Return To Full Article
You can republish this story for free. Click the "Copy HTML" button below. Questions? Get more details.

At The Hollow in Florida, the Medical Freedom Movement Finds Its Base Camp

VENICE, Fla. MAGA and MAHA are happily married in Florida, and nowhere more at home than in Sarasota County, where on a humid October night a crowd of several hundred gathered to honor state Surgeon General Joseph Ladapo, his wife, and an unlicensed Canadian radiologist who treats cancer with horse paste.

The event, , was sponsored by the , a clinic, funded by a Jan. 6 marcher, where patients can bask in red light, sit in ozone-infused steam baths, or get their children treated for autism with an experimental blood concentrate.

In Venice, in Sarasota County, a medical freedom movement forged in opposition to covid lockdowns blends wellness advocates, vaccine-haters, right-wing Republicans, and angry parents in a stew of anti-government absolutism and mystical belief.

Ladapos wife, Brianna, a self-proclaimed spiritual healer who says she speaks with angels and has prophetic visions, chaired a panel at the event at the Venice Community Center. The keynote speech was by William Makis, who, after losing his medical license in 2019, has made a living treating cancer patients with antiparasitic drugs including ivermectin, which was also championed in some circles as a covid treatment during the pandemic.

Clinical trials showed that ivermectin didnt work, but covid skeptics viewed medicines rejection of it as part of a conspiracy by Big Pharma against a cheap, off-patent drug. Some of the patients in his care have what he calls turbo cancers, Makis says, blaming alleged impurities in mRNA vaccines that he says have killed millions of people.

For Makis, its all one big conspiracy the virus, the vaccine, and the suppression of his therapies.

Brianna Ladapo has her own take on medicine, based on the idea of good and bad spiritual energy. She wrote in a memoir that as the pandemic began she intuited that it had been planned by sinister forces to frighten the masses to surrender their sovereignty to a small group of tyrannical elites. She has written that the government .

She sees dark forces all over the place, including, she said earlier this year, in chemtrails shaped like a pentagram. Theyve been plastering it in the sky right outside our house for the last few weeks, Ladapo said. The chemtrails they are dumping on us, she said, had sickened her and her three sons. The dark side are no fans of ours.

(Chemtrails are a favorite topic of conspiracy theorists who say they think that contrails, the condensation formed around commercial airplane exhaust, contain toxic substances poisoning people and the terrain. Although there is zero evidence of that, Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. whether they are part of a clandestine effort to use toxic chemicals to change the weather.)

Ladapos husband hasnt publicly endorsed all her beliefs, but as surgeon general hes reversing decades of accepted public health practice in Florida and embracing untested therapies. Were done with fear, Joseph Ladapo said after being named surgeon general in 2021. He wants to ban mRNA vaccines in Florida, and on Sept. 3 he announced plans to end childhood vaccination mandates in the state.

A few days after the Venice event, Ladapo to support Makis work though his treatments are unproven and potentially dangerous through a new $60 million cancer research fund created by Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and his wife, Casey.

Vic Mellor, CEO of , founded and owns We the People. Hes an associate of retired Army Lt. Gen. Michael Flynn, who was briefly President Donald Trumps national security adviser in 2017 before being dismissed for lying to the FBI about his contacts with Russians. Trump later pardoned him, and Flynn since has become a leader of the Christian nationalist movement.

We the People provides vitamin shots but no vaccines. In fact, many of its offerings are treatments for supposed vaccine injuries. Part of the We the People building is a broadcasting studio, where conservatives hold forth on what they see as the villainy of liberals and the American Academy of Pediatrics.

Mellor was at the U.S. Capitol during the riot on Jan. 6, 2021 he said he just knocked on front doors, according to a Facebook post described . He returned home and started building a 10-acre complex that hosts weddings and right-wing assemblies, with playgrounds, a butterfly garden, a zip line over a pond visited by alligators, and an attached, separately owned gun range.

Visitors who travel down a dirt road to The Hollow named for the hollow-core concrete that made Mellor wealthy can enter the compound through a dark, cavernous passage lined with neon signs illuminating maxims from the likes of Thomas Jefferson, Thomas Paine, and Flynn.

The Hollow has hosted clinics for unvaccinated kids and events , anti-vaccine activist Sherri Tenpenny (who in 2021 told legislators at that covid vaccine made people magnetic), and other medical freedom advocates. Mellor created a medical home for such ideas by in 2023.

The year before, three medical freedom candidates had won seats on the board overseeing Sarasotas public hospital and health care system, after protests over the hospitals refusal to treat covid patients with ivermectin and other drugs of choice for covid contrarians.

On a recent afternoon at The Hollow, manager Dan Welch was clearing brush when approached by 窪蹋勛圖厙 News. As a foe of vaccinations, he welcomed Ladapos move to end vaccine mandates. Maybe in their inception, vaccines were created to prevent what they were supposed to prevent, Welch said. But now theres so much more in there, the metals, aluminum, mercury. Since they started vaccination, the autism rate went through the roof, and I believe these vaccines are part of it.

The theory that vaccines cause autism has been debunked, and manufacturers removed mercury from childhood vaccines 24 years ago, although Welch said he doesnt believe it.

Vaccination faces additional challenges in a century-old Sarasota County neighborhood of low-slung bungalows called Pinecraft, home to about 3,000 Mennonites and double that number when Amish snowbirds arrive in the winter. Pastor Timothy Miller said that while Sarasotas Mennonites are less culturally isolated than the Mennonite community in West Texas, site of a measles outbreak in January, many in his community also shun vaccination.

His cousin Kristi Miller, 26, wont vaccinate her 9-month-old daughter or any of the other children she hopes to have, she said, because she thinks vaccines probably cause autism and other harms.

As for vaccine-preventable diseases like measles, she doesnt worry about them. , I dont live in fear, she said. I have a God whos bigger than everything.

窪蹋勛圖厙 News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFFan independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about .

Help 窪蹋勛圖厙 News track this article

By including these elements when you republish, you help us:
  • Understand which communities and people were reaching.
  • Measure the impact of our health journalism.
  • Continue providing free, high-quality health news to the public.
Canonical Tag

Include this in your page's <head> section to properly attribute this content.

Tracking Snippet

Add this snippet at the end of your republished article to help us track its reach.