As Pandemic Toll Rises, Science Deniers in Louisiana Shun Masks, Comparing Health Measures to Nazi Germany

Julie-Dermansky-022
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Scienceย denial in America didnโ€™t beginย with the Trumpย administration, but under the leadership of President Trump, it has blossomed. From the climate crisis to the COVID-19 pandemic, this rejection of scientific authority has become a hallmark of and cultural signal among many in conservative circles. This phenomenon has been on recent display in Louisiana, where a clear anti-mask sentiment has emerged in the streets and online even as COVID-19 casesย rise.

โ€œAre you a masker or a free breather?โ€ Pastor Tony Spell asked the crowd while speaking from the bed of a pickup truck at a July 4 โ€œSave Americaโ€ rally inย Baton Rouge. At the end of March Spell gained international attention for his refusal to stop his churchโ€™s servicesย despite Gov. John Bel Edwardsโ€™ stay-at-homeย order, which was issued to slowย Louisianaโ€™s rapid riseย in COVID-19 cases.
ย 
โ€œIt has never been about a virus โ€” it is aboutย destroyingย America,โ€ Spell claimed, before equating a government whose public health measures restrict church gatherings and require protective face coverings in public toย Germany under Hitler. A crowd of less than 200 roared in agreement at the rally that was heldย across fromย theย governor’sย mansion.ย 

Pastor Tony Spell
Pastor Tony Spell speaking at the โ€œSave Americaโ€ rally in Baton Rouge on Julyย 4.

Attendees of a "Save America" rally in Baton Rouge on July 4
Attendees of the โ€œSave Americaโ€ rally in Baton Rouge on July 4 including one holding aย fan.

On July 8, another conservative voice, Louisiana State Representative Danny McCormick, posted a video on Facebook making a similar comparison to Nazi Germany. โ€œThis isn’t about whether you want to wear a mask or you don’t want to wear a mask โ€” this is about your right to wear a mask or not,โ€ McCormick said. โ€œThis is about liberty. Your body is your private property โ€ฆ People who don’t wear a mask will be soon painted as the enemy โ€” just as they did the Jews in Nazi Germany. Now is the time to push back before it is tooย late.โ€

ย At a press conference the day after McCormick posted his video,ย Gov. Edwards announced that the state had lost its previous gains against the coronavirus.ย 

McCormickโ€™sย statements come about six months into a public health crisis that has infected 71,884 Louisiana residents and killed 3,247, as of July 9. Despite the pandemic’s accelerating and deadly spread, the complaints by McCormick, Pastor Spell, and the others joining themย at a handful of protests in Baton Rouge ย illustrate a pervasive disdain for science held by many associated with the Republicanย Party.ย 

Louisiana State Rep. Danny McCormick
State Representative Danny McCormick at an โ€œEnd the Shutdownโ€ protest in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on Aprilย 25.

State Rep. Danny McCormick's talking points at an "end the shutdown" rally in Louisiana
State Representative Danny McCormickโ€™s talking points on an index card he held while making a speech during an โ€œEnd the Shutdownโ€ rally in Baton Rouge on Aprilย 25.

A DeSmog investigation found that a number of groups behind protests against pandemic stay-home orders are also part of the climate change countermovement, aย term coined by sociologist Robert Brulle. U.S. Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse (D-RI) has called this network of individuals and organizations disputing climate science the โ€œweb of denial.โ€

April and May rallies in Louisiana pushing to open the state followed larger ralliesย in Idaho, Michigan, and North Dakota. Helping tie together what Trump has calledย the โ€œliberateโ€ movement is the State Policy Network (SPN).ย As DeSmog has reported, SPN is โ€œa network of state-level conservative think tanks advancingย pro-corporate agendas, [and] has received money from the likes of theย Koch family, the Devos family, theย Mercer Family Foundation, andย others.โ€ย 

Woman with a COVID-19 denial sign at an "end the shutdown" rally in Baton Rouge
Woman with a Covid-19 denial sign at an โ€œEnd the Shutdownโ€ protest in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on Aprilย 25.

Woman with a COVID-19 denial sign targeting Bill Gates, a common target of the right wing
Woman with a Covid-19 denial sign sporting a message for Bill Gates, a common target of the right wing, at an โ€œEnd the Shutdownโ€ protest in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on Aprilย 25.

