Conspiracy theories thriving online accuse Bill Gates of starting the virus outbreak

20 May, 2020
Conspiracy theories thriving online accuse Bill Gates of starting the virus outbreak
False claims targeting billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates are gaining traction online because the beginning of the coronavirus outbreak, with authorities warning they could hamper efforts to curb the virus.

Doctored photographs and fabricated news articles crafted by conspiracy theorists-shared a large number of times on social media platforms and messaging apps, in various languages-have gone so far as accusing the Microsoft founder of fabricating the outbreak.

Gates, who has pledged $250 million to efforts to fight the pandemic, is the latest in a string of online targets regardless of the World Health Organization’s efforts to fight what it named an “infodemic”-misinformation fanned by panic and confusion about the virus.

In recent months, 5G networks and Hungarian-American billionaire George Soros are also blamed for creating COVID-19, which has killed a lot more than 315,000 people around the world.

“Bill Gates is definitely a target of specific conspiracy communities,” said Rory Smith, research manager initially Draft, a non-profit that provides research and training for journalists.

Gates-whose eponymous foundation has spent vast amounts of dollars increasing healthcare in developing countries in the last 20 years-has become “a sort of abstract boogeyman”, said Whitney Phillips, an assistant professor at New York’s Syracuse University, where she teaches digital ethics.

A video accusing Gates of wanting “to remove 15 percent of the populace” through vaccination and electronic microchips has racked up practically two million views on YouTube.

Similar allegations “exploded” between January and April, Smith told AFP.

Exploiting the crisis

Since the start of crisis, AFP Fact Check has debunked a large number of anti-Gates rumours circulating on platforms like Facebook, WhatsApp and Instagram in languages including English, French, Spanish, Polish and Czech.

Several accusations, including posts claiming that the FBI arrested Gates for biological terrorism or that he supports a Western plot to poison Africans, share a common thread.

They accuse the tycoon of exploiting the crisis, whether it is to “control people” or generate income from selling vaccines. 

“These conspiracies are powerful enough to drive down institutional trust around health organisations, and for that reason, possibly lower vaccination rates, which is worrying,” Smith said.

Gates’ vocal criticism folks President Donald Trump and support for vaccine development made him “an ideal scapegoat for an emergency that emerges on the intersection of technology and (medical) science,” Kinga Polynczuk-Alenius, a social sciences researcher at Finland’s University of Helsinki, wrote in a university blog post.

It is not the 1st time Gates has found himself susceptible to conspiracy theorists. When Zika virus broke out in 2015 in Brazil, he was one of the powerful Western figures blamed for the disease.

Other rumours declare that he is secretly a lizard, a vintage favourite among online trolls.

“He hasn’t become conspiracists’ favourite target, he has been (their favourite target) for some time,” Sylvain Delouvee, a social psychology researcher at France’s University of Rennes, told AFP.

Predicted the pandemic

The recent explosion in false claims could be explained as a coping mechanism during the global crisis, Smith said.

“Folks are constantly looking for information to create sense out of the reality, and having these conspiracies offers a convenient way of having power over your position,” he said.

The pandemic has also provided fertile breeding ground for attacks on the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, particularly by anti-vaccine campaigners whose influential online presence had been brewing years before the virus emerged.

The charity’s humanitarian work in Africa, where misinformation about Gates is specially present, and financial support of the World Health Organisation-it may be the agency’s second-largest donor-have fed rumours of dark secrets and ploys for power.

Several widely shared posts indicate photographs of Gates attending a “coronavirus conference” in 2015. Conclusion? He predicted the pandemic.

In reality, he was meeting with a research institute that had filed for a patent to potentially be utilized for a vaccine against a different kind of coronavirus that affects animals.

Like many scientists, Gates had already warned of an imminent pandemic in the years prior to the novel coronavirus outbreak.

Conspiracies creeping into mainstream

Gates in addition has come under attack from celebrities.

Conservative US television set host Laura Ingraham claimed within an interview that Gates was developing “tracking mechanisms”. She was discussing a widely misinterpreted Reddit post by the billionaire about “digital certificates” showing who has recovered, been tested or-eventually-vaccinated.

Robert Kennedy Jr, the anti-Trump, anti-vaccine nephew of the former American president John F Kennedy, has accused the philanthropist of dictating global health policies.

Meanwhile, French “Chocolat” actress Juliette Binoche sparked controversy when she posted an Instagram post blasting Gates and calling for the rejection of “a microchip implant for all”.

Debunking misinformation is “not about saying that many people are an excellent guy”, said Delouvee at France’s University of Rennes, pointing to privacy concerns around the race to build coronavirus tracking applications and governments’ usage of medical data.

The Gates Foundation has come under fire in publications like the Lancet medical journal, which accused it of too little transparency over its financial investments, but that is not the same as misguided beliefs that he orchestrated the complete pandemic.
Source:
TAG(s):
Search - Nextnews24.com
Share On:
Nextnews24 - Archive