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None of this will happen.
All of that will happen.
None of this will happen.
I’m a bot for accepting with the results of dozens upon dozens of peer-reviewed scientific studies that all came to the same conclusion?It’s not because i have an agenda, it’s because im not a bot that takes what he hears at face value. They are flawed, deeply. You speak with a certainty that isnt justified. Just be more percise with your language or get off your high horse.
What Florida is doing however just may end up being the end of the world for a child who ends up dying from a preventable disease
So you arent independantly interested, got it. Id say go look at the studies yourself and find the flaws in them, which isnt difficult, then reason through the implications of that, where are the gaps, then why is that the case, and reason through it yourself. Find doctors that agree and disagree, who are earnest. But you wont, because you've made the choice to abdicate any critical thinking you have. Which is where the bot label comes in.I’m a bot for accepting with the results of dozens upon dozens of peer-reviewed scientific studies that all came to the same conclusion?
You’re sounding pretty certain yourself despite there not being any evidence to the contrary, and the fact that most of this “vaccines cause autism” CT is based on a 1998 study that was retracted for blatant false information and done by a guy who lost his medical license for it.
Are you planning to lay out each of these studies and then demonstrate at length how each one is flawed? If you could actually do that then you should submit it to a medical journal for peer review, I’m sure they’d be interested.
I’ve read many of them already and I accept their findings. As does basically the entirety of the scientific community. No reputable scientific body that I am aware of believes otherwise.So you arent independantly interested, got it. Id say go look at the studies yourself and find the flaws in them, which isnt difficult, then reason through the implications of that, where are the gaps, then why is that the case, and reason through it yourself. Find doctors that agree and disagree, who are earnest. But you wont, because you've made the choice to abdicate any critical thinking you have. Which is where the bot label comes in.
The problem is that the stats won't be trustworthy. This administration will keep a lid on any numbers that make them look bad.Hopefully someone is marking the start of this ridiculous bullshit so we can track differences in preventable child illnesses before and after. I mean, just so that the overwhelming evidence that it's a monumentally stupid move can be called fake later, of course.
I don't think that will actually be possible. I won't be surprised if they have their own set of alternate facts, though.The problem is that the stats won't be trustworthy. This administration will keep a lid on any numbers that make them look bad.
I hope they won't be able to contain the real numbers. The bolded is a given. They are always spinning some alternate reality.I don't think that will actually be possible. I won't be surprised if they have their own set of alternate facts, though.
Problem is there's no value placed on the actual, genuine scientific/medical information. We live in a choose-your-own-reality adventure book, and it exists at every point in our media consumption. The anti-vax crowd have had their crazy stupid fucking nonsense so validated that there's no undoing the damage by simply making information available. You can't reason away the things people use to define their own self worth, and intellectual arrogance is a big one.I hope they won't be able to contain the real numbers. The bolded is a given. They are always spinning some alternate reality.
“Now, we all know that vaccines can occasionally cause fevers in kids. So if a child was immunized, got a fever, had other complications from the vaccines. And if you’re predisposed with the mitochondrial disorder, it can certainly set off some damage. Some of the symptoms can be symptoms that have characteristics of autism.”And you thinks it's because of vaccines?
Support for long-established childhood immunizations remains high across the political spectrum. A June 2025 poll by Harvard T.H. Chan School and the de Beaumont Foundation found that 90 percent of Democrats, and 68 percent of Republicans, support requiring routine childhood vaccines—like measles, mumps, and rubella—for school attendance, while overall public support stood at 79 percent. Similarly, a June 2025 survey reported that 97 percent of Democrats and 88 percent of Republicans believe these vaccines are safe. So, although there is some partisan variation, the vast majority on both sides endorse—and trust—the efficacy and safety of standard childhood vaccines.So the lefties in here