A Biden administration that vowed to restore Americans’ faith in public health has grown increasingly paralyzed over how to combat the resurgence in vaccine skepticism.

And internally, aides and advisers concede there is no comprehensive plan for countering a movement that’s steadily expanded its influence on the president’s watch.

The rising appeal of anti-vaccine activism has been underscored by Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s insurgent presidential campaign and fueled by prominent factions of the GOP. The mainstreaming of a once-fringe movement has horrified federal health officials, who blame it for seeding dangerous conspiracy theories and bolstering a Covid-era backlash to the nation’s broader public health practices.

But as President Joe Biden ramps up a reelection campaign centered on his vision for a post-pandemic America, there’s little interest among his aides in courting a high-profile vaccine fight — and even less certainty of how to win.

“There’s a real challenge here,” said one senior official who’s worked on the Covid response and was granted anonymity to speak candidly. “But they keep just hoping it’ll go away.”

The White House’s reticence is compounded by legal and practical concerns that have cut off key avenues for repelling the anti-vaccine movement, according to interviews with eight current and former administration officials and others close to the process.

  • @Candelestine
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    -81 year ago

    They can’t figure out a winning strategy because their position on the issue is very dicey. Their credibility has been eroded with that particular audience, and without the credibility to really speak to them, all they can really do is make things worse.

    Since the anti-vaxxers have lost trust in establishments and given their trust to individuals instead, it becomes only individuals operating outside of an established structure that have any real chance of possibly getting through to them.

    In other words, since it’s randos online causing the problem, there’s really only one group that can effectively combat it–other randos online. Offline we’d call this grassroots. Now though, welcome to the Information Age.

    • TechyDad
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      101 year ago

      The problem is that the anti-vaxxers aren’t just believing any individual, they’re believing a conspiracy theory. Anyone with evidence showing that their conspiracy theory is false is told that they are either part of the conspiracy or are a sheep falling for the conspiracy.

      You can’t just talk people out of this. If there’s a pile of 100 points in favor of a vaccine and 1 point against it, they’ll ignore the 100 in favor, focus on the 1 against, add 20 more points that have been debunked repeatedly but still circulate on Facebook, and declare the vaccine too dangerous to use.

      I don’t have a solution because “force everyone to say X online under penalty of law” is NOT a good solution. At the very least, imagine what another administration might do if that was the law. What other topics would we be forced to repeat the “official government sanctioned view” on? I don’t think this is a problem with an easy solution.

      • @Candelestine
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        1 year ago

        Certainly. I’d also depart from the evidence-based approach. Evidence-based approaches only work on people that believe in evidence-based approaches. If this was believed in, then the problem would not exist in the first place. Evidence-based approaches are a prevention method, not a treatment method. Once illness is established, they become useless for treatment.

        Fortunately, the evidence-based toolbox is just one of many that people have access to. It’s just that being trained to prefer the evidence-based one makes the others unpalatable. They can, however, get results where evidence and rationality fail.

        edit: I think the most powerful, reliable toolbox is humor, incidentally. Being able to make people laugh is frankly a superpower sometimes. But people have different senses of humor, so it’s never easy, comedian is just a tough job. Much easier to be a scientist, and have a reliable, proven methodology to work with imo.

    • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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      91 year ago

      The problem is the instant someone disagrees with them they ignore everything they say. If one of their own changes their mind even a little, they ostracize them. It’s a self-reinforcing delusion which are really hard to break people out of.

      • @Candelestine
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        41 year ago

        Harder than really hard, nigh-impossible usually.

        That’s better than legit-impossible though, which is the odds all major establishment sources get. If you’ve been taught that doctors, politicians, educators and media are all lying to you, who is left remaining?

    • CarlsIII
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      81 year ago

      I’ll do my part.

      The vaccine is good. Get the vaccine.

      Hopefully this helps. :/

      • @JuzoInui
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        31 year ago

        When the vaccine became a litmus test for ideologies you know that folks who would gain from fewer constituents would go full bore in denialism… got my shots and standing on the balcony watching the pure bloods choke on their sputum and succumbing to Darwin’s kiss

      • @Candelestine
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        21 year ago

        If only it was that easy. Life, unfortunately, is much harder than that though, and if someone says its supposed to be easy, they’re selling something.