Amit Prasad Antiscience Movements
Amit Prasad Antiscience Movements
Amit Prasad Antiscience Movements
AMIT PRASAD
COVID–19 has not only resulted in nearly two and a half million deaths globally but it has also spawned
a pandemic of misinformation and conspiracies. In this article I examine COVID–19 misinformation
and conspiracies in the United States (US). These misinformation and conspiracies have been com-
monly argued to be anti-science. I argue, although it is important to rebut false information and stop
their spread, social scientists need to analyse how such anti-science claims are discursively framed and
interpreted. Specifically, I show how the framing of the anti-science conspiracies utilise the credibility of
science and scientists. I also explore how the COVID–19 misinformation and conspiracies were given
different meaning among different social groups. The article is divided into three sections. In the first
section I analyse the discursive emplotment of the Plandemic video that had Dr Judy Mikovits present-
ing several COVID–19 conspiracy theories and went viral before it was taken down from major social
media platforms. I show how the video draws on the credibility of science, scientists, and scientific
journals to present misinformation and conspiracies claims against vaccination, mask wearing, etc.
The second section explores how COVID–19 misinformation and conspiracies were interpreted among
the African-American community by drawing on the history of black community’s experiences in the
US and as such how their interpretations stand in contrast to the interpretations of the COVID–19
misinformation and conspiracies among the White community. The last section analyses the role of STS
in engaging with anti-science and post-truth issues and emphasises the need to excavate genealogies
of the present even with regard to misinformation and conspiracies.
On 1 July 2020, The Alliance for Science, a Cornell University based group that
‘seeks to promote access to scientific innovation as a means for raising the quality of
life globally’,1 bluntly headlined one of its news reports: ‘“Anti-Science” attitudes
Amit Prasad (corresponding author), School of History and Sociology, Georgia Institute of
Technology, Old Civil Engineering Building, 221 Bobby Dodd Way, Atlanta, GA 30332–0225. E-mail:
amit.prasad@hsoc.gatech.edu
‘We’ve gone through swine flu, bird flu, AIDS. All of the pandemics, epidemics
are perpetrated fraud to control, to drive our healthcare system. Literally, it’s bank-
rupting our country’ (as quoted in The Guardian, 2020).9 Dr Judy Mikovits, who
made the above claim, is a virologist whose 2009 paper in Science was retracted
by the journal because the research on which that paper was based was discredited.
Mikovits made the claim in a 26 minutes video titled Plandemic that was posted
on several social media platforms on 4 May 2020 and soon went viral.
In this video Mikovits is interviewed by Mikki Willis, a filmmaker, and she
makes a number of claims in relation to COVID–19. For example, she states:
‘Wearing the mask literally activates your own virus. You’re getting sick from your
own reactivated coronavirus expressions and if it happens to be SARS-Cov–2 then
you’ve got a big problem’.10 Her reasoning, as she explained in another interview,
is that ‘it’s probable that it’s {SARS-Cov–2 or COVID virus} been in every flu
vaccine since ‘13 to ‘15 because that’s when this work was being illegally done’.11
Thus, according to Mikovits, SARS-CoV–2 (COVID–19) virus has been dormant
in our bodies for years and wearing masks activates the virus.11
Mikovits makes many claims in the video with regard to COVID–19. Another of
her claims that has become a part of COVID–19 conspiracies suggests alternative
therapies for COVID–19 are already available and asks why has the focus been
on the development of a vaccine. This claim is presented as a conspiracy by the
scientific establishment and the drug companies. ‘The game’, Mikovits says, ‘is to
prevent the therapies until everyone is infected and push the vaccine, knowing that
the flu vaccines increase the odds by 36% of getting COVID–19’.11 She specifically
targets Dr Anthony Fauci but also states that the American Medical Association
(AMA) too is behind controlling alternative therapies for COVID–19. She states
in the video: ‘The AMA was saying, ya know, doctors will lose their license if they
use hydroxychloroquine’.11
In the weeks and months that passed since the Plandemic video was first posted
on several social media sites, there were not only numerous responses via videos
and print media that have shown that Mikovits claims are wrong, but the video,
Plandemic, was also later taken down from social media sites such as Facebook,
YouTube, Twitter, etc., for its role in spreading misinformation. I am not going
to go into the details of how Mikovits claims are wrong. It has already been done
very effectively by many scientists and medical professionals and I am not trained
Willis: ‘So, you made a discovery that conflicted with the agreed upon narrative’.
Mikovits: ‘Correct’.
Willis: ‘And for that they did everything in their powers to destroy your life’.
Mikovits: ‘Correct’.
Willis: ‘You were arrested’.
Mikovits: ‘Correct’.
Willis: ‘And then you were put under a gag order’.
Mikovits: ‘For five years, if I went on social media, if I said anything at all,
they would find new evidence and put me back in jail. It was one of the
few times I cried. It was because I knew there was no evidence the first
time. And when you can unleash that kind of force to force someone into
bankruptcy with a perfect credit score. So that I could not bring my 97
witnesses, which included the heads of Tony Fauci, Ian Lipkin, the heads
of public health and HHS, who would have had to testify that we did abso-
lutely nothing wrong’.15
Willis: ‘So what did they charge you with?’
