Donald Trump and RFK Jr. to Discuss Ending Child Vaccines

Not only statistically, but also in my personal experience:

We had maybe one or two autistic children PER SCHOOL when I began teaching in the early 90s. Then maybe one per grade level. Now we're up to one or two (or more) PER CLASS. Sure, some of this can be put down to better dx, but certainly not all of it. If not vaccines, SOMETHING is causing this explosion.
Let’s elect a bunch of idiots who don’t know anything about that and just go with whatever conspiracy theory they believe about the cause of autism.

Good job, America. 🇺🇲
 
That's the stupidest idea on the planet, hell in the solar system.

Only an idiot would want to go back to the days of polio and measles and shit.

Unfortunately the idiots are now in charge and we are all doomed.


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You people are retarded ignorant idiots

No one's calling for the end of polio or measles vaccines
The vacc schedule for children IS extremely excessive...

People have concerns ...and questions

What do you care anyway
You let animals across the border without a flinch
Retard
 
Let’s elect a bunch of idiots who don’t know anything about that and just go with whatever conspiracy theory they believe about the cause of autism.

Good job, America. 🇺🇲

Sure because the experts ("experts") were so great on Covid, amirite
 
I would be all for this. That is if they actually know without a shadow of a doubt that the vaccines are unsafe. As America wants as many healthy children as possible.

I can't imagine they will end all child vaccines. They might be discussing ending COVID vaxxes for kids which is probably a good idea.

But again, that they are discussing it should not be interpreted that it is done and signed policy or even intention. Discussion of all issues of concern to the American people should absolutely be happening. Without it, good policy is pretty impossible.
 
I'll play your game. You believe there should be no limits on the amount of vaccines children receive, right? All vaccines are great vaccines. Right?
Which vaccine do children take that causes autism?

You put these idiots in charge. Defend what they’re saying.
 
the hysteria from the left is hysterical ! its going to be fun watching y'all melt down for the next 4 looooong years !:auiqs.jpg:
Not everyone's personal lives are dependent in large part upon who's in the White House.

If all of the things Trump and you all claim are true, then my life and the lives of some others will get better right?

I've heard a lot of Trump supporters saying how everyone was doing better during Trump's first term. I wasn't, I hadn't earned my master's degree yet and while I was earning it I had a tuition bill of $1,110/month for each 4 out of 6 months of the year. Under Biden I completed my master's and my degree had been paid for when I walked the stage.

Some of you sound REALLY spiteful and should probably be careful of what you wish for, especially if you're wishing for the misfortune of others.
 
Some of us are reasonable and say SOME vaccines are great, like small pox and measles. But kids getting nearly 100 jabs of God only knows what is not so great. And your precious Covid woke a bunch of people up to it.
No I remember hearing about a bunch of people in the Portland, OR area probably about two decades before COVID who were big into anti-vaccines. And from what I read, there are about 5 vaccines that are required before a child is allow to attend public school and 4 more optional ones:

The modern anti-vaccine movement became significantly visible in the late 1990s and early 2000s, with one of the major catalysts being the now-debunked study by Andrew Wakefield published in The Lancet in 1998. This study falsely claimed a link between the MMR (measles, mumps, and rubella) vaccine and autism. Despite being retracted in 2010 and Wakefield losing his medical license, the study created widespread fear and skepticism about vaccines.

Key Timeline:

  • 1998: Andrew Wakefield's study is published, falsely linking vaccines to autism.
  • Early 2000s: Anti-vaccine sentiments grow online, fueled by websites, forums, and early social media platforms.
  • 2008-2010: Prominent public health concerns arise due to decreasing vaccination rates, leading to outbreaks of preventable diseases like measles in Europe and the U.S.
  • 2015: The Disneyland measles outbreak in California became a major public health crisis, linked to unvaccinated individuals, and brought attention to the anti-vaccine movement in the U.S.
  • 2020s: The COVID-19 pandemic amplified the movement, as misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccine spread rapidly on social media, contributing to vaccine hesitancy.
The anti-vaccine movement as we know it today gained traction primarily through social media platforms starting in the 2010s, allowing misinformation to reach a global audience more easily. However, skepticism about vaccines existed long before, with objections dating back to the introduction of the smallpox vaccine in the 18th century.
 
Not only statistically, but also in my personal experience:

We had maybe one or two autistic children PER SCHOOL when I began teaching in the early 90s. Then maybe one per grade level. Now we're up to one or two (or more) PER CLASS. Sure, some of this can be put down to better dx, but certainly not all of it. If not vaccines, SOMETHING is causing this explosion.
Have they always allowed autistic children to attend class with everyone else? It think we used to have something called "Special Education" for students who had struggles - being a kid I wasn't curious enough to want to know the details but could that be the reason you're seeing more now?
 

Brilliant. Let’s put this idiot in charge of the Department of Health and Human Service. Great job, America. :eusa_clap:
 

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