America’s
Frontline Doctors (AFLDS) is a wingnut political organization founded to spread
conspiracy theories, denialism and pseudoscience about COVID-19. The group rose to fame with their July 27, 2020, media event where the members advocated for
the use of repurposed drugs, such as hydroxychloroquine, as treatments for COVID-19 based
on no support from research, evidence or good reason; rather, they accompanied the
recommendations by accusing the pharmaceutical industry of intentionally
sponsoring studies showing the drugs to be ineffective based solely on the fact
that the existing serious, peer-reviewed studies didn’t support their claims. Instead of
being laughed off stage as the brainrot conspiracy crazies they are, their
claims were distributed and promoted by a number of wingnut websites and social
media, as well as by then-president Trump and (in particular) Trump jr – heck, remember that Joseph Ladapo rose to
prominence as a member of the group. There is a discussion of some of
their early antics and claims here.
In 2021, AFLDS
pivoted to anti-vaccine activism, making consistenly false claims about the efficacy and safety of COVID-19 vaccines, including falsely referring to
the vaccines as “experimental biological agents”,
falsely claiming that they were “not effective in
treating or preventing” COVID-19, and falsely claiming that the vaccines were responsible for
45,000 deaths based on utterly incompetent and dishonest dumpster diving in the VAERS database – the latter claim was even used
for a lawsuit seeking a temporary ban on
vaccinations (so much for “health freedom”) in a case so incompetent and dumb that it was most likely motivated
by its potential for fundraising (i.e. grifting) rather than by any genuine
hope that it would achieve anything in the courts.
On the
other hand, they also promoted paid telehealth consultations with “AFLDS-trained”
physicians that would prescribe fake medications they claimed were COVID-19
treatments – the grift was so obvious and in your face
that it never even registered with many of their fans. The service in question was provided by SpeakWithAnMD, a telehealth website run by legendary
conspiracy theorist Jerome Corsi for the purpose of distributing
various drugs that had been claimed by right-wing figures to be therapeutic for
COVID-19. The Intercept estimated that AFLDS and its partners had made
$6.7 million in revenue from these consultations between July 16 and September
12, 2021. You can read more about the grift here (it’s even shabbier than it
sounds).
It’s worth
emphasizing that the self-proclaimed frontline doctors have never been at the actual frontline of anything; the group’s members are notable
for never having been close neither to doing serious research on nor to
treating patients suffering from Covid, despite prominent member Stella
Immanuel claiming that she herself had treated and cured 350 COVID-19 patients
using a cocktail of hydroxychloroquine, Zithromax, and zinc (and also that sexual visitations by demons and
alien DNA are at the root of Americans’ common health concerns).
AFLDS was
founded by Simone Gold and Tea Party
Patriots-cofounder Jenny Beth Martin, though Gold’s relationship with
the group has become somewhat chaotic over the years: In early November 2022, AFLDS sued Gold for using – entirely predictably
given the kind of person we’re talking about – the group’s charitable funds to
buy multi-million-dollar mansions and
cars for her and her boyfriend’s (that would be ALFDS’s former Communications Director John Strand) personal use (more here); apparently AFLDS hired a “forensic
auditor” to do a thorough exploration of the organization’s financials
while Gold was in prison.
Because of
course she was in prison. On January 5, 2021, Gold spoke in D.C. to people
gathering to participate in the “Stop the Steal” rally, in which she said that COVID-19 was non-fatal and
spread misinformation and insane conspiracy theories about COVID-19 vaccines,
e.g. saying that “if you don’t want to take an
experimental biological agent deceptively named a vaccine, you must not allow
yourself to be coerced!” Then, on January 6, Gold joined the insurrectionists
and illegally entered the Capitol building, pushing law enforcement officials
to get inside, along with John Strand, where she gave another speech. She later said that she “regret
being there” because she was obviously concerned that ‘controversies’ about
her actions could detract from her work with AFLDS, and in February 2022, she pleaded guilty to and was
sentenced to 90 days in jail for a Class A
misdemeanor. Always a grifter, Gold used the trial to fundraise $430 000 for
her legal defense, which even her lawyer more or less admitted was pure grifting.
The claims
she made on January 5, 2021, were in line with the claims she has tended to
make elsewhere. Gold is most famous for her promotion of hydroxychloroquine as
a “safe” alternative to COVID vaccines, in direct conflict with
reality. Equally out of touch with
reality, of course, is her persistent promotion of ivermectin. She is also opposed to face
masks, of course. And Gold has been willing to use all available means to
market her conspiracy theories, such as claiming that the US government experimented on Black
people to test the general safety of vaccines in a desperate attempt to gain
traction with Black communities. And like with so many of the conspiracy
theorists associated with AFLDS, Gold’s background in research or patient care,
despite being an MD, is … at best unclear – in 2020, for instance, she made a
video trying to convince people she was affiliated with Cedars-Sinai Medical
Center in LA, which she was certainly not.
She has
been quite successful among wingnut groups, however. Her “White Coat Summit”
press conference was co-sponsored by the Tea Party Patriots and was broadcast by Breitbart, and she was a speaker at the 2020 AMPFest, as well as at an event for donors
to the Council for National Policy in November the same year (both
Gold and AFLDS colleague James Todaro are part of that group); in December, she was part of a
summit hosted by Turning Point USA. In 2021, she was part of the “Health
and Freedom Conference” at Rhema Bible Church in Oklahoma
with regular allies like Jim Caviezel, Mike Lindell, and Lin Wood (evangelicals have consistently
been an important demographic for AFLDS’s disinformation
efforts). In May, 2021, she arranged an RV tour across the US named the
“Uncensored Truth Tour”. And so on.
She
currently (or at least relatively recently) runs GoldCare, a telemedicine service that
charges $1,000 per year for individual memberships, and – needless to say – does
not accept insurance.
Diagnosis: One
of the most brazen grifters alive in the US (and the competition is fierce).
Yes, she probably honestly believes at least some of the claims and conspiracy
theories she and her group have been producing, but successful grifters tend to
do just that (when you tell a lie often enough you start to believe it yourself
and so on). That she is still perceived as an authority by anyone at this
point, is flabbergasting, but she is. A piece of utter garbage masquerading as
a human.
Hat-tip:
Rationalwiki