Conspiracy Theory 'Debunker' Accidentally Discovers a Real Conspiracy
The debunker has debunked his own debunking project.
This article was originally published by The Brownstone Institute.
The 2023 book Misbelief by Dan Ariely belongs to a genre I would label “debunking Covid conspiracy theories.” The book is meant to explore the thought process of people who subscribe to conspiracy theories, especially about Covid and the Covid vaccines.
Thus I was surprised to encounter in the book two stories in which the author uncovered real conspiracies to hide information about Covid from the public.
Ariely, a professor of psychology at Duke University, played a bit part in promoting Covid lockdowns around the world. By his own description, he worked
…on projects related to Covid-19 with the Israeli government and a bit with the British, Dutch, and Brazilian governments as well…I was mostly working to try to get the police to use rewards to incentivize good mask-wearing behavior and observance of social distancing instead of using fines… (p. 4)
The first genuine conspiracy he describes involved the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) manipulating data in the Vaccine Adverse Events Reporting System (VAERS). The second involved a newspaper editor-in-chief refusing to report about vaccine side effects observed by a hospital. The author reports these situations matter-of-factly, and even gives the conspirators the benefit of the doubt, saying maybe they did the right thing!
Let’s look at the VAERS conspiracy (recounted on pp. 274-276). Ariely says he got this information directly from a person who works “in the information technology department of the FDA.” The agency, according to the story, determined that:
…foreign powers, mostly Russian and Iranian, had found a way to spread disinformation using VAERS. So when the FDA identified cases that had clearly come from such sources, it removed them from the system…
Not only did it delete this data, but it did so silently. Ariely only found out by accident: Parents of vaccine-injured children maintained their own copy of the VAERS data, downloaded from the FDA site. They noticed that cases appearing in their downloaded data later disappeared from the government copy of the database, and they told Ariely about this.
Supposedly the FDA tried to keep these actions secret because it “did not want to announce to the foreign powers that it was onto them,” the FDA employee told him. But to anyone reasonably well-versed in information technology, keeping such acts secret is an obvious mistake. The bad guys will figure out what is going on; the folks we are trying to protect are left in the dark about possible mischief affecting data they rely on. And that’s the most charitable assessment of their actions. It could be worse: the FDA might have removed valid information inadvertently (putting aside possible nefarious intentions at this point). How might that come about?
Since we don’t have details as to how the FDA found this bad data, we need to speculate. Here is the easiest scenario to imagine. A straightforward way to detect computer sessions originating in Russia or Iran is by IP (internet protocol) address. Did the FDA personnel identify the supposedly bogus entries by this method?
But there’s a flaw in that approach. Many computer users obfuscate their IP address for privacy reasons. Some popular browsers such as Tor and Brave do that automatically: each browser page gets detoured through servers in different locations. Those servers are located worldwide, including in Russia. Thus if a US-based individual using the Tor browser added an entry to VAERS, and the session was routed through Russia, the FDA might well have identified this incorrectly as misinformation.
Compare how the world of open-source software deals with malware. These software publishers routinely make information about vulnerabilities public, so that user organizations can both protect themselves and evaluate what damage might have been done. A publisher may wait a few days or weeks while they fix a bug and get it distributed, but then they disseminate the details.
A variety of US laws and regulations even require corporations to promptly reveal data breaches that happen to them. For example, the Securities and Exchange Commission mandates that public companies report “cybersecurity incidents” within four days of determining that the incident has a “material” effect on a company’s business.
VAERS is supposed to be a public resource. If FDA has a policy to remove entries, it should be transparent about its criteria, and make the data available for audit. Or it could just as easily have flagged the entries as “suspicious origin” and left them in the database. Then others could review their judgment and either confirm or dispute the classifications.
Let’s look at the second conspiracy Ariely recounts (pp. 277-280):
I was speaking with a doctor from a large health care organization…I couldn’t resist asking her what she thought about all the online chatter about unreported vaccine side effects. To my surprise, she agreed there was a problem. She said that she had observed a lot of side effects in her clinic that had not been reported and had been collecting such data from her patients…
Ariely at that point decided this was newsworthy. He met with the editor-in-chief of “a large newspaper,” told the editor about the situation, and suggested the editor get the doctor’s data and report about it. The reaction:
The editor told me he suspected that I was correct about the underreported side effects. However, he had no intention of publishing anything about them…because he suspected that the misbelievers would use the published information in an unethical way and distort it…I was disappointed that he did not publish the story, but I could see his point.
Ariely spends a few sentences philosophizing about what is the true responsibility of a newspaper – is it just to publish true information, or is it “to do this cost-benefit analysis for the society…?” But apparently he let the matter lie, acquiescing in real censorship of real information.
The debunker has debunked his own debunking project.
This article was written by Doran Howitt and originally published by The Brownstone Institute under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. Please consider subscribing or donating to The Brownstone Institute.
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That reminds me of “ The Case for Christ” movie , true story of an investigational reporter ( self- proclaimed atheist) , that is determined to prove that God does not exist. Another example is “ Believing is Seeing”, by Michael Guillen, a Phd Physicist that wrote a book about the similarities between science and Christianity.
Both weren’t expecting where the information lead them. The “ debunker” just doesn’t SEE his information yet. You can write, and theorize, and explain away side effects & the “ intentions” of others,etc. but until you truly internalize the information, it’s only words & thoughts on paper.
Everyone comes into their own understanding from various upbringings & experiences. For example, the author shrugs & somewhat agrees with the editor’s unwillingness to publish the high number of vaccine side effects. Another individual, having attended more than a couple “ sudden” or “unexpected” funerals, in the last month, may pause & reflect on the editor’s words. ( and hopefully realize the danger of hiding information from public view)
Publishing misinformation is one thing, but not publishing valid information because of the fear of what might be the consequence, is unethical & corrupt journalism. I would rather hear the truth about mainstream media being paid off to only report the “approved” narrative. In the end, it’s all corrupt & disingenuous reporting. The truth will come out eventually, it already is starting to. And it will stand proud, long after the lies fade away.
________________TRUTH!______________
3rd conspiracy that he proved: Why was a US psychology professor paid to social engineer foreign countries, promoting Covid lockdowns, masks and distancing “on projects related to Covid-19 with the Israeli government and a bit with the British, Dutch, and Brazilian governments”1? Why would so many governments be contacted by an unknown foreign professor and be opened to his advise when even their own citizens can’t even reach their own authorities? Would this prove that he was just a mason following orders from a global government in the shadows run by masonic secret societies, which controlled the mentioned governments?
I wrote this "poem" about that book:
Lies love dark.
Lies hate lights.
Truth is bright,
shines over lies.
All in dark, is dark
,no matter what.
Why is food poisoning legal?
How Rumsfeld forced the approval of Aspartame.
Artificial sweeteners, MSG, PFAS, Glyphosate ... go organic!
https://scientificprogress.substack.com/p/why-is-food-poisoning-legal
War on food
https://scientificprogress.substack.com/p/war-on-food
Bill Gates, raunchy rancher
The plan? slo-poison us!
https://scientificprogress.substack.com/p/bill-gates-raunchy-rancher
Water poisoning
https://scientificprogress.substack.com/p/water-poisoning-they-drink-perrier
Not fast food, PFAS food:
https://scientificprogress.substack.com/p/fast-food-or-pfas-food
War on poultry and cattle:
https://scientificprogress.substack.com/p/war-on-poultry
Not global warming but deliberate global droughting
Climate change has nothing to do with gases and everything geoengineering tech
https://scientificprogress.substack.com/p/satattack