Actor Evangeline Lilly revealed that she attended the Defeat the Mandates rally in Washington, D.C., the same event where Robert F. Kennedy Jr. came under fire for his comments comparing U.S. vaccination policies to the Holocaust.

Lilly, who plays Hope Van Dyne/The Wasp in Marvel’s “Ant-Man” films, posted photos from the rally to her personal Instagram account Thursday.

In the post, she said she doesn’t believe someone should be “forced to inject their body with anything, against their will.” A photo in Lilly’s post includes a person holding a sign that reads “vaxxed democrat for medical freedom.”

“This is not healthy. This is not love,” Lilly wrote. “I understand the world is in fear, but I don’t believe that answering fear with force will fix our problems.”

It’s unclear whether Lilly, who finished filming “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania” last year, is vaccinated. A spokesperson for Lilly did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Lilly has previously been hit with criticism and apologized for comments about the pandemic.

In March 2020, she posted on Instagram that her family wasn’t self-isolating and that it was “#businessasusual” in her household despite public health officials’ recommendations to stay home. She also responded to a fan comment downplaying the coronavirus, calling it a “respiratory flu.”

“I want to offer my sincere and heartfelt apology for the insensitivity I showed in my previous post to the very real suffering and fear that has gripped the world through COVID19,” she said later. “Grandparents, parents, children, sisters and brothers are dying, the world is rallying to find a way to stop this very real threat, and my ensuing silence has sent a dismissive, arrogant and cryptic message.”

Jan. 23, 202202:23

The anti-vaccination mandate rally Sunday made headlines in recent days because of Kennedy, a son of the late U.S. senator and presidential candidate and a nephew of President John F. Kennedy.

In a speech at the rally, Kennedy likened vaccination policies to the authoritarian regime in Nazi Germany, where an estimated 6 million Jews were killed as part of Adolf Hitler’s genocide. He apologized for the remarks Tuesday, saying he intended to highlight “examples of past barbarism to show the perils from new technologies of control.”

Kennedy is well-known for speaking out against vaccines, and he was condemned by the Anti-Defamation League in 2015 for making similar comments comparing vaccination mandates and the Holocaust.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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