Berliner Boersenzeitung - Parliamentary hearings worldwide used to spread anti-vaccine conspiracies

EUR -
AED 3.827558
AFN 70.343739
ALL 96.964833
AMD 406.16103
ANG 1.879506
AOA 951.933123
ARS 1046.501742
AUD 1.602528
AWG 1.878327
AZN 1.775652
BAM 1.957994
BBD 2.10556
BDT 124.618464
BGN 1.957775
BHD 0.392718
BIF 3016.786406
BMD 1.042068
BND 1.405609
BOB 7.20618
BRL 6.063693
BSD 1.042869
BTN 88.025462
BWP 14.247172
BYN 3.412907
BYR 20424.529726
BZD 2.102106
CAD 1.45641
CDF 2991.777155
CHF 0.931343
CLF 0.037263
CLP 1028.187912
CNY 7.549824
CNH 7.564496
COP 4605.53346
CRC 531.195309
CUC 1.042068
CUP 27.614798
CVE 110.77587
CZK 25.3473
DJF 185.196707
DKK 7.457736
DOP 62.993411
DZD 139.652412
EGP 51.764412
ERN 15.631018
ETB 128.595208
FJD 2.371695
FKP 0.822522
GBP 0.831596
GEL 2.855673
GGP 0.822522
GHS 16.46869
GIP 0.822522
GMD 73.987187
GNF 8994.087925
GTQ 8.050022
GYD 218.177652
HKD 8.112285
HNL 26.264109
HRK 7.43334
HTG 136.893416
HUF 411.752671
IDR 16594.930403
ILS 3.861429
IMP 0.822522
INR 87.996951
IQD 1365.629908
IRR 43863.244665
ISK 145.493914
JEP 0.822522
JMD 166.136188
JOD 0.738935
JPY 161.29026
KES 134.951747
KGS 90.142827
KHR 4221.417198
KMF 492.381009
KPW 937.860664
KRW 1463.470058
KWD 0.320801
KYD 0.869086
KZT 520.711055
LAK 22883.8102
LBP 93317.17572
LKR 303.520154
LRD 187.833126
LSL 18.872246
LTL 3.076956
LVL 0.630337
LYD 5.090542
MAD 10.435216
MDL 19.021591
MGA 4867.499257
MKD 61.527825
MMK 3384.595706
MNT 3540.946475
MOP 8.361391
MRU 41.594178
MUR 48.821273
MVR 16.100342
MWK 1809.030135
MXN 21.349193
MYR 4.655442
MZN 66.592021
NAD 18.872242
NGN 1768.080391
NIO 38.317227
NOK 11.54085
NPR 140.841219
NZD 1.787086
OMR 0.401188
PAB 1.042894
PEN 3.953646
PGK 4.19589
PHP 61.445013
PKR 289.490304
PLN 4.335151
PYG 8141.12374
QAR 3.793652
RON 4.97567
RSD 116.997165
RUB 107.700343
RWF 1428.675013
SAR 3.912282
SBD 8.721607
SCR 14.790679
SDG 626.807638
SEK 11.500881
SGD 1.404421
SHP 0.822522
SLE 23.676168
SLL 21851.646573
SOS 595.545589
SRD 36.987196
STD 21568.700427
SVC 9.125139
SYP 2618.22657
SZL 18.882654
THB 35.941305
TJS 11.106407
TMT 3.657658
TND 3.314301
TOP 2.440631
TRY 35.994243
TTD 7.082938
TWD 33.918306
TZS 2771.900812
UAH 43.142936
UGX 3853.318406
USD 1.042068
UYU 44.349277
UZS 13395.782472
VES 48.217013
VND 26499.785252
VUV 123.716388
WST 2.909027
XAF 656.708727
XAG 0.033301
XAU 0.000385
XCD 2.816241
XDR 0.793308
XOF 648.166544
XPF 119.331742
YER 260.416496
ZAR 18.903043
ZMK 9379.864807
ZMW 28.808701
ZWL 335.54542
  • CMSD