Mikovits: ‘Nothing’.
Willis: ‘But you were in jail’.
Mikovits: ‘I was in jail with no charges. I was called a fugitive from justice
{police cars are shown making a raid in the night while Mikovits talks}.
No warrant … I have no constitutional freedoms or rights’.
Before we proceed further, it is important to note that the framing of Willis’s first
question genealogically links Mikovits scientific work (although it was later discred-
ited) to the commonly used trope to describe a scientific discovery—‘discovery that
conflicted with the agreed upon narrative’. The video thus presents reaction towards
Mikovits’ work not simply as a conspiracy of the pharmaceutical companies, but
also a result of it being ahead and beyond the accepted scientific knowledge. That is
to say, Mikovits is being presented simultaneously as a revolutionary scientist, who
made an important discovery, and somebody who became a target of special interests.
Such framing of Mikovits and her research reflects the biased view of the film-
maker. Willis does not even discuss the discrediting of Mikovits’s research that had
resulted in the retraction of latter’s paper, which was published in Science. In the
narrative emplotment of Mikovits and her ‘scientific’ claims idealised constructions
of science and scientific research are used to not just gloss over and hide falsehoods
with regard to the scientist and her claims, but to present her as a hero.
In the video, Willis, the filmmaker/interviewer, continues the earlier quoted
exchange, stating that a lot of people would have taken retirement or laid low, but
now that Mikovits’s gag order has been released, instead of lying low she has decided
to publish the book Plague of Corruption: Restoring Faith in the Promise of Science
(the book cover shows on the screen, while Willis reads the book’s title aloud). Willis
thereafter states, ‘apparently their attempts to silence you has failed’ and then says
he has to ask ‘how do you sit here with confidence to call out these great forces and
not fear for your life as you leave this building’. Mikovits replies, ‘because if we
don’t stop this now, we can not only forget our republic and our freedom, but we
can forget humanity, because we will be killed by this agenda’. Thus, the Plandemic,
after presenting Mikovits as a revolutionary scientist, presents her as a hero who is
willing to take on ‘great powers’ in spite of grave dangers to herself, including to her
life, in order to protect the nation at the time of the COVID crisis.
The interview moves on to Dr Anthony Fauci, initially focusing on how Dr Fauci
was central to the coverup in relation to Mikovits. Then, Willis asks, so now the
whole ‘world is listening to his {Dr Fauci’s} advice for how to handle the current
pandemic, how do we know what he is saying is what we need to be learning’.
Mikovits replies, ‘what he is saying is absolute propaganda’. And then Mikovits
links her claim of Fauci’s advice as propaganda to what she calls was propaganda
that started way back in 1984 in relation to the development of a vaccine for AIDS
(see Leavy, 2009 for a report on the controversy over the AIDS vaccine). The
interview continues on Dr Fauci and then shifts to concerns about the COVID–19
infection data in the US. Mikovits suggests that the cases are being wrongly counted.
Willis states that he has seen so many videos of doctors who have been perplexed
by the CDC’s guidelines. One doctor (a white man in coat and tie, but the specific
identity is not provided in the video, so it is difficult to confirm) is shown telling
a news reporter that one of his patients, an 86-years-old woman had pneumonia.
And, although this patient was not tested for COVID–19, since they later came
to know that her son had tested positive for COVID, though the son did not show
the symptoms, he (the doctor) was being told that it would be appropriate to write
COVID–19 on the death certificate of the 86-years-old patient.
This video shot is followed by a white man wearing medical personnel’s gown
(his identity is not given) who states, ‘when I am writing my death report, I am pres-
sured to write COVID. Why is that? Why are we being pressured to add COVID?’
This person then adds: ‘To maybe increase the numbers and to make it look lit-
tle worse than it is. I think so’. The video then moves back to the news report in
which a white male/doctor (in coat and tie) was talking about difficulties in listing
COVID as a cause of death and he is asked by the news anchor ‘why would they
want to skew the number of deaths due to COVID–19?’ The doctor replies: ‘Well,
fear is a great way to control people. And sometimes people’s ability to think for
themselves is paralyzed if they are frightened enough’. He then adds that is not
the situation in which he wants people to be. Again, it is worth noting that in the
misinformation in relation to COVID–19 data in the US the credibility of medicine
and medical scientists are used.
More broadly, the Plandemic sets the stage for a scientist/hero who against all
odds is shown taking on the establishment in which the popular voice of caution
from the medical community, Dr Anthony Fauci, is discredited and people are asked
to take their own decision. The discursive emplotment of the video draws on several
tropes that resonate with existing discourses of particular social groups—that of
David versus Goliath, of white victimhood that emerged in the United States in the
1970s and 1980s (Berbrier, 2000), protection of ‘our freedom’ and the republic,
calls against wearing of masks and challenging of COVID fatality numbers, which,
apart from aligning with interests of particular groups, have been presented as
attempts to malign President Trump, conspiracy of pharma companies in protecting
their self-interest, etc. It is important to take note of these tropes because then it
will make better sense how this video went viral. It will show how ‘manufacturing
consent’ occurs through alignment of interests.
