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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsYou can't get much worse than this quack.
Yeesh.
Texas Billboard Tells Parents a Dangerous Lie: Vaccines Can Cause Autism
Reader Bradlee was driving through Amarillo, Texas, when he saw this disturbing billboard saying Vaccines can cause autism (subtitle: Choose Intelligent Design).
The signs there are at least two of them have been up for over a month, and a lot of local residents are rightfully infuriated. Not that Dr. Fitt gives a damn.
It really concerned me when I saw it, because I was like people are going to see this and believe it without doing their own research and doing their own investigating, without talking to their own doctors, Parent Tashi Haley said. It just made me upset seeing it.
The sponsor of the sign, Roby Mitchell M.D. or Dr. Fitt, claims there is evidence showing a link between vaccines and autism and what he is putting on the sign is nothing new. He said he just wants parents to be informed.
Sadly, the only parents who might be informed by this sign are the same ones who think Jenny McCarthy offers credible medical advice. Theyre the ones who dont trust or dont listen to real scientists and whose kids are going to suffer. And if their kids arent vaccinated, we could all suffer.
To state the obvious: There is no link between autism and vaccines. None. And Intelligent Design, in whatever context its meant, is also a scam.
Dr. Fitt, by the way, isnt even a doctor anymore. His license was revoked in 2012 after he prescribed colostrum bovine treatment to cure cancer. Hes also been in legal trouble of a different sort a couple of times before.
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/friendlyatheist/2016/12/24/texas-billboard-tells-parents-a-dangerous-lie-vaccines-can-cause-autism/?Utm_Medium=email&Utm_Source=BRSS&Utm_Campaign=Nonreligious&Utm_Content=361
PoindexterOglethorpe
(25,750 posts)As the mother of a son with Asperger's, there's not too many things that can get me riled up than this crap.
This son was different from day one, although it took over 18 years before he was diagnosed. That's in part because he was born in 1982, well before Asperger's was an official diagnosis. He was also sufficiently high functioning to make a formal diagnosis tricky.
To add to this, he also has an auto immune disorder, alopecia areata, which causes hair loss. He's been completely bald since he was four. Whenever someone righteously tells me that hair loss like this is from stress, I want to deck them. Give them enough stress to cause hair loss. I may not have been the world's best mother, but I was NEVER enough of a monster as to give my kid so much stress he lost all his hair.
Grrrr.