The Truth about RFK Jr

The level of stupid is off the charts.


An anti-vaxx town in the US is currently being gripped by the world's most infectious disease - a horror measles outbreak that has so far killed two children. But residents in Seminole, Texas, are standing firm on their decision to stay vaccine free, with many claiming the jabs contain "dangerous stuff" and that big pharma have only manufactured them to make money.

This is despite the town's most recent tragedy - the death of eight-year-old Daisy Hildebrand - who is now the second child to die from an escalating measles crisis sweeping Seminole. Her devastated father, Peter Hildebrand, is convinced his daughter did not die from the killer disease. He said: "She did not die of the measles. If there's one thing you should know, it's that. She was failed." But Daisy's death was confirmed to be from measles by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

The dad added: "'The [MMR] vaccine ain't worth a damn. My brother's family got it and they all still got sick — worse than my unvaccinated kids. This isn't about the vaccine." Hidlebrand believes Daisy died due to a failure in her medical care, including inadequate treatment and prejudice against the family for their Mennonite faith - a small Christian sect that favours "natural remedies" over modern medicine, MailOnline reports.

Daisy became ill around a month ago, developing a fever and a sore throat, followed by pneumonia. After the family's home remedy of cod liver oil failed, they took Daisy to the hospital, where she was diagnosed her with strep throat, mononucleosis (a contagious viral infection) and measles. Daisy was given antibiotics and sent home, but her condition deteriorated just three days later.

She was then rushed back to the hospital with severe pneumonia and treated again, but this time, she did not survive. Daisy was the second child to die from measles after six-year-old Kayley Fehr - who also unvaccinated and part of the same Mennonite community - died just weeks earlier.

the stupid it burns.png
 
These people infuriate me. As do enablers like RFK Jr.

Again, measles was considered eradicated in the U.S. in 2000, and we have these ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ to thank for it's reintroduction.
 
So should we just start removing "Seminole, Texas" from all the maps now? Or wait until it's official?
 
Yeah, I was going to say that. The purpose of "herd immunity" is so that people don't get the disease. What is the point of it if everyone gets the disease?
Herd immunity is really a fallacy of composition. The herd doesn't have immunity. Individuals that comprise the herd have immunity. The emergent phenomenon of herd immunity is that too few individuals in the herd can be infected, forcing a pathogen to slow-walk and ultimately to die out before the nonimmune members have a chance to be infected. But the key is still individual immunity, which can be achieved better and more safely by vaccination.

The argument in this case patently puts the cart before the horse. It seems to start with the premise that vaccines are bad and should be avoided. It then tries to argue that there are better means to eradicating a disease, such as naturally-acquired herd immunity. That there are in some cases naturally occurring alternatives to vaccination begs the question of what makes a better method. Herd immunity arising from vaccination of individuals results in eradicating a disease more quickly and with fewer losses among individuals. And the eradication of measles by vaccination and the ensuing herd immunity proves this.
 
I read one article which indicated that one would have to take 45 teaspoons of cod liver oil per day for two days to obtain a "therapeutic dose" of Vitamin A. This cuts both ways, in that it is difficult to see how one would obtain toxic levels of Vitamin A in this manner.
 
I read one article which indicated that one would have to take 45 teaspoons of cod liver oil per day for two days to obtain a "therapeutic dose" of Vitamin A. This cuts both ways, in that it is difficult to see how one would obtain toxic levels of Vitamin A in this manner.
I would surmise that there are other ways of getting Vitamin A, such as pills. Maybe RFK can kill several birds with one stone here, his fondness for ursine carcasses, his scammy profiteering, and his health nuttery, by offering polar bear livers as a cure. If there's anyone who knows how to make a killing both ways at once, it's Bobby.
 
I read one article which indicated that one would have to take 45 teaspoons of cod liver oil per day for two days to obtain a "therapeutic dose" of Vitamin A. This cuts both ways, in that it is difficult to see how one would obtain toxic levels of Vitamin A in this manner.
But think of the gloriously smooth bowel movements you would have.
 
Yeah, I was going to say that. The purpose of "herd immunity" is so that people don't get the disease. What is the point of it if everyone gets the disease?

It's pretty moronic.
As I said at the time of the declaration's initial publishing, it took at least 16 rounds of pandemic and hundreds of years for humanity to naturally develop herd immunity from the bubonic plague.

And even at that, natural immunity was only ever very temporary.
 
drjolenebrighten
ActuallyAutistic
I’m autistic and I used the toilet today (multiple times in fact).Someone call RFK.But if the claim is that I can’t pay taxes, well, please let me take you up on your offer.
 
Who knew this would happen.

