Roy Batty and Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
February 19, 2018
Another thing to blame Russia for.
Scientific researchers say Russian social-media trolls who spread discord before the 2016 U.S. presidential election may also have played an unintended role in a developing global health crisis.
They say the trolls may have contributed to the 2018 outbreak of measles in Europe that killed 72 people and infected more than 82,000 — mostly in Eastern and Southeastern European countries known to have been targeted by Russia-based disinformation campaigns.
Experts in the United States and Europe are now working on ways to gauge the impact that Russian troll and bot campaigns have had on the spread of the disease by distributing medical misinformation and raising public doubts about vaccinations.
That’s right, Russian bots are to blame for growing public skepticism about vaccinations.
I don’t know enough to comment on the whole vaccination controversy.
But judging by how hard the media Jews are shilling against anyone who even raises a question about the vaccination practices in the medical industry… I’m starting to get very suspicious.
Given the lack of any discussion about what is in our food, it’s just really difficult to believe they care a whole lot about our health.
Though the headline and the lede are about Russian trolls spreading disease by telling people vaccines are unsafe, the story also states that the Ukraine – which has experienced a near total collapse in social services since Maidan – has stopped vaccinations in several parts of the country due to lack of funds, and that this has the potential to spread to Europe.
WHO vaccine specialist Katrine Habersaat tells RFE/RL that misinformation is just one factor behind a recent decline of vaccination coverage in Eastern and Southeastern European countries where there has been a resurgence of measles.
She says other factors include complacency about the threat of the disease, the convenience of vaccination services, and confidence in health workers who carry out vaccination campaigns.
In Ukraine, the country worst hit by the 2018 measles epidemic, vaccination services and supplies were also greatly reduced in 2015 and 2016 as fighting intensified between government forces and pro-Russia separatists in the east of the country.
“We actually don’t know enough about the influence of misinformation available online upon vaccination intentions and behaviors,” Habersaat says. “What we do know is that there is an element of echo chambers in this.”
This has nothing to do with “trolls and bots,” it is just blaming Russia for disease in general by claiming they are responsible for the war in the Ukraine.
The media is simply linking yet another thing they don’t like – anti-vax – to Russia and injecting hysteria. They recently attempted to do this to Tulsi Gabbard. Tulsi Gabbard is also an enemy of the Jews.
We are certainly suspicious any time anything is linked to this Russian hoax, as it is nothing more than a way to attack people.
This weird “Russian agent” attack on anti-vax is certainly a point in favor of that movement.
Maybe vaccine autism is real?