How vaccine misinformation spreads
In October, Reveal senior reporter and producer Ike Sriskandarajah tuned in to one of his favorite radio stations, Power 105.1 FM in New York, and started listening to the show “The Breakfast Club” co-hosted by Charlamagne Tha God. Charlamagne started warning his national audience of 8 million listeners about taking the COVID-19 vaccine. “Millions will line up to take the vaccine, and boom, microchips for all of y’all, right in time for goddamn Thanksgiving.”
Ike couldn’t help but wonder: Is this conspiracy theory going to be a problem?
This week on the podcast, Ike unravels the history of the surprisingly widespread lie that there is a tiny microchip in the COVID-19 vaccine. He follows the thread of the conspiracy theory from a Reddit “Ask me anything” thread with Bill Gates to a Swedish biohacking website and Donald Trump adviser Roger Stone. The impact of this misinformation is very real: As U.S. leaders hope to get enough people vaccinated to end this long, deadly pandemic, one recent poll found that 42% of respondents in the United States believed at least one COVID-19 conspiracy theory. One in 14 people believe a tracking chip might be planted in the vaccine, according to the poll.
Indeed, one doctor at a Brooklyn hospital told Ike that of the hundreds of patients he was giving COVID-19 nasal tests to every day, 1 in 5 would ask about a tracking microchip on the end of the swab.
This week’s episode marked a new milestone for Ike: In addition to reporting this segment and writing a story that we co-published with The Verge, he hosted the show for the first time, filling in for Al Letson as he works on a new project. Go Ike!
Listen to the episode: Viral lies
Read the story: Where did the microchip vaccine conspiracy theory come from anyway?
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