Judy Mikovits’s book, Plague of Corruption: Restoring Faith in the Promise
of Science (Mikovits & Heckenlively, 2020), which was briefly discussed and its
cover displayed in the Plandemic video, for example, went on to become one of
the best sellers on Amazon soon after the video went viral.16 The book continues
to top the selling charts in several categories of books, including virology. On
Amazon the Plague of Corruption had more than 4,500 customer reviews by the
end of October 2020, around six months after it was published, and more than
90% of the reviewers gave the book 4 or 5 stars. One reviewer wrote: ‘Before we
can restore faith in science we have to know how it was lost. Who betrayed us
and why’. Another reviewer states: ‘This book is the second collaboration of a top
scientist and an attorney’.17
Interestingly, Mikovits co-authored the Plague of Corruption with Kent
Heckenlively who ‘bills himself as the “world’s #1 anti-vaxxer”’.18 Heckenlively
too is not overtly anti-science. His author page on Amazon describes him thus: ‘I
worked as a lawyer with my dad for several years, then found myself drawn to my
original love of science and became a science teacher. Now I get to teach science
during the day and write about it at night’ (emphasis added).19 His most recent
book, also co-authored with Judy Mikovits, is titled The Case Against Masks:
Ten Reasons Why Mask Use Should be Limited (Skyhorse Publishing, July 2020).
Plague of Corruption has a foreword written by Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a lawyer
and an activist who is also well-known for his anti-vaccine position. Kennedy, in
the foreword, compared Judy Mikovits’s situation to that of Galileo fighting the
orthodoxies of his time (Kennedy in Mikovits & Heckenlively, 2020). The blurb
of the book quotes well-known French virologist, Luc Antoine Montagnier, who
in 2008 shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for the discovery of
the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Dr Montagnier’s blurb for Mikovits’s
book, Plague of Corruption, which appears on the cover of the book, states that
the book ‘delves into the midst of this rampant corruption, which hides from the
public scientific truths which might go against these corporate economic interests’
(emphasis added).
Montagnier also told the news platform CNews that ‘the virus has come out of
a laboratory in Wuhan, which has been specializing in these types of coronaviruses
since the beginning of the 2000s’, thereby adding fuel to another conspiracy in
relation to COVID–19—that the virus was made in a laboratory in China.20 In the
US the conspiracy about SARS-CoV–2 being human-made in a laboratory, in spite
of it being discredited by almost all the scientists, continues to have valence and is
continually used by President Trump in his references to COVID–19 as ‘Wuhan
virus’ or ‘China virus’.21 The Plandemic video was thus linked to a number of
interests and conspiracies from the start. And the video and the book complemented
COVID–19 Misinformation and Conspiracies Among the Blacks and the Whites
In late February and early March, when the Center for Disease Control (CDC)
first stated that COVID–19 was heading towards a pandemic status, a claim about
immunity of black people started to circulate in the African-American community.
An NBA player tweeted: ‘So NONE of these Corona Virus cases have been black
people?! LEMME FOUND OUT WE IMMUNE. It’s the least God can do after
slavery’.28 Another NBA player tweeted: ‘Not making light of it at all. Serious
question: Has a Black person got coronavirus yet?’29 Soon the claim about black
people’s immunity to coronavirus picked up and it even became an act of resist-
ance. For example, when a white police officer was shown on video appearing to
intentionally cough at a black woman, the latter replied: ‘Oh, I ain’t worried about
that shit! Y’all get that shit, Black people don’t’.30
The belief in black people’s immunity to COVID–19 at least in part stemmed from
the exceptionally small number of infections recorded in Africa. In early March, when
more than 3,000 people had already died worldwide and nearly 90,000 cases were
recorded in 60 different countries, the African countries had reported just a few infec-
tions.31 As Brandi Collins-Dexter of Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public
Policy at Harvard Kennedy School noted in his report, ‘COVID–19 misinformation
and black communities’, this misinformation was sought to be explained through the
presence of melanin: ‘melanin, the pigment found in hair, skin and eyes, offered a layer
of protection from the virus’.32 The belief in the immunity of black people also has a
colonial genealogy. In the eighteenth century, as a result of Dr John Lining’s widely
circulated belief that black people were naturally resistant to yellow fever, ‘{r}efer-
ences to innate black immunity functioned both as damaging hearsay and as medical
information passed over time and across distinct locales’ (Hogarth, 2017, p. 20).33
The misinformation about the immunity of the black people to COVID–19 could
not be sustained for long. The coronavirus and the spread of the pandemic disrupted
the spread of misinformation about black people’s immunity. By mid-March news
reports had started showing that COVID–19 infections and deaths among black
(and Latinx and Native American) communities were disproportionately high.
