Maintenance Phase - RFK Jr. and The Mainstreaming Of The Anti-Vaxx Movement
Episode Date: August 1, 2023Join us for a 75 minute answer to a 5 word question: Is there mercury in vaccines? Support us:Hear bonus episodes on PatreonDonate on PayPalGet Maintenance Phase T-shirts, stickers and moreBuy Aubrey&...apos;s bookListen to Mike's other podcastLinks!Paul Offit’s “Autism's False Prophets”Peter Hotez’s “The Deadly Rise of Anti-Science”Seth Mnookin’s “The Panic Virus”Jonathan M. Berman’s “Anti-vaxxers: How to Challenge a Misinformed Movement” Steve Silberman’s “Neurotribes”Transcript of the Simpsonwood meetingA Kennedy’s Crusade Against Covid Vaccines Anguishes Family and FriendsImmunizations and Autism: A Review of the LiteratureCDC Studies on Thimerosal in VaccinesRFK Jr’s 2005 article on mercury and vaccinesRFK Jr.’s Inside JobVast Majority of Americans Say Benefits of Childhood Vaccines Outweigh RisksCorrecting Robert F. Kennedy Jr.When Vaccine Injury Claims Go to CourtVaccine Compensation Hearing DecisionThanks to Doctor Dreamchip for our lovely theme song!Support the show
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Hi everybody and welcome to Maintenance Phase, the podcast that only has 46 pages of notes today.
Oh, you're doxing me, you're calling me out.
I'm outing you.
I was like, I'm sorry we recorded for three and a half hours last time.
I'm trying to keep it shorter. I only outing you. I was like I'm sorry we recorded for three and a half hours last time. I'm trying to keep it shorter. I only have 46 pages which is pretty good for me.
That is pretty good for you. We were talking about our different notes thresholds.
Minus 40 pages. So I'm already exceeding it and we're doing the third part of this
fucking episode. So I don't know if my restraint can really be admired at this point. Restrainants for tourists.
I'm Aubrey Gordon.
I'm Michael Hobbs.
If you would like to support the show, you can do that at patreon.com slash maintenance phase.
You can also subscribe on Apple Podcasts, subscriptions. It's the same audio content.
And today, Michael, Mry, we are continuing our journey
with RFK Jr., no?
Yes, we didn't put part one in the title of the last episode
because nobody downloads them if they say part one,
but that was a part one.
We're manipulating.
We're manipulating.
We're clickbaiting you into downloading part one of a,
now three part episode got dammit.
I think your idea of clickbait and the rest of the internet's idea of clickbait are different
because you're like, we clickbait as you into the Brian Wonsink story.
And I'm like, one of the best, most interesting stories we've told.
So Aubrey, why don't you recap us?
What did we learn about RFK Junior and anti-vaxxers last time?
We learned about sort of the rise of the anti-vaxxers last time. We learned about sort of the rise of the anti-vaxx movements, starting pretty much as soon as
there were vaccines.
We learned that those arguments have not substantively changed.
We learned that RFK Jr. started out working on really consequential stuff like climate change
and doing really good work, and then just kind of gradually slid
into weird anti-vax world.
And we learned about sort of the source code
for a lot of contemporary American anti-vax stuff,
which is a paper written by a researcher named Andrew Wakefield
that is like one of the shoddiest pieces of research
we have discussed on this show.
Which is really huge for us to reach new depths
of bad methodologies.
The show that talked to you about celery juice
and the future ghost.
It's like, no, this one's really bad.
Yeah, we're like, that's 0.5 of a Wakefield.
We're now measuring these in wake fields.
Yes, this is where we're basically starting this episode.
It is 1998, the paper by Wakefield, making the link between the measles, mumps, rebella
vaccine, and autism has been released to great fanfare and a lot of consternation.
And we get this whole fucking machine going into overdrive where the media is like,
there's questions.
There's a tricky debate about vaccines.
In 2002, we get a BBC special called MMR,
every parent's choice.
That's clickbait.
Yeah, here's your clickbait.
You're already defending us from charges of clickbait.
No, we're doing the okay kind of clickbait.
We're tricking you into learning about anti-vaxxers.
No, I just mean like that is actually like pretty deceptive coverage of like,
there's a debate happening. There's a without situating that in like,
this is a very small number of people making a very fringe argument on very flimsy
data. So alongside all of this like question begging news coverage,
there's of course one side of the debate becoming increasingly radicalized
and increasingly drifting further and further from reality, right?
And as this is happening sort of in the culture at large,
it is also happening to RFK Jr.
So as we discussed last episode in 1994, his son Connor is born and has very
severe allergies. He says that he has 29 ER visits in his first three years of life. So this
was obviously causing a huge amount of anxiety. RFK Junior in 1998 found this like food allergy
initiative thing, which is basically trying to make the link between childhood vaccines and allergies.
He also has an episode that I think also contributes to his radicalization. We actually talked about this last episode,
but we cut it out for space. So pretend that I'm telling you this for the first time.
So pretend that this is new. Just say Mike, that's new information.
