Group administrators are given the absolute power to grant the “Group Expert” badge to anyone in the group. Which, when you’re in the midst of fighting a losing battle against misinformation, doesn’t exactly seem like a very helpful feature.
A match made in hell — Anti-vaxxers and violent militia groups wouldn’t be the first friendship we’d think up, but they’re actually perfect for each other, in a twisted sense. Both groups feel they’re being silenced, specifically by left-leaning politicians and the media; both feel ready to act on the anxiety brought on by the ongoing pandemic.
“You get the soccer mom who doesn’t see herself as a [militia member] or maybe didn’t think of herself as a ‘Stop the Steal’ person,” said Katie Paul, director of TTP, “but those moms are aggressive about protecting their kids from the vaccines, and so it’s easy to loop in an entirely new audience.”
Facebook, meanwhile, keeps hammering home one fact: that Facebook has removed plenty of misinformation from the site. A Facebook spokesperson told Vice more than 20,000 militia-related Facebook groups have been removed since the ban was announced.
The fact remains that vaccine misinformation is still very much a problem on Facebook, so much so that Facebook news readers are demonstrably more opposed to vaccines than even Fox News followers.