There is no link between autism and vaccines. Given the gigantic amount of children vaccinated all over the world we would see massive spikes in linked developmental disorders we just don't see. The research often cited is either lacking, shows no significant results or in the case of the specific UK doctor that became a big deal was actually funded by a vaccine competitor trying to corner the market for THEIR vaccine.
Even then we know the mortality associated with these disease far outweigh even the anti-vaxxer claims of autism and other promoted side effects. It used to be 1 in 11 children died. We've reduced that with anti-virals to 1 in 26 but think about that. 1 in 26 dead vs one in million of "vaccine induced autism" which I would highly dispute as an autistic child who got vaccines and the parents blaming the vaccines instead of their child being born autistic as it is not an acquired condition.
But hey good news! 95% of people are still getting vaccinated. So we have herd immunity. Even if you decide that the 1 in 26 mortality of measles (and we aren't even talking the other diseases) sounds better than the purported rate of autism induction from basic human immunization, you are still less likely to actually have to be confronted with that possibility because there is no easy vector for the disease.
So get your vaccines if you want, don't get em if you don't want to. Like I said, there have been HUGE fuck ups like the type 2 polio that was both a cost saving effort and a "muslims hate needles" combination of factors.
I state it as fact that there has been no proof that if you inject a kid with vaccines they get autism because of several issues. One, you didn't find proof when doing analysis. Two, autism is an inherited disorder with no known mechanism by which to induce it.
The burden of evidence is not in my court. You claim something causes something and have no evidence for it. So we're done. I am not going to have the tiresome discussion of extracting a concession from you that the thousands upon thousands of safety studies are in fact not refuted by this one paper from a Nigerian scam church.
All people with autism drink water. What do you think is in the water giving them autism? What do you mean there is no proof drinking water gives you autism? That just means you haven't found the proof yet!
This is one of the most common logical fallacies I see spouted.
Evaluating each vaccine separately is not anti-vaccine.
Wanting a different version of a vaccine is not anti-vaccine.
Wanting to alter the schedule but still get the vaccines is not anti-vaccine.
To suggest otherwise is to suggest people are too stupid to evaluate and decide on their own medical care. Apply this logic to anything else and you'll see how authoritarian it is. You're too stupid to understand nutrition, so we'll pick all your meals for you. You're too stupid to know what religion to choose, so we'll choose one for you. It's the established religion and church. Hyperbolic... only a little.
I literally said the opposite. I have no idea which comment you read but I basically told you to do whatever you want cause I am not at risk of anything.
There is no link between autism and vaccines. Given the gigantic amount of children vaccinated all over the world we would see massive spikes in linked developmental disorders we just don't see. The research often cited is either lacking, shows no significant results or in the case of the specific UK doctor that became a big deal was actually funded by a vaccine competitor trying to corner the market for THEIR vaccine.
Even then we know the mortality associated with these disease far outweigh even the anti-vaxxer claims of autism and other promoted side effects. It used to be 1 in 11 children died. We've reduced that with anti-virals to 1 in 26 but think about that. 1 in 26 dead vs one in million of "vaccine induced autism" which I would highly dispute as an autistic child who got vaccines and the parents blaming the vaccines instead of their child being born autistic as it is not an acquired condition.
But hey good news! 95% of people are still getting vaccinated. So we have herd immunity. Even if you decide that the 1 in 26 mortality of measles (and we aren't even talking the other diseases) sounds better than the purported rate of autism induction from basic human immunization, you are still less likely to actually have to be confronted with that possibility because there is no easy vector for the disease.
So get your vaccines if you want, don't get em if you don't want to. Like I said, there have been HUGE fuck ups like the type 2 polio that was both a cost saving effort and a "muslims hate needles" combination of factors.
I state it as fact that there has been no proof that if you inject a kid with vaccines they get autism because of several issues. One, you didn't find proof when doing analysis. Two, autism is an inherited disorder with no known mechanism by which to induce it.
The burden of evidence is not in my court. You claim something causes something and have no evidence for it. So we're done. I am not going to have the tiresome discussion of extracting a concession from you that the thousands upon thousands of safety studies are in fact not refuted by this one paper from a Nigerian scam church.
All people with autism drink water. What do you think is in the water giving them autism? What do you mean there is no proof drinking water gives you autism? That just means you haven't found the proof yet!
https://vaers.hhs.gov/
This is one of the most common logical fallacies I see spouted.
To suggest otherwise is to suggest people are too stupid to evaluate and decide on their own medical care. Apply this logic to anything else and you'll see how authoritarian it is. You're too stupid to understand nutrition, so we'll pick all your meals for you. You're too stupid to know what religion to choose, so we'll choose one for you. It's the established religion and church. Hyperbolic... only a little.
I literally said the opposite. I have no idea which comment you read but I basically told you to do whatever you want cause I am not at risk of anything.