COVID–19, in fact, exposed the wide racial disparity in healthcare access and out-
comes. A CDC report showed that in comparison to the whites, Native Americans
had 2.8 times higher cases and 1.4 times higher deaths, African-Americans had
2.6 times higher cases and 2.1 times higher deaths, and Hispanic/Latinos had 2.8
times higher cases and 1.1 higher deaths.34
As the reports of disproportionate COVID–19 infections and deaths in the
black community spread, misinformation and conspiracies behind creation of the
coronavirus and the proposed development of a vaccine started to gain traction. In
mid-March a video was posted on Instagram that promoted ‘the theory that Bill
Gates was responsible for creating the novel coronavirus’. The video soon went
viral–it ‘was viewed more than 2.2 million times {and} was promoted by a number
of social media influencers, including at least 20 verified Instagram users and more
than 50 other users’.35 The conspiracy surrounding Bill Gates’s role in relation to
coronavirus has genealogical links to longstanding conspiracy theories that claimed
that Bill Gates was involved in forcible population control.
The earliest version of this conspiracy has been traced to 2010, when Mame-
Yaa Bosumtwi, a Ghanaian-born, US-educated former communications officer for
a Gates Foundation funded initiative in Ghana, had claimed that a Gates-funded
genocide was being carried out via Pfizer’s contraceptive, Depo-Provera, that was
being provided to women in Africa. In 2011, this particular conspiracy acquired
transnational reach when it was picked up by the US group ‘Rebecca Project for
Human Rights’ that claimed in a report: ‘Researchers allegedly injected thousands
of impoverished and illiterate Ghanaian women with Pfizer contraceptive, Depo-
Provera, and administered other unidentified oral contraceptives during human
research experiments to reduce population and modify health care’.36 This particular
conspiracy had slowly subsided.37
However, as discussed earlier, Bill Gates became the centre of the controversy
during COVID–19, when a video was posted on Instagram and other social media
sites. The conspiracy video took a clip from Bill Gates’s TED talk in 2015, in which
drawing on the example of Ebola and calling for the need to be better prepared for
pandemics, Gates had warned: ‘The biggest risk for the global catastrophe doesn’t
look like this {the image of a nuclear bomb}. Instead, it looks like this {image of
the flu virus}’. The conspiracy video was, however, captioned: ‘Bill Gates either
predicted or planned the coronavirus outbreak’. 38
‘Cedric the Entertainer posted the video to his Instagram account and wrote,
“So they knew”’. Within days the video was viewed nearly 400,000 times.39 Soon
memes started emerging that linked proposed coronavirus vaccine as conspiracy
Science, Technology & Society 27: 1 (2022): 88–112
Anti-science Misinformation and Conspiracies 99
by Bill Gates. One such meme used a childhood photo of Cardi B, the music artist,
and claimed, ‘my mama said nobody elected Bill Gates to do anything and we ain’t
takin no vaccine from some shady ass nerd that wants to depopulate the planet’
(See Figure 1). Similar concerns were voiced by a number of people. In the black
community this conspiracy was articulated through ‘the frame of Black genocide’,
which is a result of ‘longstanding distrust of mainstream media and history of trauma
from interactions with powerful institutions, like medicine and government’.40 The
trope of ‘Black genocide’ also informed the COVID misinformation and conspira-
cies in relation to the role of 5G wireless network.
Amber Butts, writing in a different context, states: ‘Even when black conspiracy
theories are misguided, they are not nonsensical’.41 Butts draws on several examples,
including those from her own experiences to highlight how the conspiracies among
the black community often reflect the long history of mistrust resulting from racial
discrimination and exploitation. She, for example, writes about the deep impact of
her own experience during a visit to a white doctor, because she was ‘feeling like
something was blocking … {her} air passages’ (after her grandmother’s death) and
the doctor ‘stuck a black tube with camera down … {her} left nostril’, a procedure
Figure 1
Source: https://shorensteincenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Canaries-in-the-Coal-Mine-
Shorenstein-Center-June–2020.pdf
for which she had not given consent: ‘The realities of medical racism, terror and
experimentation on Black, Brown and Native women’s bodies kept me from going
back to that doctor’.41 Butts, thus, highlights how in order to properly understand
an action or event we need to trace the history of the present.
The broader issue that Butts raises—that ‘conspiracies are misguided, {but}
they are not nonsensical’—is an important lesson for us when we study the role of
conspiracies not just among the Black community, but in any community (see, e.g.,
Turner, 1993). Conspiracies, in significant ways, seem to embody displacement
and condensation of not only the past experiences of an individual but also the
history of the social group to which s/he/they belong.42 In that regard, it is useful
to return to one of Mikovits claims—‘because if we don’t stop this now, we can
not only forget our republic and our freedom’. Mikovits’s statement may seem a
general reference to all American citizens. However, it is telling how protecting ‘our
freedom and our republic’ have been invoked in anti-mask wearing protests in the
US largely by the whites. For example, Ashley Smith, the co-founder of ReOpen
NC, a group that was formed in April 2020 with a call to reopen North Carolina,
during one of their anti-lockdown protests stated: ‘We’ve seen a dramatic and sud-
den attack on our Constitutional rights … so this is just a day to stand against that
and memorialize our fallen heroes for the liberty they fought and died for’.43 Some
other anti-mask and anti-lockdown protesters carried signs that read ‘No Liberty,
No Life’ and ‘Give me liberty or give me COVID–19’.44
Similarly, the COVID conspiracy in relation to Bill Gates was articulated
very differently among the whites. Rev. Danny Jones, a white senior pas-
tor of the Northlake Baptist Church in Gainesville, Georgia, called Bill Gates
as the anointed one to lead the new world order ushered by the coronavirus in
one of his sermons that went viral. Citizen Media News posted the video of the ser-
mon on YouTube on 30 April 2020, but the video is available through other sources.
