Chakras, crystals and conspiracy theories: how the wellness industry turned its back on Covid scienc [View all]
Its gurus increasingly promote vaccine scepticism, conspiracy theories and the myth that ill people have themselves to blame. How did self-care turn so nasty?
Sirin Kale
Thu 11 Nov 2021 06.00 GMT
When the deployment of the Covid vaccine got under way, Carr began to see posts that troubled her, ranging from polite concern about the social consequences of mass vaccination, or the politics underpinning it, to full-blown rejection of the science. The conversation and tone of their posts shifted, she says. At first it was all about self-care and being part of a community that is caring for each other. But then they started to speak more about how there should be a choice when it came to vaccines. They were saying things like: My body, my choice.
Carr watched as Greenacre posted an Instagram story describing vaccine passports as medical apartheid. Vittengl went further. In a post in July, Vittengl, who is unvaccinated, compared vaccine passports to the social polarisation witnessed during the Holocaust and spoke about the mess caused by the ideology of the western medical system. We arent being shown the full picture, Vittengl concluded, in a post that was liked by Greenacre. Greenacre subsequently invited Vittengl on to her podcast, where Vittengl discussed the pernicious influence of big pharma and celebrated the work of the controversial doctor Zach Bush, who has been called a Covid denialist by researchers at McGill University in Montreal.
Such views are anything but exceptional in the wellness community. If anything, they are on the milder end of the spectrum. Anti-vaccine or vaccine-hesitant attitudes are as abundant in online wellness circles as pastel-coloured Instagram infographics and asana poses on the beach at sunset. People are really confused by what is happening, says Derek Beres, the co-host of Conspirituality, a podcast about the convergence of conspiracy theories and wellness. Why is their yoga instructor sharing QAnon hashtags?
(More at link):
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2021/nov/11/injecting-poison-will-never-make-you-healthy-how-the-wellness-industry-turned-its-back-on-covid-science