A leading public health officer in California was forced to confront a baseless conspiracy theory on Tuesday and had to declare publicly that Covid-19 vaccines do not carry tracking devices. The unusual moment unfolded last week when Orange County, California’s top public health administrator, Dr. Clayton Chau, answered questions from members of the county Board of Supervisors.
“In the vaccine, we heard about the injection of a tracking device. Is that being done anywhere in Orange County?” Supervisor Don Wagner asked. A surprised Chau appeared to chuckle under his mask before answering. “I’m sorry. I just have to compose myself,” Chau said. “There is not a vaccine with a tracking device embedded in it that I know of that exists in the world. Period.”
Wagner, a Republican who was formerly mayor of Irvine and a state Assembly member, represents the Third District of Orange County, was criticized and ridiculed for even giving a platform to vaccine conspiracy theory. “There is a tracking device in the vaccine (very small to fit into the needle) and it’s still looking for your brain,” tennis icon Martina Navratilova tweeted.
Wagner called a press conference on Thursday, defending his “tracking device” question with Chau by his side. “While preposterous to so many of us, thankfully, it truly is a myth that we have had to constantly address in Orange County,” Chau told reporters. “And I know for fact, the supervisor does not indeed believe this myth as he was painted by so many outlets.” Wagner said he does not believe in vaccine conspiracies and said such myths have to be called out in public settings. “Vaccine hesitancy is a real concern. It is a real thing,” Wagner said Thursday. “We are hearing about it on the Board of Supervisors and it is responsible leadership … to take on those fears head on and work to quell them.”
Wagner has been critical of California’s response to the coronavirus pandemic and is opposed to government tracking of individual vaccinations, but is apparently not a vaccine conspiracy theorist. Earlier this month, the lawmaker even tweeted a picture of Dr. Chau giving him a Johnson & Johnson vaccine. Wagner has also publicly advised his constituents to get their shots: “I continue to encourage everybody to get vaccinated if they can.” So the mystery remains as to why the Supervisor brought it up in the first place.
Paul Cleary, a professor of public health and sociology at Yale University, said open dialogue — even based on an “outlandish” premise — is helpful. “I actually found this exchange interesting and I think airing this could be beneficial, not harmful,” Cleary said Thursday. “This exchange convinced me that even otherwise reasonable people in leadership positions have questions about what I think of as outlandish ideas.” Cleary added, “When I am asked a question I try to provide information that addresses their concerns. I think that is a useful approach, irrespective of the nature of question, even if it seems outlandish.”
The false claim that the vaccine includes some sort of tracker, or nefarious microchip, has been an incredibly popular conspiracy theory embraced by New Age groups, anti-government organizations, and even mainstream audiences, according to First Draft, a nonprofit that tracks misinformation.
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