At an April 25 โ€œEnd the Shutdownโ€ rally in Baton Rouge, rally-goers, led by Rep. McCormick, marched from the State Capitol building to the nearby lawn across from the governor’s mansion to express their anger with his handling of the crisis. In a speech, McCormick offered talking points to counter Gov. Edwardsโ€™ emergency orders meant to address the COVID-19 pandemic. The talking points mirrored a memo sent by GOP political operative Jay Connaughton to Republican State Sen. Sharon Hewitt and shared with GOP state legislators. Hewitt is one of Louisiana’s top conservative leaders. In 2018 she was named โ€œNationalย Legislator of the Yearโ€ by the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC).

Veronica Lemoa, a stay-at-home mom, at the "end the shutdown" protest on April 25 in Baton Rouge
Veronica Lemoa, a stay-at-home mother, at an โ€œEnd the Shutdownโ€ protest on April 25, 2020 in Baton Rouge,ย Louisiana.ย 

Young girl at an "Open Louisiana" event in Baton Rouge May 2
Young girl at an โ€œOpen Louisianaโ€ event in Baton Rouge on May 2 across from the Governorโ€™sย Mansion.ย 

Despite President Trumpโ€™s praise for Gov. Edwards, a Democrat, for his handling of the pandemic, anti-mask protesters are equating the governorโ€™s stay-at-home order and mask mandate with the first step to tyranny. Spell, who was arrested for defying the mask mandate, did not stop with his sharp criticism of the governor โ€” and also had some for Trump. While he is glad the Trump administration deemed churches โ€œessential,โ€ in order to reopen them, Spell proclaimed that he doesn’t need the presidentโ€™s permission, and warned: โ€œIf they can give you your right to go to church, then they can take from you your right to go toย church.โ€


Pastor Tony Spell speaking on the July 4 at rally in Batonย Rouge.ย 

At the July 4 rally, many expressed their support for Trump, and saw the upcomingย presidential election as the mostย importantย in their lifetime. Theyย labeledย those who wear protective face coverings โ€œsheep.โ€ Out of the less than 200 rally-goers, I saw only two people with face masks. One was worn by a man that had the words โ€œDixie Beerโ€ painted on it, which was expressingย his disdain over the decision by the owner of the New Orleans beer company to change the beerโ€™s name in response to anti-racism demonstrations. The other mask I noticed at the rally was worn on a womanโ€™sย arm.ย 

The only man wearing a face mask at a "save America" rally on July 4
The only man wearing a mask on his face at a โ€œSave Americaโ€ rally in Baton Rouge on July 4. He expressed his displeasure that the owner of Dixie Beer is changing the New Orleans beerโ€™sย name.ย 

Woman with a mask on her arm at the "save America" July 4 rally
Woman wearing a face mask on her arm at the โ€œSave Americaโ€ rally in Baton Rouge on Julyย 4.ย 

In an April 1 op-ed in Newsweek, Rochester Institute of Technology philosophy professorย Lawrenceย Torcello, and Pennsylvania State University climate scientist Michael E. Mann wrote: โ€œUnfortunately, President Trump has again emerged as a leading source of disinformation. Having called COVID-19, as he previously did with climate change, a โ€™hoax,โ€™ heย now resorts to calling COVID-19 the โ€˜Chinese Virus.โ€™ In the case of both COVID-19 andย climate change, he has outsourced policy decision-making to science deniers. In both cases he is as wrong as he is xenophobic โ€” and in both cases his predictableย disinformation endangersย lives.โ€

Inย February,ย before the first COVID-19 cases wereย identifiedย in Louisiana, Gov. Edwards finally broke away from Trump on espousing climate scienceย denial.ย 

โ€œLouisiana will not just accept or adapt to climate change impacts,โ€ Edwards statedย at a news conference in Baton Rouge. โ€œLouisiana will do its part to address climate change.โ€ In a reversalย of his previous statements that questioned humansโ€™ well-established role in drivingย the climate crisis, he said,ย โ€œScience tells us that rising sea level will become the biggest challenge we face, threatening to overwhelm our best efforts to protect and restore our coast. Science also tells us that sea level rise is being driven by global greenhouse gasย emissions.โ€

