Online conspiracy theorists twist singer’s COVID-19 death
CHICAGO — Conspiracy theorists are twisting facts online about country singer Joe Diffie’s death from COVID-19 complications in order to promote their claims that health officials are exaggerating the coronavirus pandemic’s threat.
Diffie, who topped the charts in the 1990s with honky-tonk singles like “Home” and “Pickup Man,” died on March 29 due to complications from COVID-19, after he tested positive for the virus. He was 61 when he passed away in Nashville, Tennessee.
In the days following his death, Facebook and Twitter users posing as internet sleuths falsely claimed media reports hid that he had lung cancer. He did not. The untrue online reports appear to have stemmed from an internet obituary for Diffie’s father, Joe Diffie Sr., who passed away in November 2018 from cancer.
It’s the latest inaccurate claim from Facebook, Twitter and YouTube users who are seeking to sow doubt about the impact of the virus, and suggest that health officials, government leaders and media outlets have overblown its danger, despite millions being infected with the virus worldwide.