No doubt VACCINES CAUSE Autism. and No way in hell will I ever willingly take that poison.
My niece was perfectly fine when she was born. Now she has some type of autism. NO ONE in my family has it. So it can't be hereditary. How come my nephew doesn't have the same thing she has? Granted, I haven't done much research on it but I've always been skeptical of the vaccines and everyone should be. Can an unhealthy pregnancy give off autism?
36 comments
"Granted, I haven't done much research on it"
And that's all we needed to know. Not surprising, though. This is expected from anti-vaccine nutjobs like you.
"No way in hell will I ever willingly take that poison."
Fine by me. If you want to die by some easily preventable disease due to your own stupidity, I'm not going to stop you. Natural selection just doing its job.
P.S.: As someone in the autism spectrum, I really despise these people.
"Granted, I haven't done much research on it but"...
That's all we needed to know, thanks.
Look up polio and smallpox. Really. And do try to educate yourself. I assure you, research is beyond the scope of your abilities. Taking responsibilty for your ability to interpret reality is, likely, possible.
No doubt VACCINES CAUSE Autism.[
]
Granted, I haven't done much research on it[
]
You aren’t very bright, are you?
"Granted, I haven't done much research on it"
You didn't really need to say this, as it's self-evident from the rest of your post.
As an FYI for you, unless there's an obvious physical malformation, all babies are "fine" when they're born. We don't really have any way of analyzing a baby's brain function at birth, but have to wait until s/he is older.
The guy who claimed vaccines caused autism, Andrew Wakefield, was found to have committed fraud, was found to have engaged in a number of other unethical practices and was struck off as a doctor. Dozens of further studies have found no link between autism and vaccines, and the people who have championed the idea keep coming up with new explanations every time their old ones are shot down.
There are risks with vaccines, but autism isn't one of them, and the risk of the disease far outweigh the risk of the vaccine.
NO ONE in my family has it.
Diagnosis of autism has been rather poor until the last generation or two, so how do you know?
Granted, I haven't done much research on it
It shows: you're on Stormfront.
"NO ONE in my family has it."
Unless your niece is the product of incest, she has two families. And what brazenTyrant said.
"Granted, I haven't done much research on it"
Then why are you mouthing off about it as if you were an expert?
I think that if you don't have a medical exemption for not vaccinating, then your kids shouldn't be allowed to go to a public school.
You want to put your kid at risk, fine. But you shouldn't put other kids at risk because you don't understand science and refuse to listen to people who are better informed than you.
What an arse. It's painfully obvious that they haven't done any research. No-one in my large family has autism, yet my 10-year-old (Big Gingey) has recently been diagnosed with it. His brother who receives MORE vaccines than him (gets annual flu jab as well as the routine ones) is definitely NOT on the spectrum. I'm breaking out my favourite Scottish word for him:'eejit'
Autism usually present itself around the time when vaccines are taken.
You can all have it, but only on one chromosome, while both is required for it to show.
Healthy pregnancies can probably "give off" autism too, as it's not quite understood what causes it. That it's not autism is cleared about a thousand times.
What this moron thinks happened when his niece was diagnosed: Vaccines are wot dun it.
The more likely explanation: His niece masked her symptoms until she had to actually interact with the wider world and the stress of such a big change triggered extreme autism burnout.
(Note: Autism burnout is when you can no longer maintain the mask to pass due to there being too much to process. The mild version is end of the day exhaustion due to wearing the mask all day long, the extreme version is long term exhaustion in response to larger and more stressful changes.)
Confused?
So were we! You can find all of this, and more, on Fundies Say the Darndest Things!
To post a comment, you'll need to Sign in or Register . Making an account also allows you to claim credit for submitting quotes, and to vote on quotes and comments. You don't even need to give us your email address.