No dispares al mensajero, vete a Twitter y debunkea los cientos de vídeos.
Allí está la cancha, entra allí y defiende tu postura con fuerza.
Juassss QUE RISIÓN
Naturally, We Now Have a Cottage Industry of cobi19 Truther Assholes
Naturally, We Now Have a Cottage Industry of cobi19 Truther Assholes
YOU DON’T HAVE TO DO THIS
The #FilmYourHospital hashtag has taken off on the right. It’s absurd. It’s also wildly offensive.
Over the weekend, a growing number of pro-Trump personalities decided that the way to prove that the media was overhyping the pandemic was to film places where cars and ambulances show up to drop patients off. If the entrances were quiet and the parking lots mostly empty, they claimed, that was proof that the cobi19’ effects had been overstated. Inspired by the #FilmYourHospital hashtag, which trended on Twitter and was originally started by a
QAnon conspiracy theorist, people across the country started filming hospitals.
There are plenty of holes in Starnes and Tesoriero’s argument. Medical staff treat patients inside the hospitals, after all, not in parking lots. The videos also don’t consider that, as hospitals cancel elective surgeries and ban visitors, fewer people could be parking at the hospital. The videos also don’t take into account the fact that cobi19 patients are likely isolated from the rest of the hospital, meaning they can’t be easily seen by walking past an entrance or lobby.
The 'cobi19 Truthers' Have Arrived
The 'cobi19 Truthers' Have Arrived
They're urging people to #FilmYourHospital
(NEWSER) – NBC News is calling them "cobi19 deniers"; the Daily Beast is going with "cobi19 truthers." These are the people—most of them conspiracy theorists or far-right activists—who started the #FilmYourHospital hashtag urging people to head out to their local hospitals, film the entrances, and then post the results on social media.
Their argument: Things seem pretty quiet at these hospitals despite harrowing reports to the contrary. As NBC points out, just because the outside of a hospital appears calm doesn't miccionan the inside is. And an expert notes that some hospitals, even in hard-hit areas like New York City, may simply be quieter than others: "There can be particularly high-risk neighborhoods within a hot spot. There may be hospitals where they're not putting refrigerated morgue trucks out the door. If you take it all together, it's one big picture. If you look at it separately, it may look like another."
Adds Will Sommer at DB, "The videos also don’t consider that, as hospitals cancel elective surgeries and ban visitors, fewer people could be parking at the hospital. The videos also don’t take into account the fact that cobi19 patients are likely isolated from the rest of the hospital, meaning they can’t be easily seen by walking past an entrance or lobby." The phenomenon started when former Fox News commentator Todd Starnes tweeted a video Saturday of a calm-looking Brooklyn Hospital Center; the next day, a New York City councilman tweeted a video of bodies being loaded onto an 18-wheeler outside the same hospital. Even so, the hashtag (which Sommer notes was started and proliferated by QAnon conspiracy theorists) and accompanying conspiracy theory had already taken off, with thousands tweeting about it by Monday and people including a
onetime California congressional candidate posting similarly quiet-appearing videos of hospitals.
A Fox News contributor retweeted, then deleted, that video. (Read more cobi19 stories.)
The 'cobi19 Truthers' Have Arrived