Last week, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released new numbers suggesting that 1 in 44 children in the United States are autistic. This is cause for celebration. As CDC researcher Kelly Shaw noted, the “the earlier kids get identified, the earlier they can access services that they might need to improve their developmental outcome.” Similarly, higher prevalence rates reported among Black and Hispanic children is also good news given America’s poor track record diagnosing autistic children of color. Better diagnoses mean more children will receive the services they need. But more than that, it’s time for a cultural reckoning. Autism affects people from all walks of life — and it’s time we embrace them all equally.
Oz’s ascent (and that he could be a U.S. senator come 2023) is just one example of how the world we live in has been shaped by years of autism fearmongering.
Unfortunately, last week also featured Dr. Mehmet Oz, the erstwhile esteemed cardiothoracic surgeon-turned-snake oil salesman, announcing his candidacy for the U.S. Senate as a Republican in Pennsylvania. Oz has spent a career selling ludicrous weight-loss supplements, but he’s also spent a significant amount of time providing a platform for people who misunderstand and fear autism.
Oz’s ascent (and that he could be a U.S. senator come 2023) is just one example of how the world we live in has been shaped by years of autism fearmongering. That culture of fear which by extension includes vaccines has profoundly dangerous ripple effects. Indeed, many of the people who now question everything from the efficacy of Covid-19 to the integrity of U.S. elections cut their teeth promoting conspiracy theories and outright falsehoods about autism.
As late as 2014, Oz had Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a notorious anti-vaxxer, on his show to talk about removing Thimerosal, a mercury-based preservative, from flu shots. Apparently unimportant is the fact that the CDC says Thimerosal does not increase the risk of Autism Spectrum Disorder. This was not the first time Oz had waded into the murky autism and vaccine misinformation pool. He also gave a platform to Jenny McCarthy, America’s ur-anti-vaccine mom (who to this day denies she’s anti-vaccine), who talked about asking God to help “heal” her son (which as a Christian makes me want to yell, “My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?”) Incidentally, when I searched the website for Oz’s show, a series of segments he did on autism causes are now unavailable.
Even when Oz got it right, like in 2019 when he featured a mom who exposed parents poisoning their autistic children with bleach, he was often also wrong. “There is no cure right now for autism,” he noted. “I wish there was and I understand the desire of parents who want to help their kids.” This despite that many autistic people do not want to be “cured” but rather, as I chronicled extensively in my book “We’re Not Broken: Changing the Autism Conversation,” want their autism to be seen and accepted as an inextricable part of their identity.
Perhaps one of the most egregious practitioners of this fearmongering is Kennedy. The former environmental activist’s infamous, 4,700-word opus linking vaccines and autism appeared in Rolling Stone magazine and on Salon.com in 2005, but was eventually retracted because of its many half-truths and falsehoods. Sadly, the damage was done.
These days, Kennedy is hawking a book supposedly exposing the “Real Anthony Fauci,” and collaborating with the conspiratorial John Birch Society, which his father called “ridiculous” when he was U.S. attorney general. The book is now a New York Times bestseller and Eric Clapton, the former guitar god turned anti-vaxxer himself, cried his white boy blues to Kennedy in November. For years, Kennedy has irreparably tarnished his family name with stunts like implying baseball legend Henry Aaron’s death might be linked to the Covid vaccine.
Dr. Anthony Fauci and self-styled “philanthropist” Bill Gates and their allies are using the COVID pandemic to bring humanity under global totalitarian rule, and they must be stopped, says Children’s Health Defense chief Robert F. Kennedy Jr.https://t.co/WLNqXkO1gM pic.twitter.com/hEkGlOZUOj