Oh, Mike will have never heard anything like this before.
New stuff.
So the reason we cut this out is because we talked for like 45 minutes because this is
like such fucking typical NGO drama.
So as we mentioned last episode, he gets pulled into this water cleanup NGO that sues
governments over like following EPA regulations in the 1980s.
He eventually moves his way up the ranks.
And in 2000, he forces out the guy
who brought him into the organization in the first place.
He has this weird idea to sell branded bottled water
from this like river keeper organization,
like NGO approved water.
What are we doing?
You can just say that's new information.
That's new information.
I've never heard anything like it before.
Thank you.
Incredible stuff.
So this causes a lot of consternation among the board
and the people who actually work at the NGO.
I don't know if we want to become a private company
selling bottles of water.
You said it's typical.
It's so damn typical.
The number of organizations where an executive director
will get an idea into their head where they're like, we'll make t-shirts
and then we'll sell the t-shirts.
And you're like, I don't know, man.
At one of the NGOs I used to work at
our high up director guy got obsessed with the idea
of JK Rowling writing the introduction to our annual report.
Boy, that's an idea that did not age well.
Did not age well.
This was before her whole thing,
but it's like, sure, all spent weeks
like trying to get this massive billionaire author
to write the introduction to our unbelievably boring PDF
that like four people are gonna read.
Beyond誠, definitely we'll play at our gala.
Yeah, exactly.
This eventually culminates in like him sort of taking over
the organization, he also hires some guy who was like,
had been arrested for selling rare birds.
What a weird specific kind of shady criminal.
So basically in like the most NGO drama way possible,
everyone kind of agrees that he's wrong on the merits,
but they keep him around
because his last name is Kennedy and he's really good at fundraising.
I think a lot of successful fundraising from large dollar donors is just knowing how to
be around rich people.
Oh, yeah.
Like, there is just like a great deal of like, it's fine.
Yeah, it's fine.
Keep them.
So there's a New York Times article about the drama in 2000, where employees of the NGO are quoted.
One guy talking about arcade junior says, I think he separates himself from good science at times
in order to aggressively pursue an issue and win.
Boy, this is really Chekhov's Times quote.
I think that was my joke last time.
I think you just had to do the most.
God damn it, really. No, I'm kidding, I'm kidding, I'm time. I think you just had to do the most. God damn it.
Really?
I'm kidding, I'm kidding, I'm kidding, I'm kidding.
I'm kidding.
Oh, God.
And then the other quote is he had a nasty tendency
to deride or insult anybody he thought was not on his side.
Ooh.
So we're already seeing this kind of black and white thinking
and this like weird crusader mentality
where he just becomes completely immune to facts.
Yeah.
And it seems this is also when he starts falling down
the conspiracy rabbit hole.
Shortly after the 2004 election,
he becomes convinced that it was rigged
in favor of George W. Bush.
Do you remember this?
Yeah, I mean, like people still sort of grouse about that today.
It appears he got the idea from Larry David.
What?
Just a very weird cameo.
So he and Larry David, the guy who is the co-creator of Seinfeld
and the creator and star of Kirby Your Enthusiasm,
invited him to like, Aspen or something.
This is also where he met his current wife, Cheryl Heinz. So this is my question is like, is this pre-or-posts Cheryl Heinz?
I think this is Cheryl Heinz. Like, this is mid-cheral Heinz. Like, that's how he met her.
And there's a New York Times article where they describe Larry David, like,
urging RFK Jr. to read some crank book on like how the election was stolen in 2004.
And there's a pretty good follow up New York Times story now that like RFK Jr. is much more
sort of like out as like an anti-vax crank. They look into the question of like, what is Larry
David like actually think about this stuff? And so they talk about how RFK Jr. basically says like,
oh yeah, he supports me like all my friends support me in my endeavors. And then they reach out to Larry David.
And the article says,
this might lead you to believe
that Larry David is back in Kennedy's candidacy,
but the curb creator would like to disabuse people
of that notion in a text to the New York Times.
He wrote, yes, love and support,
but I'm not supporting him and supporting his in court.
And this is the relationship that I imagine exists between Laura Dern and Maryanne Williams
and it's also making me very grateful that none of my former roommates are running for
president. This is like when we hang out, how we avoid talking about tar.
Our greatest, our greatest disagreement, the greatest issue of tension between us.
Yeah, I, I, listen, take my blinchette very seriously.
You know this about me.
I do know this about you.
So last episode, we talked about the things that conspiracy theorists do, right?
They lie, they remove context.
Today, we are going to talk about how the anti-vax movement kind
of came to America and how RFK Jr. himself helped to spread it.
Like, added a ton of fuel to the fire.
He is like in this episode a lot more than the last RFK
Jr. episode we did.
But the tendency of conspiracy theorists
that all of this demonstrates, and I really
want to like, tediously hammer all of this demonstrates, and I really want to like tediously hammer home
in this episode, is how conspiracy theorists constantly
move the goalposts.
So in this moment, in 1998, post-wake field, right?
