attacked Fauci online since at least 2018. But her claims did not gain much traction until this year, when the narrative that Fauci was secretly plotting to undermine and discredit the president started spreading.

Mikovits says Fauci's attacks on her work date back to the 1980s when she contributed research to the National Cancer Institute as a graduate student. In the video being shared, Mikovits alleges that Fauci intercepted her research on HIV to make money off patents, threatened her and then took undeserved credit for moving the field of HIV treatment forward.

She also ties her professional downfall to Fauci. In 2009, Mikovits published research in the journal Science claiming to show that a mouse retrovirus caused chronic fatigue syndrome and other illnesses. That research gained significant media attention, but it was discredited a couple of years later, including with a retraction by the journal. Mikovits was briefly jailed in California on charges of theft made by Whittemore. The charges were later dropped.

Mikovits has sought to reframe the scandal as part of a broader campaign of persecution, aimed at silencing her work questioning the safety of vaccines.

There is no evidence that Fauci and Mikovits interacted. In a statement to the fact-checking website Snopes, Fauci denied ever having threatened Mikovits. "I have no idea what she is talking about," he wrote.

The National Cancer Institute referred an inquiry about Mikovits' claims to the National Institutes of Health, the agency that oversees the NCI's cancer research and training. Fauci came to the NIH as a clinical associate in 1968 and was appointed director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases at the NIH by 1984.

In a statement, the agency said, "The National Institutes of Health and National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases are focused on critical research aimed at ending the Covid-19 pandemic and preventing further deaths. We are not engaging in tactics by some seeking to derail our efforts."

Dr. Ian Lipkin, the director of the Center for Infection and Immunity at Columbia University, said in an interview Saturday morning that Fauci had asked him in 2011 to design a study that would address whether Mikovits and others could reproduce her research showing an association between XMRV, the mouse retrovirus, and chronic fatigue syndrome. He pointed to a September 2012 news conference at Columbia in which Mikovits admitted the link her original research had made between the mouse retrovirus and chronic fatigue syndrome was "simply not there."

"Now is the time to use" the invalidating results that came out of the effort to reproduce her research "and move forward," Mikovits said at the time. "And that's what science is all about."

Ivan Oransky, a co-founder of academic watchdog Retraction Watch, which has followed Mikovits' work closely, said that when he sees videos like the one posted in the past week, "they tend to coalesce around certain kinds of subjects, then the trajectory turns to martyrhood really quickly."

There is some evidence that prominent members of conspiracy groups have tried to give her name and her story a lift online.

Zach Vorhies, a former YouTube employee who has recently promoted QAnon conspiracy theories, posted a GoFundMe campaign April 19 titled "Help me amplify Pharma Whistleblower Judy Mikovits." The campaign was first spotted by DiResta, of the Stanford Internet Observatory.

A day before the GoFundMe campaign began, a newly created account for Mikovits tweeted for the first time. "A big thanks goes out to Zach Vorhies (@Perpetualmaniac) for helping me get on Twitter!" It was retweeted 400 times and liked more than 2,200 times. The account has gained over 111,000 followers in less than a month.


• Covid19.govt.nz: The Government's official Covid-19 advisory website

GoFundMe removed the page Friday, stating that the campaign violated the website's terms of service for "campaigns that are fraudulent, misleading, inaccurate, dishonest, or impossible."

Vorhies did not respond to requests for comment.

Mikovits' newfound notoriety has also lifted sales of her new book. This past week, "Plague of Corruption" shot to No. 1 on Amazon's print bestseller list. The book was out of stock Friday. Amazon said that the book did not violate the company's content guidelines.

Skyhorse, the independent publishing company behind the book, defended its decision to print Mikovits. "The world should discuss the ideas in this book rather than allow censorship to prevail," a spokeswoman for Skyhorse said.

Dr. Peter Hotez, dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, said her rise illustrated how the anti-vaccination movement had "taken a new ominous twist" with the coronavirus.

"They've now aligned themselves with far-right groups," Hotez said, "and their weapons of choice are YouTube, Facebook and Amazon."


Written by: Davey Alba
© 2020 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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