So, my an online american friend said"My mom didn’t want to vaccine vax cuzs autism". Is he joking? I know many people say thing like that but i thought they all were joking?

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.

  • Scott_of_the_Arctic@lemmy.world
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    1 hour ago

    Back in the 90s a British doctor called Andrew Wakefield was bribed by a pharmaceutical company that made separate vaccines for measles, mumps and rubella to come up with a study to discredit the combined mmr vaccine. He found a bunch of parents in an antivax society and twisted the results of a very weighted questionnaire to demonstrate a link between MMR and the 'tism. It was quickly discredited, but the damage was done. He was stripped of his medical licence after that.

  • Malfeasant@lemm.ee
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    2 hours ago

    It’s Poe’s law- sometimes it’s a joke, sometimes they’re serious, and it’s nearly impossible to determine which at any given time.

  • DarkFuture@lemmy.world
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    Our “leader” is an anti-democratic felon rapist who incited an insurrection and illegally attempted to overturn an election.

    It’s not a joke.

    Americans are stupid as fuck.

  • Clinicallydepressedpoochie@lemmy.world
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    42 minutes ago

    People believe it like they believe horoscopes predict your future. Its a fun little activity they do with their friends but at the end of the day those that get vaccinated sleep fine at night.

  • rumba@lemmy.zip
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    I shit you not; my dental hygienist just confided in me that 5g towers scared her while she was taking my xrays. She thought they had adverse effects on the body. She has an associate’s degree. She mentioned they were thinking of dropping thee lead jacket requirement for patients and was shocked when I said yeah I totally agree.

    There’s a reason why there comparisons out there about x-ray exposure comparing a flight to number of dental xrays. She’s better off not getting it multiple times a day, but my annual xrays do no harm to me.

    I personally know nurses who I went to school with who are anti-vax.

    They are not joking. They are 100% conspiracy-theory loving, in it for the propaganda weak-willed individuals who will buy anything that shows the man is holding them down, and through some simple choices they themselves can make, they have an edge on the world in their own minds.

    I told her that I had a HAM radio license and a background in electronics and science and that understanding exposure to ionizing and non-ionizing radiation, there’s no serious effects from cell phone towers and that even if there was one in the room with her, the worst that would happen is heat.

  • rambling_lunatic@sh.itjust.works
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    Not American, but at least a few do. And they’re exporting it. My old English teacher back when I lived in the Dominican Republic was an American missionary who taught to fund her religious activities. Guess what beliefs about science and politics she was spreading along with her beliefs about baptism of the spirit?

  • FeelzGoodMan420@eviltoast.org
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    Yes, people truly believe this. It seems obviously bonkers to you and I, because we have at least average critical thinking skills. The people who believe these things have way below average critical thinking skills. And there A LOT of these people. Just look at your normal bell curve chart.

  • rikonium@discuss.tchncs.de
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    4 hours ago

    It’s a very real belief, lot of folks here weren’t around to know the “before times” and nothing is ever real until it happens to them.

  • AA5B@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    It’s all too real even today, however that might not be the cause of current measles outbreaks.

    Measles was eradicated from the US years ago, thanks to high vaccination rates. However that means most people have never seen measles so there is a fringe belief that it’s not harmful or the vaccination is more harmful, and vaccination rates have been declining to the point we could get a larger epidemic.

    We do have localized measles outbreaks many years but they’ve usually been attributed to a new infection from overseas and a very local community insufficiently vaccinated. Sometimes the population is from places where they’re not vaccinated, sometimes it’s a vulnerable population. While yes, it can also be from fringe anti-vax groups, I really think the bigger fear is whether those fringe groups open a path to much wider outbreaks or epidemics.

  • Bytemeister@lemmy.world
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    4 hours ago

    They actually believe it. Despite no actual link being found. Despite the author of the OG article admitting that he falsified data.

    People here also believe that mRNA vaccines will rewrite your genes, that the COVID vaccine sequesters in your testicles and makes you sterile and magnetic, that vaccines are less effective than “natural immunity”, that vaccines will feminize you and make you compliant to authority, and that vaccines are ineffective.

    I have legitimately heard all of those arguments against vaccines in the wild. For the record, vaccines are one of the oldest and most effective preventative measures we have. There is a reason why the mortality rate for children isn’t +30% anymore, it’s vaccines, and vaccination programs.