In sorry but you are basing this all on science based in the scientific method? Which requires the EXACT same circumstances in order to be used, and in the case of genetics that is mathematically impossible to reproduce a second time.
Comments
Log in with your Bluesky account to leave a comment
Your argument dismisses literally all of medicine.
No one has *ever* found evidence of vaccines having any connection to autism at all. Is there a chance there could be like 1% of 1% of 1% of cases of autism being caused by vaccines due to some mechanism we can’t detect at all?
Sure. But that in no way justifies exposing kids to *polio*. “We think this might be an issue because of a thing a fraud made up that we have never once been able to prove is even remotely true” is a *terrible* reason to not do something. You need actual evidence to prove the connection exists.
And there is no evidence. No one has ever been able to find anything, and the fact that you’re making really basic factual mistakes, like the amount of thimerosal, indicates to me that you’re listening to extremely unreliable sources.
Whose off topic, I have never stated anything that justifies exposing kids to anything, stated several times I am in no way associated with or saying anything about RFK. Also...
Ah, I was looking at Canadian and British sources, as I’m Canadian. Canada and the UK removed it in 1994, I assumed the US had too. But again, thimerosal was *never* present in the MMR vaccine, which was the main one Wakefield’s bullshit was focused on.
Understandable. And also I am provaccine, my kid literally got there dtap today!!! But the US flu vaccines still contain Thimerosal still, which is part of why I have never received one. But the correlation (at least in the US) and the number of shots a child is recommended before the age of...
Thimerosal was just dropped because the technology improved and, as usual with public health stuff, the US was behind the curve, I guess. I’m guessing thimerosal was cheaper than the replacement.
We have tons and tons of evidence that vaccines prevent childhood deaths. We have *no* evidence that vaccines cause autism.
We have to pick one of these, and we should pick the one with *actual evidence* and not the one that’s completely made up and has no supporting evidence at all.
Yeah, and it’s ethylmercury, the type that the human body can safely dispose of it, and vaccines contain so little of that even looking at a fucking can of tuna exposes you to more mercury.
Comments
I find the fear over vaccines because of ASD offensive as a person with ASD. It implies people would rather catch a lethal disease than be like me.
No one has *ever* found evidence of vaccines having any connection to autism at all. Is there a chance there could be like 1% of 1% of 1% of cases of autism being caused by vaccines due to some mechanism we can’t detect at all?
We have to pick one of these, and we should pick the one with *actual evidence* and not the one that’s completely made up and has no supporting evidence at all.