Joe McCarron sitting in a wheelchair in a corridor of Letterkenny University Hospital in County Donegal, Ireland on Sept. 14, 2021. (Images: Antonio Mureddu Telegram channel 'The Italian Job.')
Unraveling viral disinformation and explaining where it came from, the harm it's causing, and what we should do about it.
“We came to Letterkenny to rescue my friend because they were trying to kill him,” one of the activists, an Italian man named Antonio Mureddu, tells McCarron, who appears confused and distressed throughout the ordeal.
"We are walking home from the hospital and nobody is going to stop us. We are going home. We are saving the lives of the people," Mureddu declares before telling McCarron: "If you stay here, they are going to fucking kill you.”Ultimately McCarron left the hospital and was taken home. But days later the virus had spread to his brain, and he was rushed by ambulance back to the hospital and put on a ventilator. On Friday, McCarron died in the hospital.The incident is the latest example of a growing trend around the globe of anti-vaccine activists, sovereign citizens, and conspiracy theorists attempting to undermine medical staff at hospitals claiming that vaccines don’t work and in some cases claiming that hospital staff are purposely working to prevent COVID-19 sufferers from recovering.Earlier this month, anti-vaxxer and QAnon believer Veronica Wolski became the center of a campaign by her supporters—spearheaded by pro-Trump lawyer Lin Wood—to harass staff at a Chicago hospital who refused to administer ivermectin because it hasn’t been approved as a treatment for COVID-19. Wolski ultimately died in hospital.
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