
NEW STUDY SHOWS DOGS CAN DETECT COVID-19 IN UNDER ONE SECONDĬDC IS INVESTIGATING REPORTS OF MILD HEART INFLAMMATION AFTER VACCINATIONS
NAOMI WOLF TWITTER FREE
Others, however, voiced concern the ban was stifling free speech and called for her account to be reinstated.įAUCI BOMBSHELL: ‘NOT CONVINCED’ COVID-19 DEVELOPED NATURALLY OUTSIDE WUHAN LAB “As a historian of #autism, I’ve been reading vile anti-vaccine propaganda for 20 years, and Wolf’s claims were as out-there and delusional as I’ve ever seen,” author Steve Silberman wrote. Many Twitter users applauded the suspension. This has been the start of many, many genocides.” congressional committee last month that so-called vaccine passports would “re-create a situation that is very familiar to me as a student of history. The Guardian reports that Wolf, who was once a political adviser to Al Gore and former President Clinton, told a U.S. Wolf has also falsely claimed that vaccines are a “software platform that can receive uploads,” and reportedly compared the nation’s top infectious diseases expert, Anthony Fauci, to Satan. The news outlet reports that in one of Wolf’s most recent tweets, she said the urine and feces of people who had been vaccinated needed to be separated from the general sewage system while studies are done to measure the impact on unvaccinated people through drinking water. Add Changing America to your Facebook or Twitter feed to stay on top of the news. Our country is in a historic fight against the coronavirus. The BBC reports the author behind the critically acclaimed third-wave feminist book “The Beauty Myth” was recently banned from Twitter after posting unfounded theories about the coronavirus and vaccines to her more than 140,000 followers. Wolf wrote the critically acclaimed third-wave feminist book “The Beauty Myth” in the 1990s.Īuthor Naomi Wolf has been suspended from Twitter after spreading misinformation about the coronavirus pandemic on the social media platform.While many Twitter users applauded the move, others voiced concern the ban was stifling free speech.Wolf has falsely claimed that vaccines are a “software platform that can receive uploads,” and reportedly compared the nation’s top infectious diseases expert, Anthony Fauci, to Satan.

Michael Schaub is a Texas-based journalist and regular contributor to NPR. In a Substack newsletter, journalist Eoin Higgins reports that Wolf plans to join an event organized by anti-vaccine conspiracy theorists that will be held on June 19, which is Juneteenth, a holiday celebrating the emancipation of Black enslaved people in the U.S. While promoting the book, Wolf told a BBC radio interviewer that “several dozen” men had been executed in 19th-century Britain for having gay sex the interviewer pointed out that Wolf had likely misinterpreted legal language from historical documents. In 2019, Wolf and her publisher parted ways when inaccuracies were found in her book Outrages after its release in the U.K. government planned to introduce Ebola to America so it could justify imposing martial law. Wolf was a pioneering third-wave feminist at the start of her career but has recently become known for spreading conspiracy theories, suggesting that videos showing murders by the terrorist group ISIS were staged and that the U.S. She also wrote that the urine and feces of vaccinated people should be separated from sewage systems while tests are conducted to measure their impact on people who haven’t been vaccinated.

Wolf, the author of such books as The Beauty Myth and Promiscuities, tweeted that Covid-19 vaccines are a “software platform that can receive uploads,” parroting a baseless conspiracy theory. Twitter has suspended Naomi Wolf after the author used her account to post misinformation about the Covid-19 pandemic and the vaccines used to fight the coronavirus, the Guardian reports.
