Media Lies & the Sacred Rites of the Vaccine Cult
Media Lies & the Sacred Rites of the Vaccine Cult
The coverage Szilveszter Csollanyās death shows you being called an āanti-vaxxerā is more about what you think, than what you do.Kit Knightly
The Independent has put out an early (and strong) entry for āWorst Journalism of the Yearā award, reporting yesterday the death of Hungarian gymnastics coach Szilveszter Csollany under the headline:
Anti-vax Olympic gold medalist Szilveszter Csollany dies of Covid, aged 51
The glaring issue with this headline becomes clear just three paragraphs into the article [our emphasis]:
While Csollany had, according to [Hungarian newspaper Blikk], expressed anti-vaccination views on social media, the six-time World Championship medallist had been vaccinated to allow him to continue to work as a gymnastics coach.
The journalism is terrible, criminally bad.
The evidence supplied for Csollanyās supposed āanti-vaccination viewsā is non-existent. Second-hand hearsay, at best. No direct quotations, no sources provided.
OffGuardian would be ashamed to publish something so flimsy. Any outlet should.
But, of course, that isnāt the most egregious part ā as you can tell from our emphasised quote ā the supposed āanti-vaxxerā had been vaccinated.
To bury that in the body, under that headline, is deliberate deception. They know many people will read the title and assume he hadnāt had the vaccine without ever reading the body of the text, and they are relying on that to spread an intentionally false impression.
The very definition of disinformation.
After deliberately misrepresenting the manās life, they proceed to do the same to his death. Not even granting him the respect of an honest appraisal of his last weeks alive, they totally ignore all the relevant questions pertaining to the manās health.
They never question why a previously healthy 51-year-old would ever need to be put on a ventilator, or consider how ventilator-associated pneumonia or ventilator-induced trauma may have contributed to his death.
The article readily admits he died āof Covidā despite being vaccinated, but never even attempts to explain that, sparing a throwaway sentence suggesting āhe contracted the virus soon after receiving his jab, and thus had not built sufficient levels of antibodiesā, which is not supported by any medical opinion or sources.
Having admitted he WAS vaccinated, and only a short time before he died, the article never considers even for a second the obvious logical conclusion: That the vaccine may have played some part in his death, or killed him outright.
It doesnāt even refute the idea, it simply refuses to acknowledge its existence.
But really, the worst aspect of this black-hole of integrity is not the deliberately misleading headline, or the lack of even the most basic journalistic ethics, it is deeper than that. There is an unspoken message concealed within the tone of the writing, and a shifting of linguistic definitions that comes with it.
The implied thought buried in the text is that, even though he was vaccinated, his alleged doubts mean he was still an āanti-vaxxerā and therefore deserved to die. That he brought the Covid curse down upon his head through his expressing āanti-vaccination viewsā.
As if he called down Godās wrath through speaking heresy.
This is not the first time we have seen the narrative try and separate the meaning of āanti-vaxxerā from a personās vaccination status.
In Australia the Northern Territories Premier Michael Gunner recently told the media :
If you support or give comfort to anybody who argues against the vaccine, you are an anti-vaxxer, I donāt care what your personal vaccination status is.
Yes, in Australia an anti-vaxxer can be a vaccinated person who āgives comfortā to someone who argues against the vaccine, they donāt have to agree with the anti-vaxxer they simply have to tolerate them.
Itās a dark age belief system, where to even hear heresy spoken is to be tainted by it.
This is all part of the redefining, really the broadening, of what people even mean by āanti-vaxxerā in the first place. Yet more āpivoting of our languageā.
Szilveszter Csollany is accused of āexpressing anti-vaccination viewsā on social media, but in our current climate that can mean almost anything.
Opposing vaccine mandates, vaccine passports, or the giving of untested vaccines to children. All have been described as āanti-vaxā positions.
You could have every vaccine youāve ever been offered, but decline the Covid āvaccineā to wait for long-term safety data, and still find yourself branded an āanti-vaxxerā.
And now, finally, you can actually be vaccinated, but be labelled an āanti-vaxxerā because you may have previously expressed doubts or asked questions.
The injection has become the quite literal equivalent of a religious rite, where your beliefs are just as important as your actions, maybe even more so.
The vaccines are āsafe and effectiveā, thatās the mantra for the modern age, chanted in televised chapels.
In the beginning, people were told that if you were anti-vaxxer you would die, for the vaccines are the new blood of Christ, and by accepting them into your heart you are promised life eternal.
This conditioning has gone so deep people are inverting it and spitting it back out: Now, if you die, you must have been an anti-vaxxer.
Being vaccinated, but not believing in the vaccine, is just as bad as rejecting the vaccine, and you will remain unvaccinated in spirit.
And like a modern-day ducking stool, if ā like poor Szilveszter Csollany ā you get the vaccine and die anyway, it shows only that your faith was not strong enough, you were secretly an anti-vaxxer at heart, and the press will say as much in your obituary.
The media all talk this way.
I canāt tell if they do it dishonestly to create this bizarre atmosphere of religious fervour, or they donāt even realise theyāre doing it because theyāre so caught up in zealotry. And Iām not sure which is worse.
Either way, the endpoint is clear: A world where being āanti-vaccinationā is no longer defined by what you do, but by what you say and think or even what you allow others to think.
An all-purpose label, so vague as to be functionally meaningless, but universally applied to anyone who diverts as much as one degree from the mainstream course, turning them into an outsider who must be shunned.
It really is a cult. Thereās no other way to describe it.