A prominent science communicator has publicly challenged claims linking vaccines to autism, describing such arguments as thoroughly discredited by scientific evidence. The statement came after the science communicator had blocked an individual sending repeated materials making these vaccine-autism claims.
"Page after page" of content was being sent, according to the account. The sender reportedly showed persistent determination in pushing the narrative. However, the response was firm: the conversation was terminated.
The vaccine-autism hypothesis remains one of the most extensively studied and thoroughly debunked claims in public health. Large-scale epidemiological research across multiple countries has found no causal link between vaccines and autism spectrum disorder. Yet this narrative continues circulating in certain communities, sparking ongoing tensions between scientific consensus and alternative health claims.
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DegenTherapist
· 13h ago
Ha, it's that same vaccine conspiracy theory again... I really should block them
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The scientific data is right here, yet some people keep fabricating stories, it's hilarious
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The page is bombarding with conspiracy theory content, it really should be shut down and muted
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I really can't understand this obsession, the research is clear
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Another guy who can't settle down, even after science says no, he still insists
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Blocking directly is the right move, there's nothing to discuss
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Repeating the same arguments every day, come on everyone
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ImpermanentPhobia
· 13h ago
Vaccines cause autism? Come on, this joke has been debunked so many times, is anyone still taking it seriously?
View OriginalReply0
OffchainOracle
· 13h ago
The joke about vaccines causing autism really needs to die. There are plenty of scientific evidence, and some people still treat it like the Bible?
View OriginalReply0
TradFiRefugee
· 13h ago
The old meme about vaccines causing autism is still being repeatedly tossed around, truly incredible.
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Some people are just obsessed with being refuted a thousand times, unbelievable.
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These people are the most annoying; you slap data in their face and they still do as they please.
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Science is right there, yet they insist on copying those discredited theories. What's the point?
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Sending page after page to people—this obsession is truly absurd.
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It's that timeless rumor bundle again.
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Blocking well done; discussing with this kind of person is a waste of time and brain cells.
A prominent science communicator has publicly challenged claims linking vaccines to autism, describing such arguments as thoroughly discredited by scientific evidence. The statement came after the science communicator had blocked an individual sending repeated materials making these vaccine-autism claims.
"Page after page" of content was being sent, according to the account. The sender reportedly showed persistent determination in pushing the narrative. However, the response was firm: the conversation was terminated.
The vaccine-autism hypothesis remains one of the most extensively studied and thoroughly debunked claims in public health. Large-scale epidemiological research across multiple countries has found no causal link between vaccines and autism spectrum disorder. Yet this narrative continues circulating in certain communities, sparking ongoing tensions between scientific consensus and alternative health claims.