    0.1350

    24.58

    +0.55%

  • SCS

    0.2450

    13.285

    +1.84%

  • BCC

    3.3500

    143.71

    +2.33%

  • GSK

    0.3000

    34

    +0.88%

  • BTI

    0.3200

    37.3

    +0.86%

  • BCE

    0.1650

    26.845

    +0.61%

  • JRI

    0.0750

    13.305

    +0.56%

  • NGG

    1.1096

    63.19

    +1.76%

  • RBGPF

    -0.5000

    59.69

    -0.84%

  • RIO

    -0.3200

    62.25

    -0.51%

  • AZN

    1.3800

    65.64

    +2.1%

  • RYCEF

    0.0300

    6.82

    +0.44%

  • VOD

    0.1373

    8.735

    +1.57%

  • CMSC

    0.0500

    24.69

    +0.2%

  • BP

    0.1100

    29.63

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.9750

    46.735

    +2.09%

Parliamentary hearings worldwide used to spread anti-vaccine conspiracies
Parliamentary hearings worldwide used to spread anti-vaccine conspiracies / Photo: STEPHANE DE SAKUTIN - AFP/File

Parliamentary hearings worldwide used to spread anti-vaccine conspiracies

Standing on the podium of the Ohio Statehouse in the United States last year, a nurse pressed a key against her neck aiming to prove that Covid vaccines make people magnetic.

Text size:

The key -- like the theory -- didn't stick, instead tumbling down her neck and leading to the video of her testimony going viral.

While the nurse's failure mainly prompted derision, it was just one example of how parliamentary hearings worldwide have been weaponised to spread vaccine misinformation since the start of the pandemic.

Parliaments have hosted known conspiracy theorists, who quickly post edited videos of their testimony on social media where the prestigious platform gives them the veneer of legitimacy, experts warn.

The nurse at the Ohio Statehouse was following the lead of anti-vaxxer Sherri Tenpenny, who had earlier testified at the invitation of Republican lawmakers, and has promoted the thoroughly debunked theory that coronavirus vaccines make people magnetic.

Known spreaders of Covid-19 misinformation have addressed hearings across the United States, such as Peter McCullough, who has testified to a Texas Senate committee as well as the US Senate in Washington DC.

Such parliamentary hearings "are part of an arsenal of disinformation," said Sebastian Dieguez, a neuroscientist specialising in conspiracy theories at Switzerland's University of Fribourg.

These figures paradoxically "need the seal of legitimacy imparted by the 'system'," such as mainstream politicians and media, that they spend so much time and rejecting, he told AFP.

- 'A trap' -

"I do think having the opportunity to participate in hearings gives those perspectives a legitimate platform," Molly Reynolds of the US think tank Brookings Institution told AFP.

She said she suspected that in some cases Republicans invited anti-vaccine witnesses to hearings to support their own views.

Dieguez said one argument was that, in a democratic legislative process, all voices have a right to be heard.

But this can be "a bit of a trap", he warned, "if it means giving a false sense of balance by offering a platform to positions that are not only in the minority but also often quite outrageous".

France's Parliamentary Office for the Evaluation of Scientific and Technological Choices has been accused of doing just that.

Earlier this year, it heard from speakers who gave misleading statistics about the adverse effects of Covid-19 vaccines.

Alain Fischer, who coordinates France's pandemic vaccine strategy, criticised the office after himself giving testimony at the Senate hearing in May.

It was "regrettable... that a public hearing was held where specialists who rely on scientific data and pseudo-experts who promote opinion not based on facts were placed on the same level," he told L'Express newspaper.

"This amounts to granting them a form legitimacy."

- Time to change the rules? -

Mathematician and politician Cedric Villani, the then president of the office, rejected the criticism, saying the panel "does not claim to offer more or less legitimacy to one person or another".

Senator Sonia de La Provote, the office's rapporteur, said the office was "proud" to hear from everyone.

"Only giving the floor to those we consider have the right speak seems to me to be particularly detrimental to our democratic functioning," she told AFP.

In the tiny neighbouring country of Luxembourg, several known anti-vaccine figures including French scientist Luc Montagnier spoke in parliament in January.

They were brought along by a group whose petition about compulsory Covid vaccines gained enough signatures to trigger a parliamentary debate.

The president of Luxembourg's Chamber of Deputies Fernand Etgen told AFP in January that it was "obvious" that "most of their assertions were untrue, false or misleading".

The parliament is looking at changing the rules about how much notification it gets about the identity of those who testify.

In January, it only found out who would be speaking the day before the event, making it "impossible for members of parliament to prepare," Etgen said.

(U.Gruber--BBZ)