The irony is it was all started with a guy trying to spread FUD over existing measles vaccines to try getting his own vaccines picked up.
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People heard about the original, now discredited study, which came out around the time autism diagnosises were increasing. People then either didn't hear or chose not to believe that the OG study was discredited.
United States citizens have reasons not to trust their government with their health. Trust takes a lot time to build, and recent administrations haven't been building it.
...therefore vaccines cause autism?
That's part of the explanation for these people.
Well, my mom believes it and she's not even American.
At a job in Silicon Valley I had a boss who had an autistic child and my boss told me directly that when they vaccinated their child, the child's behavior changed, and caused autism.
I have other friends in SV who are huge vaccine skeptics.
So, yes, even in deep blue areas there are anti-vax people. There are also Trump flag flying people in SV too.
Not just USA.
It's both. They actually believe it and it's a joke that they do.
Spot on. Waiting for their favourite influencer, pastor, etc to tell them to believe something else.
In theatre it's called "suspension of disbelief." You know what's happening on stage isn't really happening, but you agree to just go with it and exist in the show's reality for an hour or so. Not meant to be a permanent state of consciousness.
I know many who believe vaccines cause autism yes
It’s a loud minority. Also not just in America there are anti-vax people all over the world. Mostly in developed countries where they have eliminated diseases like polio. And where outbreaks of measles are really rare. Anti-vax don’t believe vaccines are necessary since they personally never seen diseases like polio. While everyone in the developing world knows that vaccines are necessary since they’ve seen what those diseases can do to people.
You know the meme Hard Times Create Strong Men, Strong Men Create Good Times, Good Times Create Weak Men, Weak Men Create Hard Times Well antivax are the weak men.
It is a predominant US minority who tries to spread their nonsense worldwide.
It was started by Andrew Wakefield who was a UK doctor. He has lost his license for doing unapproved lumbar punctures on autistic kids.
The modern anti-vax movement started in the UK with Andrew Wakefield, I wouldn't be quick to square the bulk of the blame with the US.
It's a global phenomenon of the gullable, the willfully ignorany, and the vulnerable (usually through personal loss or trauma) - and the fraudsters who wish to take advantage of them.
Wakefield wasn't anti Vax. He was against the MMR jab specifically. He was also invested in one of the alternative vaccines, and faked data to make money.
His (false) message got garbled crossing the pond, and gained traction in America as a general anti Vax movement.
No, he was anti-vax once he realized the value of his scam
MIL100% believes this. Her son was normal until about 3 and then developed seizures and is now brain damage. She blames vaccines and it doesn't help a few other kids in area had similar experiences. She thinks there was a bad batch distribution.
Here's the funny thing, if that had actually happened (bad batch of a vaccine hurt kids) there is an entire Vaccine Injury Fund that will pay out to her. Medical providers have been reporting vaccine injuries for as long as we've had vaccines and there's lots of very real side effects. However, it's extremely difficult to get the payout because you have to prove the vaccine caused the injury and provide evidence that batches were the same. It's probably gone with DOGE but the vaccine manufacturers did pay in to the fund so the money is there and always has been if people can provide their allegations.
Depends on which vaccine. There are two agencies, there is the VICP and the CICP. The VICP only covers a short list of vaccines that doesn't include COVID. (https://www.hrsa.gov/vaccine-compensation/covered-vaccines). COVID vax is covered by the CICP and doesn't pay anything out for pain and suffering, only your medical bills for what your insurance didn't cover from treatment.
Yeah this is a true thing. This person that knows me asked me if vaccines caused my autism.
Yes, they tend to happen about the same age, so can appear correlated when they’re not
There are people around the world who don’t believe in it. It’s not specific to Americans. You are basing this off one person on both the ends.
Yes, they do believe it.
In my country which is a third world country no one believe shit like that even my Grand mother who is illiterate and religious don’t believe thing like that and knows the benefit of vaccine
That is because your country has recent, relevant experience with the efficacy of vaccines.
US citizens have been so coddled for so long by being an economic superpower and having access to medications and medical procedures that others do not that those who remember are beginning to pass from old age. This means an entirely new, always coddled generation literally does not know from experience how bad things can get without it. Due to that, and due to American obsession with "free speech" lies and misinformation have flourished, and made people believe that these things are dangerous instead of lifesaving.
Further, it's tied in with how US citizens feel about being "different." We live in a wild cult of individuality where everyone knows that if you're actually really different that things can go sideways for you fast. They'd rather not risk a child being "different" and having autism, and they genuinely don't understand that they're choosing to risk death of their child instead. You can be different, just so long as you're exactly like everybody else!
Our education system is so broken, and our people are so fucking coddled, that they have the opportunity to pretend that these things don't matter. It's literally children tearing down things they don't like because they don't understand.
These are those "weak mean that create hard times." Which is infuriating because anti-vaxxers and their ilk are the people who peddle that kind of bullshit ass saying the most, erroneously thinking they're the "strong men" because they're "willing to stand up to the man." In this case, "the man," being anyone with an education. Notice they don't hate a rich idiot like Trump who does not care for them, but they hate intellectuals "in their ivory towers" (cough academia).
Yes, a society can be so coddled that the stupid resent the intelligent and educated to the point where they reject everything they say. They think they are fighting tyranny because they have convinced themselves we are lying to them to "get one over on them." It's absurd because the very people who put those ideas in their heads are the ones trying to get one over on them. Of course, this has been going on in America for long time.
-Isaac Asimov, 1980
Most people? No, definitely not. Most Americans get vaccinated. More people than you would hope? Yeah, absolutely.
There's so many people here who have crazy views on health and wellness generally. Juice cleanses. Chiropractic. Homeopathy. Fad diets. Faith healing. I think some of it is because people can't afford real healthcare, but most of it is anti-intellectualism and propaganda.
Yep. There was a solid base pre-Covid that could be built off of as COVID was shown to be as bad as it was.
I also feel like a lot of vaccine rejection was built on having to justify that COVID wasn't as bad as people were saying it was.
I don’t know, I think the Covid vaccination disaster is mostly from media and politics trying to take advantage, to foment outrage and fake controversy for the clicks/votes. And too many people fall for it
US pharmaceutical companies are straight up evil and we all know it. It's no wonder why more and more people are skeptical about their products, e en when they are shown to be beneficial to everyone.
No there's really people that stupid. It's tragic.
And these fuckfaces act like they’re enlightened.
And it's a growing trend.