The Citizen Media News video post of the sermon on YouTube had more than
1.5 million views until November 2020. This particular post of the video has had
more than 20,000 likes and more than five hundred comments with viewers writing,
Rev. Jones goes on to detail how Bill Gates and others are trying to institute a new
world order through the coronavirus pandemic: He states:
The eventual goal, the pastor goes on to state, is to make the people submit to the
United Nations or any other form of world government. The reference and scope
of Rev. Jones’s conspiracy theory (he calls it as such in the sermon) of biometric
chip taking away individual freedom is not limited to any particular community.
He does not just refer to Americans, but people from different parts of the world
and the comments on this video post on YouTube too shows global and multi-racial
viewership (at least to an extent).
The issue, however, as I have been highlighting in the article, is not the form of a
particular conspiracy (for example, the role of Bill Gates in relation to coronavirus),
but how it is articulated through the real and perceived experiences of particular
social groups. In this video too, as Rev. Jones quote above shows, science is not
dismissed (he cites the Scientific American, albeit falsely). And, unlike the Black
community, the conspiracy about Bill Gates is not situated in a history of exclusion
and exploitation of the community, but as a concern to protect individual freedom
and the republic. Other articulations of Bill Gates related coronavirus conspiracy
similarly highlight the concern with loss of freedom, although it often also draws
on the trope of white victimhood (see Figures 2 and 3).
The trope of protecting freedoms and the republic that has been expressed in
the white community has to be situated in relation to the colonial discourse of
whitening of Americas as a key element in the making of the nation, which, conse-
quently, results in defining of citizenship among social/racial groups differentially.
Theodore Roosevelt, the 26th President of the United States (1901–1909) in his
response to historian-journalist Charles Pearson’s National Life and Character:
A Forecast (1893) had, for example, reflected, ‘the peopling of the great island-
continent with men of the English stock is thousand-fold more important than the
holding {colonizing} of Hindoostan for a few centuries’ (as quoted in Anderson,
2006, p. 254). Roosevelt categorically states: ‘Nineteenth century democracy needs
no more complete vindication for its existence than the fact that it has kept for the
white race the best portions of the new world’s surface, temperate America and
Australia’ (emphasis added).45
As is evident from Roosevelt’s responses to Charles Pearson the colonial history
of America continued to bear upon imaginaries and practices long after the United
States gained independence. Patricia Hills Collins rightly argues, ‘U.S. national
identity may be grounded more in ethnic nationalism than is typically realized’
(Collins, 1998, p. 70). Collins shows how ‘differential population policies devel-
oped for different {racial and ethnic} segments of the U.S. population emerge in
direct relation to any group’s perceived value within the nation-state’ (Collins,
1998, p. 76). It is important to situate the recent events related to coronavirus in
this broader context. For example, surveys have shown differences in relation to
mask wearing during COVID–19, which Dr Robert Redfield, the Director of the
Center for Disease Control (CDC), had called perhaps the most effective tool in
preventing COVID infections.45 A PEW Research Center survey conducted in
June 2020 showed a striking variation in mask wearing in terms of political affili-
ation with 53% of people, who identified as Republican or Republican leaning, as
Figure 2
Source: https://www.thestranger.com/slog/2020/04/20/43464468/i-went-to-sundays-anti-lockdown-
rally-in-olympia-and-we-are-so-fucked
Figure 3
Source: https://miro.medium.com/max/1400/0*0V1q453z61MaGiia
Latour criticises ‘the noise surrounding a “state of war” against the virus’ that
has propelled the responses of the nation-states, which, according to him, are
‘caricatured form of the figure of biopolitics…straight out of a Michel Foucault
lecture’.52 It is unclear what Latour means by ‘caricatured form of the figure of
biopolitics ….’ However, his concern with the responses to COVID–19 as a ‘state
of war against the virus’ is important, because we have seen how those responses
have not been effective. Latour’s concern has resonance among, at least a section
of influential biologists. Joshua Lederberg, who had received the Nobel Prize in
1958 ‘for his discoveries concerning genetic recombination and the organization of
the genetic material of bacteria’,51 had, for example, called for a stop to the use of
war as a metaphor for infection and asked biologists and public health officials to
look for ‘{n}ew strategies and tactics for countering pathogens’ (Lederberg, 2000).
Lederberg’s argument is not simply that bacteria and virus are important ‘actants’
whose networks should be carefully unravelled. According to Lederberg: ‘We should
think of each host and its parasites as a superorganism with the respective genomes
yoked into a chimera of sorts’ (Lederberg, 2000, p. 288). The report on the ‘Forum
on Microbial Threats’ of The National Academies, which was dedicated to the ‘life
and scientific legacies of Joshua Lederberg’, pointed out in 2009, ‘a reconsideration
of our interactions with pathogenic microbes is warranted, and it must be based
on a better understanding of the host-microbe relationships in general’, adding,
Estimates indicate that 90% to 99% of the approximately 1014 cells that comprise
a healthy human body belong to the complex microbiota that share our space.
