The Truth about RFK Jr

◊◊◊◊ face McGee and ◊◊◊◊ face McGee Jr are bound and determined to kill themselves some kids.
 
He has proof:
Trump: There's a rumor and I don't know if it's so or not—that Cuba, they don't have tylenol because they don't have the money for tylenol, and they have virtually no autism

Trump: Bobby wants to be very careful with what he says. I’m not so careful with what I say. Certain groups, the amish, as an example. They have essentially no autism
 
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Leucovorin also called Folinic acid to treat Autism

Who sells folinic acid?
Dr. Oz's supplement company, iHerb.

Isn't that convenient.

Oz: The FDA is approving Leucovorin for treatment of autistic children… Over half of American children are covered by medicaid and chip, government health insurance. State medicaid programs in partnership with CMS will cover the prescription around the country.

 
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Trump: "I think I can say there are certain groups of people that don't take vaccines and don't take any pills that have no autism. Does that tell you something? Is that a correct statement, by the way? ... I'm not so careful with what I say."

In a moment of near lucidity Trump vaguely recalls that someone had already told him, probably several times, that the old antivaxx canard about Amish not having any autism cases simply wasn't true.
 
Trump: Bobby wants to be very careful with what he says. I’m not so careful with what I say. Certain groups, the amish, as an example. They have essentially no autism
STFU, you stupid, lying, conspiracy-monging mother ◊◊◊◊◊◊.

In testimony before the Pennsylvania senate, a tech entrepreneur turned COVID-19 conspiracy theorist repeats the long-disproven myth that Amish children don’t have autism because they are not vaccinated. He also claims that the government is covering up data showing that these communities are healthier because of their low vaccination rate.

High-profile figures continue to promote the persistent myth that childhood vaccines cause autism. Debunking messaging may emphasize that the claim is false on three grounds.

First, researchers who have searched for a potential connection between vaccines and autism for decades have never found any evidence linking the two. The original study made the claim was retracted due to its unethical research practices.

Second, Amish children do have autism, albeit at lower rates than the general population. One preliminary study found that Amish children are diagnosed with autism at about a third of the national rate, which may be at least partially due to differences in how Amish parents report their children’s behavior. Finally, although the Amish have significantly lower immunization rates than the general public, many Amish children receive at least some vaccinations.
 
Maybe it is safe after all!

Q: The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists put out a statement saying that 'acetaminophen remains a safe trusted option for pain relief during pregnancy.' That's at odds with what you said.

TRUMP: That's the establishment. They're funded by lots of different groups. And you know what? Maybe they're right.

 
Here come the throngs of antivax stay-at-home-moms to swarm every school board, city council, and town hall to demand an end to vaccine mandates. Speaking as a Long Islander here, who has sat through countless Moms for Liberty rants. They do it not because they believe in it, they do it because they have the time on their hands to get bombed, watch Altmed TikTok and write speeches about their parental rights that stick it to the scientists and their complicated “theories.” They have hereby been weaponized. But ◊◊◊◊’s about to get so real for them.
 
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This is the one paper on acetaminophen cited by White House
it has not a word on autism
Other paper:
Of 996 participants in the study 66 had children with ASD, autism. Or 6%. In children with no acetominophen connection, 3% are in the autism spectrum. There is not a cause and effect presented. There is a phrase "in a dose-response fashion" but I can't read data presented in cryptic one line coded ways to see if it is there.

OK, the third study is similar, but has little in numbers of patients. The number of mothers was 8500.
...the children in the middle third group were about 2.26 times more likely to have an ADHD diagnosis and 2.14 times more likely to have an autism spectrum disorder diagnosis. Those with the highest levels of exposure were associated with 2.86 times the risk of ADHD and 3.62 times the risk for autism spectrum disorder, compared to those with the lowest exposure.

So mothers who like to use Tylenol also take their children to get an autism diagnosis 3.6 time more than mothers who do not use Tylenol. The 8500 babies were not followed for x years.
 
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Well, yeah, it's not like there was going to be anything new uncovered. It had to be based on an assessment of the currently available literature, whcih is soundly not supporting vaccines as the cause.

Therefore, they are grabbing on to anything they can find, which is the tylenol thing. Even though that hasn't held up, either.

Seriously, all these clowns have done is to try to have ChatGPT write the report for them. They don't have the ability to read and assess the literature themselves, of course.

"Hey ChatGPT, write a report on the cause of the autism epidemic"
ChatGPT won't even write a report that dumb for me.

"No, evil balloon animals did not cause the autism epidemic — and to be clear, there is no autism epidemic in the way that term is often sensationalized."
 

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