But Sharonย Lavigne,ย founder of RISE St. James, a community group fightingย petrochemical industry expansion in Louisianaโ€™s Cancer Alley, doubts hisย sincerity. โ€œIf theย governorย isย seriousย about reducing carbonย emissions,ย he needs to pull the plug on Formosa.โ€ Plastics giant Formosa is poised to start building aย petrochemicalย complex in St. James Parish that has received permits toย spewย the emissions equivalent of 2.6 millionย cars.ย 

Petrochemicalย companies are one of Louisianaโ€™s top producers of carbon dioxide, one of the globe-warming gases linked to human-caused climate change. However, theย governorย has not walked back his support of Formosaโ€™sย project.ย 

Edwards was the firstย governorย in theย country to point out that African Americans are beingย disproportionatelyย impacted by the pandemic. But he has yet toย addressย the impact which ongoing pollution from theย petrochemicalย industry plays in the poor health ofย predominantlyย Black communities living near existing plants, or future ones, such as Formosaโ€™s in St. Jamesย Parish.

Many U.S. leaders have failed to take to heart scientistsโ€™ warnings that half-measures to combat climate change and theย COVID-19ย pandemic wonโ€™t work. Meanwhile, temperaturesย acrossย Americaย are hitting new record highs, and cases ofย the coronavirusย continue to riseย exponentially, leading top U.S. infectious disease officialย Dr. Anthony Fauciย to adviseย states โ€œhaving a serious problemโ€ with a surge inย coronavirus cases to โ€œseriously look at shuttingย down.โ€ย 

Protester across from the Louisiana Governor's Mansion on May 2
Protester across from the Governorโ€™s Mansion in Baton Rouge on May 2 with a protest sign against Anthony Fauci, Bill Gates, and the โ€œNew World Order.โ€ย ย 

Protesters across from the Louisiana Governor's Mansion on May 2
Protesters across from the Governorโ€™s Mansion in Baton Rouge on May 2.ย ย ย 

โ€œAs withย climate change, theoretical models have proven essential for anticipating what is likely to happen in the future. In the case ofย coronavirus, the initial spread of this virus is occurring at an exponential rate as models predicted,โ€ Torcello and Mann pointed out in their Newsweek op-ed. โ€œThis means we can anticipateย that larger sums of people will become infected in the coming weeks. We know the majority of those infected by COVID-19 will experienceย mild or noย symptomsย while remaining highly contagious, and we know that for others, COVID-19 will create the need for ventilators and other emergency medical supports that we do not yet have in sufficient supply. It is worth emphasizing: The fact that most people will experience mild symptoms is irrelevant to aย crisis, like COVID-19, which is grounded inย the mathย of largeย numbers.โ€

In his 1995 book The Demon-Haunted World, astronomer and science writer Carl Sagan presaged, with trepidation, an America wherein โ€œour critical faculties in decline, unable to distinguish between what feels good and what’s true, we slide, almost without noticing, back into superstitionย and darknessโ€ฆa kind of celebration ofย ignorance.โ€

After viewing some of my photos from the recent โ€œSave Americaโ€ rally, Mann wrote in an email:ย โ€œThese people, sadly, are the purest embodiment of Saganโ€™s chillingย prophecy.โ€

Protester across from the Governorโ€™s Mansion on May 2 with a protest sign that is a variation of the Gandsen Flag.ย 
Protester across from the Governorโ€™s Mansion on May 2 with a protest sign that is a variation of the Gandsenย Flag.ย 

Trump supporters at a rally across from the Governorโ€™s Mansion on July 4.
Trump supporters at a rally across from the Governorโ€™s Mansion on Julyย 4.

Protesters at an โ€œEnd the Shutdown" event in Baton Rouge on April 25 march from the Capital Building to the Governorโ€™s Mansion nearby.ย 
Protesters at an โ€œEnd the Shutdownโ€ event in Baton Rouge on April 25 march from the Capital Building to the Governorโ€™s Mansionย nearby.ย 

Main image: Woman holding an anti-mask sign at a July 4 โ€œSave Americaโ€ rally in Baton Rouge. Credit: All photos and video by Julie Dermansky forย DeSmog

Julie-Dermansky-022
Julie Dermansky is a multimedia reporter and artist based in New Orleans. She is an affiliate scholar at Rutgers Universityโ€™s Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights. Visit her website at www.jsdart.com.

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