A Vast Right Wing Conspiracy? Maybe.

In the late 1990s, Hilary Clinton was widely derided for claiming that the various “scandals” of the Clinton Administration as orchestrated by a vast right wing conspiracy.

In 2004, David Brock (founder of media matters) wrote a book called “The Republican Noise Machine” which described how various right wing media organizations create a loud chorus of “noise” to drown out whatever news or information they want obfuscated.

Yesterday, I learned that Twitter had taken down a couple of tweets by media conservatives for violating its rules against spreading false information, aka “fake news.” Here are the tweets:

What I find interesting about these tweets is not that they are false. Charlie Kirk is a shameless purveyor of right wing misinformation. What interests me is that his tweet was followed up 11 minutes later by an identical tweet from Rudy Giuliani.

Giuliani did not merely retweet Kirk, but went to the trouble of copying, pasting, and putting it in quotes. Why does Giuliani, allegedly a very important person, have nothing better to do at 7:40 a.m. on a Saturday morning than to jiggle around a tweet from a conservative back bencher?

In my opinion, Kirk is a certifiable crackpot who has no ideas of his own. Presumably he got the memo (figuratively speaking) that noise is to be made about Whitmer, because Trump has picked a feud with her, dismissively and disrespectfully referring to her as “that woman from Michigan.” I’m not suggesting that Kirk was actually given instructions by some shadowy operative. A dog knows how to curry favor with his master.

Before we go any further, let’s apply a little critical thinking to the tweet in question.  It begins with “Hydroxychloroquine has been shown to have a 100% effective rate treating COVID-19.”  We are in the midst of a world-wide health crisis that has afflicted hundreds of thousands of people, killed tens of thousands, shut down the world’s economy as a cost of trillions and trillions of dollars, it has a significant portion of the world’s population sitting at home, either because they’ve been ordered to do so by their governments or because they’re scared out of their wits, and the cure is no more difficult than administering a pill that is widely available and ridiculously inexpensive to manufacture. Seemingly oblivious to this fact are the hundreds of thousands of scientists feverishly working to come up with something to treat, slow down, prevent or just cast shade on the virus.

Either the world is turned upside down, or Kirk’s statement is not true. Let’s suspend belief and move on.

Next we are told “Yet, Democrat Gretchen Whitmer is threatening doctors who prescribe it.”  This is something that is not hard to track down. This is what came out of Governor Whitmer’s office:

The Department of Licensing and Regulatory Affairs has received multiple allegations of Michigan physicians inappropriately prescribing hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine to themselves, family, friends, and/or coworkers without a legitimate medical purpose.

Prescribing hydroxychloroquine or chloroquine without further proof of efficacy for treating COVID-19 or with the intent to stockpile the drug may create a shortage for patients with lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, or other ailments for which chloroquine and hydroxychloroquine are proven treatments. Reports of this conduct will be evaluated and may be further investigated for administrative action. Prescribing any kind of prescription must also be associated with medical documentation showing proof of the medical necessity and medical condition for which the patient is being treated. Again, these are drugs that have not been proven scientifically or medically to treat COVID-19.

Which of the following statements culled from the above troubles you:

      • Doctors should only prescribe drugs when there is a medical necessity for doing so.
      • Doctors should not needlessly prescribe drugs in order to stockpile them.
      • Stockpiling drugs in this fashion can deprive people who actually have conditions for which the drugs are proven treatments, and the State will investigate any such activity.

Moving on . . .

The next statement by Kirk is the only one with a germ of truth: “If Trump is for something – Democrats are against it.” This is often the case, but in fairness, Trump campaigned by promising to do all sorts of things that Democrats were against, so it might be a chicken or egg type of thing. Nevertheless, Democrats just approved a 2 trillion dollar spending bill that Trump was for, so that statement clearly has some holes in it. Maybe this is a good time to note that Kirk, a fiscal conservative, might question why Trump was agreeing to add trillions to the deficit if he truly believed that hydroxychloroquine was 100 percent effective against Covid-19.

“They’re ok with people dying if it means opposing Trump.” The syntax here is a little tortured. The most natural meaning would seem to be that Democrats are ok with people who oppose Trump dying, presumably because they believe that opposing Trump is worth the ultimate sacrifice and not because they think that people who oppose Trump deserve to die. I do not believe that this is what Kirk meant, and I am not aware of any registered Democrats self-immolating in protest.

I believe that what Kirk is trying to say is that Democrats would rather let people die than let Trump save them. This assumes that using hydroxychloroquine to save people’s lives is somehow a political and not a scientific issue. Which brings us back to my original point.

Why did Giuliani repeat Kirk’s crackpot tweet 11 minutes later? I can say many unflattering things about Giuliani, but he is not stupid, as least not in the technical sense of the word. Perhaps he was simply trying to drum up interest in the next segment of his ironically named podcast “Common Sense.” But Giuliani knows that there is little evidence that hydroxychloroquine is effective against Covid-19. He certainly knows the ludicrousness of the assertion that it has been shown to be “100 percent effective.” Kirk’s and Giuliani’s tweets were retweeted a combined 30,000 times. Who knows how many gullible souls were exposed to this lie?

For whatever reason, somebody in the GOP camp has decided to politicize this issue. It’s probably a no-lose scenario. If it turns out to be an effective treatment, Republicans have positioned themselves as for it and they have painted Democrats as being against it. If it fizzles out, they know that people’s memories are short, and the list of lies foisted upon the American public by the GOP is long, and this will be just one more.

If you are interested in the current state of information regarding hydroxychloroquine and Covid-19, this is probably the best article out there:

https://www.sciencemag.org/news/2020/03/insane-many-scientists-lament-trump-s-embrace-risky-malaria-drugs-coronavirus#

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