Only a small fraction of the roughly several thousand bacterial species that inhabit
our bodies cause illness; very little is known about the other non-pathogenic
bacteria, or even about microbes that in most cases cause chronic, subclinical
disease in humans (Relman et al., 2009, p. xiii).
These biologists and medical scientists are calling for not simply a reorientation of
biological and medical research of microbial infections, but also a reimagination of our
understanding of the society and the relationship between humans and non-humans.
The report categorically states: ‘An axiomatic starting point for further progress is
the simple recognition that humans, animals, plants, and microbes are cohabitants of
the planet. That leads to refined questions that focus on the origin and dynamics of
instabilities within this context of cohabitation’ (Relman et al., 2009, p. 64). Latour is,
thus, right in claiming: ‘Covid has given us a model of contamination’, which is ‘an
incredible demonstration of network theory’. He adds, ‘I’ve been trying to persuade
sociologists of this for 40 years. I’m sorry to have been so right. It shows that we
must not think of the personal and the collective as two distinct levels’.52
Although, Latour restricts his comments on COVID–19 in relation to France,
the situation in the United States (US) too, in spite of the stark difference in the
American state’s response to COVID–19 under President Trump, can benefit from a
network analysis of the roles of human and non-human actors. However, COVID–19
pandemic has also brought to the fore the underlying theoretical and methodological
“I can’t breathe”, but we are being forced to wear it anyway’.57 The experiences of
violence, brutality, and exclusions of Black people that, as I showed earlier, became
the trope through which COVID–19 misinformation and conspiracies were given
meaning in the Black community, are thus appropriated and in the process voices
against racial exploitation and hierarchy are diluted.
William Barr, the Attorney General under President Trump, went a step further
stating, ‘putting a national lockdown, stay at home orders, is like house arrest. Other
than slavery, which was a different kind of restraint, this is the greatest intrusion
on civil liberties in American history’.58 Such appropriations of experiences of the
‘other’ are often complemented with calling people who raise the issue of racism
as racists. Lisa Nakamura, for example, shows that when the issue of racism was
raised among the videogame players of the World of Warcraft, one of the players
replied: ‘g2 lv love people who consider things racism when in actuality {sic}
they are rascist {sic} for making the difference {sic} in their head, if every one
just viewed {sic} every one else as “people” theyd {sic} be no problem’. Another
one added: ‘what’s rasict {sic}, no we are only one race the human race, now if
there where another species and he was making fun of them, then it would be rasict
{sic}’ (as quoted in Nakamura, 2009, p. 238).59
In short, describing the ‘inscriptions’ of each individual, humans as well as non-
humans, may seem democratic. However, if it leaves out history of the present and
thereby fails to ‘problematize the present by revealing the power relations upon
which it {the present} depends and the contingent process that have brought it
into being’ (Garland, 2014) such an analytical/theoretical position, analogically,
starts to seem more like the claim of ‘All Lives Matter’, which is symmetrical and
seemingly democratic, but aimed at suppressing the voices (inscriptions) of the
marginalised and exploited social groups.
Conclusion
positions and the anti-science attitudes expressed in these conspiracies have also
been frequently highlighted. The spread and acceptance of scientific falsehoods
seems to show how people are either acting as dupes or being duped by others in
the context of uncertainties propelled by the pandemic.
The anti-science misinformation and conspiracies, among other things, again
brought to the fore a long-standing criticism of the field of Science and Technology
Studies (STS)—that STS’s symmetrical treatment of scientific controversy and
rejection of neutral or value-free science has ‘lowered scientific facts to the level
of beliefs’ (Lynch, 2020, p. 51). Michael Lynch, responding to such criticisms,
argues that ‘{a}s originally proposed, symmetry and relativism in STS were cir-
cumscribed as part of an effort to approach diverse forms of knowledge without
initially classifying particular instances as true, false, rational, irrational, successful
or mistaken and doomed to failure’ (Lynch, 2020, p. 53).
In this article, I have argued that the methodological symmetry of STS towards
true and false beliefs is in fact useful and necessary in order to investigate
COVID–19 misinformation and conspiracies more carefully and thereby act more
effectively against conspiracies and misinformation. We need to investigate how,
for example, a reified and idealised understanding of science becomes a tool to
spread anti-science and other misinformation. In the first section of the article, I
analysed a viral COVID–19 conspiracy video, Plandemic, and showed how it draws
on the credibility of science, scientists, scientific journals, and doctors to spread
anti-science falsehoods. In particular, I focused on how the video was discursively
emplotted to make it seem credible and align its claims with the interests of different
social groups. After the video was posted online on different social media platforms
the alignment of interests, which were reinforced and propagated by social media
influencers, resulted in the video going viral and it continues to inhabit the social
media ecology through different mutations.
