‘Felt concocted in the lab about how many identities and horrible experiences can we put on one person’
By Joe Kovacs
(Photo by Saad Chaudhry on Unsplash)
As Americans and citizens across the world were bombarded with messages promoting lockdowns, masks and social distancing during the COVID pandemic, it turns out some doctors endorsing those control measures did not even exist, being part of a “network” of fake Twitter accounts, according to a stunning report.
The San Francisco Standard revealed how a number of physicians in the LGBT community pushing the government narratives and blasting those who questioned official advice were actually electronic bots.
Its report focused on the account of Dr. Robert Honeyman, who described himself on Twitter as a “Doctor of Sociology and Feminist studies” and whose profile photo was merely a royalty-free stock image.
His purported spouse, Dr. Patrick C. Honeyman, also was a fabricated account with a purloined stock photo.
“The two fake doctors, whose accounts urged extreme caution about Covid-19, were part of a network of at least four fake accounts that touted their ties to the LGBTQ+ community, vocally advocated for mask-wearing and social distancing, and dished out criticism to those they felt were not taking the pandemic seriously,” the Standard reported.
“The Honeymans could not be reached for comment, as they do not exist. At publication time, Robert Honeyman’s account was no longer active.”
The paper conducted a reverse Google image search showing Robert Honeyman’s photo is, in fact, a stock image from DepositPhotos.
