On January 30, the Los Angeles Times reported that “members of anti-vaccine and far-right groups” caused a COVID-19 mass vaccination site in LA’s Dodger Stadium to temporarily shut down. Although the disruption “ultimately did little to inhibit vaccine distribution” and there was no violence reported, media should more proactively describe these actions as not mere “protests,” but as expressions of a dangerous and increasingly interconnected world of conspiracy theories.
The Los Angeles Times reported that the group didn’t prevent anyone from making their appointment, though some people had to wait for an extra hour. LA County has been hit particularly hard by the pandemic, with an estimated 1 in 3 Angelenos contracting COVID-19 at some point.
The Los Angeles Times referred to “far-right groups” present at the vaccination site shutdown, but it didn’t elaborate that some of those involved were reportedly supporters of the QAnon conspiracy theory. QAnon has grown from an initial lie that Hillary Clinton’s arrest was imminent (over Pizzagate, a different conspiracy theory) to an all-encompassing pro-Trump conspiracy theory that’s been linked to or helped inspire multiple violent crimes, including the deadly January 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol. CNN Business reporter Donie O’Sullivan explained that there is “an overlap between QAnon, between election conspiracy theories, and between vaccine misinformation.”