A careful investigation of the COVID–19 misinformation and conspiracies
shows, although it is important to quickly and effectively rebut the false claims, we
also need to carefully analyse how these anti-science misinformation conspiracies
are crafted and thereafter interpreted and mobilised by different social groups. In
that regard, I also examined some COVID–19 misinformation and conspiracies
that spread in the African-American communities and showed how they draw on
the histories of exclusion and exploitation of the black community. Moreover, as
I showed, the tropes used to defend the misinformation and conspiracies in the
black community was often very different from those used among the whites. I,
thus, argued that even in relation to misinformation and conspiracies we need to
carefully investigate the history of the present. More broadly, my concern, much
like Joshua Lederberg’s and Bruno Latour’s suggestion in relation to the pathogens
that cause pandemics, is that the war metaphor that aims to put a complete stop to
misinformation and conspiracies is hardly going to be useful. In the present times,
when access to world wide web has become instantaneous, an era characterised by
some as ‘viral modernity’ (Peters et al., 2020), we will have to learn to live with
misinformation and conspiracies and their virality and in order to better deal with
them we need to critically and carefully study misinformation and conspiracies.
Science, Technology & Society 27: 1 (2022): 88–112
108 Amit Prasad
The author declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship and/or
publication of this article.
Funding
The author received no financial support for the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.
Notes
that it is effective against SARS-COV-2 or COVID-19 and could in fact even harm the patient.
President Trump openly supported the use of Hydroxychloroquine. https://gizmodo.com/who-are-
americas-frontline-doctors-the-pro-trump-pro-1844528900, accessed October 30, 2020.
14. https://www.bitchute.com/video/TuzSyJkjvS4d/. Transcription of the interview mine.
15. Ian Lipkin is the Director of the Center for Infection and Immunity at Columbia University. In
2011, he was asked by Dr Fauci to ‘design a study that would address whether Dr Mikovits and
others could reproduce her research showing an association between XMRV, the mouse retrovirus,
and chronic fatigue syndrome’. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/09/technology/plandemic-judy-
mikovitz-coronavirus-disinformation.html
16. https://www.rollingstone.com/culture/culture-news/plandemic-judy-mikovits-plague-of-
corruption-998224/
17. https://www.amazon.com/Plague-Corruption-Restoring-Promise-Science/dp/1510752242
18. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-australia-41104629
19. https://www.amazon.com/Kent-Heckenlively/e/B00J08DNE8%3Fref<hig>=</hig>dbs_a_mng_
rwt_scns_share
20. https://www.connexionfrance.com/French-news/Disputed-French-Nobel-winner-Luc-Montagnier-
says-Covid-19-was-made-in-a-lab-laboratory, accessed 19 September 2020. Interestingly,
Montagnier cited a study of Indian scientists that has claimed to have highlighted the similarity
between SARS-CoV-2 and HIV, which had not undergone peer review as yet and was pre-published.
21. This particular controversy has global spread as well. For example, ‘a study by polling agency
Ifop—published at the end of March—found that more than 26% of French people believe that
the new coronavirus “was intentionally made in a laboratory”; a figure that jumps to 40% among
voters of far-right part le Rassemblement National’. Ibid.
22. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/20/technology/plandemic-movie-youtube-facebook-
coronavirus.html
23. https://fsi.stanford.edu/news/manufacturing-influence-0
24. https://twitter.com/perpetualmaniac/status/1252341972859142147?lang<hig>=</hig>en
25. https://fsi.stanford.edu/news/manufacturing-influence-0
26. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/05/20/technology/plandemic-movie-youtube-facebook-
coronavirus.html
27. https://fsi.stanford.edu/news/manufacturing-influence-0
28. As quoted in https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2020–03-14/no-black-people-aren-t-
immune-to-covid-19
29. https://shorensteincenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Canaries-in-the-Coal-Mine-Shorenstein-
Center-June-2020.pdf
30. As quoted in https://speakpatrice.substack.com/p/frustrated-by-coronavirus-conspiracy
31. https://www.france24.com/en/20200301-with-only-three-official-cases-africa-s-low-coronavirus-
rate-puzzles-health-experts
32. https://shorensteincenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Canaries-in-the-Coal-Mine-Shorenstein-
Center-June-2020.pdf. The report states that this misinformation emerged when ‘a since-deleted
news blog CityScrollz released on Valentine’s Day proclaimed that “Chinese Doctors Confirmed
African Blood Genetic Composition Resist Coronavirus After Student Cured”’. This blog soon went
viral, although ‘it was removed and eventually debunked by several fact-checking organizations’.
33. Ironically, in 1793 when yellow fever struck Philadelphia, then the temporary capital of the nation,
Dr Benjamin Rush, ‘one of North America’s most respected physicians’, who was known for his
‘anti-slavery leanings’, requested and got support from the local black community to take care of
the white city dwellers based on this racialized construction of black immunity (Hogarth, 2017). The
interplay of race, medicine, and law has had profound impact on medicalizing and pathologizing
blackness (Duster, 2006).
34. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/covid-data/investigations-discovery/hospitalization-
death-by-race-ethnicity.html
35. https://shorensteincenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Canaries-in-the-Coal-Mine-Shorenstein-
Center-June-2020.pdf
36. https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/ryanhatesthis/coronavirus-bill-gates-conspiracy-theories.
‘The Rebecca Project for Justice’ calls itself ‘a transformational organization that advocates
protecting life, dignity and freedom for people in Africa and the United States’ and one of its key
concerns, as stated on its website, is negative effects of Depo Provera. http://rebeccaprojectjustice.
org/who-we-are/. However, as a result of this report, the founders of ‘The Rebecca Project for
Justice’ had to leave and the organization has been co-opted for anti-abortion politics. https://www.
typeinvestigations.org/investigation/2017/08/17/new-war-birth-control/
37. The genealogical link of Depo Provera with concerns of colonial control of population in Africa is
much longer. The contraceptive was, for example, introduced in colonial Rhodesia (Zimbabwe) and
after independence its usage in Zimbabwe was stopped because of concerns of continuing colonial
domination, which had support among the postcolonial Zimbabweans, because ‘{f}or much of the
1970s, Depo {Provera} was a drug inflicted by white men on brown and black women’. However,
there was a gender politics in this as well—women, in spite of concerns of negative side effects,
were supportive of the drug. Eventually, in 1992 the drug was again legalized (Kaler, 1981, p.
373).
38. https://www.corona24news.com/c/2020/03/17/bill-gates-has-predicted-a-pandemic-since-2015-
viral-video-on-instagram.html
39. https://www.nbcnews.com/tech/social-media/coronavirus-conspiracy-video-spreads-instagram-
among-black-celebrities-n1158571
40. https://shorensteincenter.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/Canaries-in-the-Coal-Mine-Shorenstein-
Center-June-2020.pdf
41. https://racebaitr.com/2019/10/01/even-when-black-conspiracy-theories-are-misguided-they-are-
not-nonsensical/
42. Displacement and condensation are frequently used terms in psychoanalysis. I do not use these
terms to suggest that there is a point de capiton such as the Oedipus Complex that can explain the
process of displacement and condensation. I simply wish to highlight that the sign or representation,
expressed through articulations of different actors, is better understood if we its displacement and
condensation.
43. https://www.newsobserver.com/news/coronavirus/article242972936.html. ReOpen NC’s publicly
accessible Facebook page shows that they have 83,426 members. https://www.facebook.com/
groups/1071729406534210/
44. https://www.vox.com/first-person/2020/4/25/21234774/coronavirus-covid-19-protest-anti-
lockdown
45. ‘Some experts say part of the resistance to masks could stem from confusing public messaging
that came from public health officials in the beginning of the pandemic’. https://www.theguardian.
com/world/2020/jun/29/face-masks-us-politics-coronavirus
46. Mikovits had also presented misinformation in relation to wearing masks in the video, but anti-
mask conspiracy and misinformation gained currency significantly because of President Trump’s
position on not wearing a mask. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/10/02/us/politics/donald-trump-
masks.html
47. https://www.statnews.com/2020/06/03/which-deamany-black-men-fear-wearing-mask-more-than-
coronavirus/
48. https://www.statnews.com/2020/06/03/which-deamany-black-men-fear-wearing-mask-more-than-
coronavirus/.
49. http://somatosphere.net/2020/epidemic-philosophy.html/
50. https://www.journals.uchicago.edu/doi/full/10.1086/711428, accessed March 23, 2021.
51. https://www.nobelprize.org/prizes/medicine/1958/summary/
52. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/jun/06/bruno-latour-coronavirus-gaia-hypothesis-
climate-crisis
53. Monica Casper in her analysis of the agency of the foetus in the context of foetal surgery and research
criticizes ANT for ignoring how historically agency has been hierarchically assigned based on race,
gender, etc. (Casper, 1994). According to Steven Shapin, ‘the “dog” that—so to speak—“doesn’t
bark” in Latour’s picture of scientific travel is a conception of normative order’. He argues for
a focus on the role of ‘trust’ in scientific practice in order to understand how ‘transactions occur
between places’ (Shapin, 1998, p. 7).
54. https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/covid-data/investigations-discovery/hospitalization-
death-by-race-ethnicity.html
55. https://france-amerique.com/en/black-lives-matter-in-paris-an-american-movement-in-france/
56. https://france-amerique.com/en/black-lives-matter-in-paris-an-american-movement-in-france/
57. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v<hig>=</hig>HMdf_GW354M. The video is of a news report
by the news agency ABC, but it was reposted on YouTube by somebody or some organization
called Rebel HQ that has 316,000 followers.
58. https://www.cnn.com/2020/09/16/politics/barr-justice-department-speech/index.html
59. The digital age that was initially hailed as ushering the elimination of race and gender distinctions
has become a particularly fertile ground to not only enact and spread social distinctions such as
race, gender, etc., but also to suppress criticisms of, for example, racialization (Nakamura, 2008;
Nelson, 2002).
60. https://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/2020/10/02/facebook-anti-face-mask-groups-trump-
covid-19/3597593001/
61. https://time.com/5891333/covid-19-conspiracy-theories/
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