click to enlarge
- Screenshot of the video
- This woman has ideas about things.
Conservative Vermont website
True North Reports published a video with some shocking claims Monday night under the headline “Citizen journalists visit coronavirus hospitals, find no ill patients or crowds awaiting testing.”
True North bills itself as “The other side of Vermont’s News,” and
this was certainly another side. The 13-minute video features a voiceover by a YouTube conspiracy theorist who calls herself Dana Ashlie. She cheerfully announces at the top of the video, while strolling outdoors and smacking a ball into a baseball mitt, that citizens have scurried around to investigate the mainstream media's hoopla about people lining up for coronavirus tests and treatment.
Well, game on. Cue the scenes that question media accounts.
click to enlarge
- Screenshot
- From True North Reports
“People, look at the testing centers,” an unidentified woman says as her camera spans a makeshift building
somewhere with no people and little more than a few empty chairs. “This is where they’re telling you the testing is going on in. Where’s the testing?” Her voice becomes urgent. “They’re empty. They’re abandoned, people.
There is no testing going on.”
For the record, here’s the testing in Vermont:
click to enlarge
- Oliver Parini
- Real staff testing actual samples from real Vermonters
That takes place in the Vermont Department of Health Laboratory. It's in this building in Colchester:
click to enlarge
- Oliver Parini
- The state lab is in this building.
Some samples, but not all, are taken from people who drive up to the makeshift testing center at the Champlain Valley Exposition in Essex Junction.
click to enlarge
- Courtney Lamdin
- Reporters touring the drive-up testing site in Essex Junction
Running the video was a curious choice for True North. It’s not Vermont-focused, for one thing. But more to the point, its maker’s credibility has been debunked.
Health Feedback, a nonprofit organization that checks the veracity of public accounts, noted in February that another claim of Ashlie’s — that 5G technology, and not a virus, caused the health crisis —
is simply not true. A 30-second investigation involving a Google search leads to a body of questionable claims she's made.
Various social media platforms have announced crackdowns on coronavirus disinformation. So why did True North run Ashlie’s piece? We emailed them Thursday afternoon to ask, and so far they haven’t responded.
The website has been bankrolled by Burlington heiress Lenore Broughton, who has been a major Republican donor in Vermont. It generally hosts much tamer fare by conservative Vermonters. Current commentaries on the site include ones attributed to GOP lieutenant gubernatorial candidate Meg Hansen, Vermont Republican Party chair Deb Billado and Rep. Anne Donahue (R-Northfield). Thursday's lead headline: “Economy collapsing under Gov. Scott, weekly jobless claims soar 286 percent.”
Seven Days asked the Vermont Department of Health for comment on the video, and spokesman Ben Truman sent this statement:
Everyone — regardless of their political or philosophical predilections – owes it to themselves, and to their families and loved ones, as well as to their communities, to seek out science-based information and guidance to inform their decisions. Lives are very much at stake.
Whatever their information source, limiting spread of the virus relies on people doing the painful but critical actions like following stay-at-home orders. We strongly encourage people to talk with their doctors if they have symptoms, and to stay informed through sites like healthvermont.gov to protect themselves and everyone around them.
Boom. Game over.
Clarification, March 3, 2020: Following publication of this story, Rep. Donohue noted that she is not a commentator for True North Reports. Rather, she said, the site ran her constituent updates as commentaries. Likewise, Meg Hansen said her piece on the site had been submitted to VTDigger.org.