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WASHINGTON —Disinformation and conspiracy theories have spread quickly in response to natural disasters in the southeastern United States, creating distrust in the government response, according to the head of the Federal Emergency Management Agency.
"It is absolutely the worst I have ever seen," FEMA Administrator Deanne Criswell told reporters on a Tuesday call.
The spread of lies surrounding the natural disasters comes at a time when social media infrastructure will allow "virtually any claim" to amplify and spread, experts say.
Hurricane Helene left more than 200 people dead and many more injured or without power, and Hurricane Milton has left at least four dead after ravaging Florida, according to the Associated Press.
Some frequently spread falsehoods include accusations that FEMA prevented Florida evacuations and claims that funding for storm victims was instead given to undocumented migrants.
Such misinformation is "demoralizing" to first responders, Criswell said in the press call.
Additionally, the fabrications could put first responders and residents of impacted areas in even more danger, according to Matthew Baum, a Harvard University professor who focuses on fake news and misinformation.
"When you're talking about life-and-death situations, [misinformation] can cause people not to take advantage of help that's available to them, and it can also be dangerous for first responders who are being accused of all sorts of badness," Baum told VOA. "And if first responders start to worry about their own safety, that's going to undermine how they do their jobs."
Many of the other falsehoods stem from former President Donald Trump's campaign and allies.
In an October 3 rally, the former president falsely claimed that the Biden-Harris administration was diverting FEMA funding to house illegal migrants.
Last week, Representative Marjorie Taylor Greene, a Republican from Georgia, claimed that "they control the weather" in a post on social media platform X, formerly Twitter. She did not specify who "they" are.
To combat popular conspiracies surrounding hurricane relief efforts, FEMA launched a "Hurricane Rumor Response" webpage to "help correct rumors and provide accurate information," according to a press release.
Baum, however, told VOA that those who believe the false claims may not be swayed by the government-funded website, as they are already "deep down the rabbit hole of conspiratorial thinking."
"I don't think the website will have a significant effect, but it's still worth doing because journalists read it and having that information out there gets it into the news ecosystem," Baum said. "But fundamentally, it's not likely to reach many of the people that are at risk of being harmed by this disinformation."
FEMA put up a similar rumor response webpage during the 2020 coronavirus pandemic.
On social media platforms such as X, misinformation tends to spread faster than true stories, a 2018 MIT study found. False news stories are 70% more likely to be reposted than true ones are.
Media scholar Matt Jordan told VOA the vast amount of disinformation circulating is part of a "firehose of falsehood" strategy, in which bad actors publish so much "garbage" that people don't know what to believe.
"It's a way of eliminating the capacity for the press to help generate democratic consensus by just putting so much garbage into the zone," the Penn State professor said.
U.S. President Joe Biden said during a Tuesday morning briefing that this misinformation "misleads" the public.
"It's un-American, it really is," he said in his remarks. "People are scared to death; people know their lives are at stake."