A deadly E. coli outbreak hit 15 states, but the FDA chose not to publicize it​

The outbreak linked to romaine lettuce killed one person and sickened at least 88 more, including a 9-year-old boy who nearly died of kidney failure.
An E. coli outbreak linked to romaine lettuce ripped across 15 states in November, sickening dozens of people, including a 9-year-old boy in Indiana who nearly died of kidney failure and a 57-year-old Missouri woman who fell ill after attending a funeral lunch. One person died.

But chances are you haven’t heard about it.


The Food and Drug Administration indicated in February that it had closed the investigation without publicly detailing what had happened — or which companies were responsible for growing and processing the contaminated lettuce.

According to an internal report obtained by NBC News, the FDA did not name the companies because no contaminated lettuce was left by the time investigators uncovered where the pathogen was coming from.
So much for my lunch salad.; I'll have to throw my romaine away because these idiots won't identify the grower. JFC these people are ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊.
 
The New Republic reported, "Wired reported Thursday that Mikki Willis, a notorious Covid-19 conspiracy theorist, said the virus is being used to strategically target Mennonite communities, a group at the center of the recent measles outbreak in Texas that killed two unvaccinated children. Willis has long been a supporter of Kennedy, whose anti-vaccination group Children’s Health Defense helped fund Willis’s conspiracy documentary Plandemic." Mikki Willis believes that the causative agent of measles is a bioweapon.

Regarding vaccines in general, the WHO quoted a Lancet study that indicated that over 150 million lives had been saved since 1974 because of vaccines.
 
The New Republic reported, "Wired reported Thursday that Mikki Willis, a notorious Covid-19 conspiracy theorist, said the virus is being used to strategically target Mennonite communities, a group at the center of the recent measles outbreak in Texas that killed two unvaccinated children. Willis has long been a supporter of Kennedy, whose anti-vaccination group Children’s Health Defense helped fund Willis’s conspiracy documentary Plandemic." Mikki Willis believes that the causative agent of measles is a bioweapon.

Regarding vaccines in general, the WHO quoted a Lancet study that indicated that over 150 million lives had been saved since 1974 because of vaccines.
Yeah, that's high on the Liberal New World Order agenda, wiping out the Mennonites. :rolleyes:
 
The New Republic reported, "Wired reported Thursday that Mikki Willis, a notorious Covid-19 conspiracy theorist, said the virus is being used to strategically target Mennonite communities, a group at the center of the recent measles outbreak in Texas that killed two unvaccinated children. Willis has long been a supporter of Kennedy, whose anti-vaccination group Children’s Health Defense helped fund Willis’s conspiracy documentary Plandemic." Mikki Willis believes that the causative agent of measles is a bioweapon. Regarding vaccines in general, the WHO quoted a Lancet study that indicated that over 150 million lives had been saved since 1974 because of vaccines.
He's actually right. But it is being created, encouraged and unleashed by himself and RFK Jr. and all the anti-vaxx crowd, not any "liberal agenda".
 
The New Republic reported, "Wired reported Thursday that Mikki Willis, a notorious Covid-19 conspiracy theorist, said the virus is being used to strategically target Mennonite communities, a group at the center of the recent measles outbreak in Texas that killed two unvaccinated children. Willis has long been a supporter of Kennedy, whose anti-vaccination group Children’s Health Defense helped fund Willis’s conspiracy documentary Plandemic."
Mikki Willis believes that the causative agent of measles is a bioweapon.
Bioengineering obviously started far earlier than I thought
The first systematic description of measles as distinct from smallpox and chickenpox is credited to the Persian physician Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi (860–932), who published The Book of Smallpox and Measles.
 
Why does this dumb ◊◊◊◊ still have a job?

  • Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is facing backlash for comments about autism made at a press conference on April 16.
  • In his remarks, RFK Jr. said that children diagnosed with autism are “suffering,” claiming they will never work, find love, write a poem, play baseball, and many will never "use a toilet unassisted."
  • Celebrity parents of children with autism, like Rosie O’Donnell and Holly Robinson Peete, have spoken out against the claims.

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the secretary of health and human services, has come under fire for remarks made during his first press conference since being appointed to the role by President Donald Trump.


Responding to a new study by the CDC that found 3% of children in the U.S. have autism, Kennedy said the rise in diagnoses constitutes an “epidemic” and vowed to identify the “environmental causes” responsible for the disorder. Kennedy, who has previously promoted a scientifically debunked claim that autism is caused by vaccines, denied that the uptick in diagnoses can be explained by experts learning more about the disorder.


“One of the things that I think that we need to move away from today is this ideology that…the autism prevalence increase, the relentless increases, are simply artifacts of better diagnoses, better recognition or changing diagnostic criteria," he said. “This epidemic denial has become a feature in mainstream media.”
Everything this dumb ◊◊◊◊ says here it wrong.
 

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