• Star Wars Enjoyer A
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    92 years ago

    What Yog said is true, but it should also be mentioned that the far-right has used crazed conspiracies to convert followers for generations, and anti-vax is one of many.

    If they can prey on a person’s mental illness (in this case paranoia), then they can convince this person that only the far-right has the answers that can solve this problem, that they made up. This is why Infowars and Breitbart were popularized in the early 2000s, and are still massive far-right entities today. All of the wild conspiracies of this nature, the Illuminati, reptilians, aliens at A52, Op Jade Helm being a training op for enacting modern enslavement of Americans, FEMA mass-producing coffins (they were actually just helicopter basket liners) being evidence that the government intended to lead a genocide of Americans, etc. are all intended to bring people on the fringe into the far-right. And this propaganda absolutely works, in fact, it worked on teenage me.

    • @ksynwa@lemmy.ml
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      fedilink
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      2 years ago

      Yeah. Feels like anti-science thought is bound to emerge and propagate from bourgois ideology.