If you look at the history of everything the anti-vax
movement has been through so far, in the 1980s,
we had this documentary about the pertussis faxie,
where they were saying, oh, the pertussis about the pertussis vaccine, right?
Where they were saying, ah, the pertussis vaccine causes basically everything, right?
It was like kids with seizures.
They showed footage of kids with Down syndrome.
It was just kind of all over the place, but it was all linked to the pertussis vaccine, right?
In the early 1990s, they then move over to food allergies, right?
Vaccines cause food allergies, sure. Then in 1998, they shift to the measles vaccine,
causes stomach problems, and the stomach problems cause autism. So in 2005, RFK juniors conspiracy
mindset thing culminates with the publication of an article called Deadly Immunity. It's like a major
feature story. He describes it as a cover story in Salon, but Salon was a website. So I don't know
how I could be in the first place. But it's published on Salon and in the print edition of Rolling
Stone. And this article marks the mainstreaming of the anti-vax movement. So I am going to send you a JPEG of what this looks like
on salon.com.
Wow, I forgot how hideous websites in this era were.
It looks like Craigslist.
You know what it looks like?
It looks like it should have those blinky gifts of
Texas.
Or like the dancing hamsters gifts.
This is the kind of layout of a website now.
If a restaurant has it, you know the food is good.
This is ugly enough.
People are not going there for the aesthetics.
So this is listed in the news and politics section
as a salon slash Rolling Stone joint investigation.
There is a picture of a kid facing a window with their hands behind their back.
And the title is deadly immunity. When a study revealed that mercury and childhood vaccines may have caused autism in thousands of kids,
the government rushed to conceal the data and to prevent parents from suing drug companies for their role in the epidemic.
No, the moving of the goalposts.
Again, right now we're on to Mercury.
Yeah, totally.
But then, okay, so I am going to send you a very long excerpt.
This is like the first sort of six paragraphs of the story.
We are going to read this, and then we are going to circle back
to it.
Once we learn a little bit more about the background and context.
Are we just, are we doing like a close text debunking?
Yeah, we're going to read this like seven times.
We're just going to keep going over and over again.
We're going to do it sent us by sent us eventually.
But for now, okay, I love it.
We're going to learn about the evil dasterly deeds of the CDC.
Okay.
In June 2000, a group of top government scientists
and health officials gathered for a meeting
at the isolated Simpson Wood Conference Center
in Norcross, Georgia.
Conveined by the CDC, the meeting was held
at this Methodist Retreat Center
to ensure complete secrecy.
So we've got a secret meeting by the CDC.
Federal officials and industry representatives
had assembled to discuss a disturbing new study
that raised alarming questions about the safety
of a host of common childhood vaccines
administered to infants and young children.
A CDC epidemiologist named Tom Verstreten
had analyzed the agency's massive database containing
the medical records of 100,000 children.
He found that a mercury-based preservative in the vaccines, thymarazole, appeared to be
responsible for a dramatic increase in autism and a host of other neurological disorders among
children.
I will say, I'm say, this is commentary time.
Hello, commentary.
It is a real red flag if someone is saying,
hey, we took an existing giant data set and looked at it.
And we found an association.
And we've decided that that means it's a causal relationship.
Oh, Aubrey, you're going to love, you're going to love the debunking
into so much.
You're gonna be like, there was no data set.
No, no spoilers, but we're gonna add some context.
But pretty much, yeah.
A little bit of extra context to this.
Okay, quote, I was actually stunned by what I saw
for Straighten told those assembled at Simpsonwood,
citing the staggering number of earlier studies
that indicate a link between thymarazole
and speech delays, attention deficit disorder, hyperactivity and autism. But instead of taking
immediate steps to alert the public and rid the vaccine supply of thymarazole, the officials
and executives at Simpson Wood spent most of the next two days discussing how to cover up
the damaging data.
How to cover it up. According to transcripts obtained under the Freedom of Information Act,
many at the meeting were concerned about how the damaging revelations about thymarazole
would affect the vaccine industry's bottom line.
Big Farna. Dr. John Clements, vaccines advisor at the World Health Organization, declared flatly that
the study quote, should not have been done at all, and warned that the results quote,
will be taken by others and will be used in ways beyond the control of this group.
The research results have to be handled.
Orying stuff.
I mean, he's framing this in a way to make it sound sinister.
That's like, we won't have complete control anymore.
But like a more neutral way of saying that thing
in different framing is essentially like,
look a bunch of people without any training
are gonna get a hold of these numbers
and are gonna take that as proof positive
that they shouldn't vaccinate their kids.
And that's like exactly what happened.
I shouldn't know that you would immediately spoil
the rest of this episode.
I wanted you to read this and be like,
damn, Mike, there was a secret meeting of the CDC.
I think we're gonna cover things up.
And they say, well, actually, Aubrey, we're gonna rewind.
I'm so sorry that I have listened to our show.
This is so savvy about what he's doing here, right?
He says, like, oh, there's a transcript,
and we had to do a FOIA request to get this secret transcript
of this secret meeting, right?
But then the actual quote from this guy
at the World Health Organization,
he's saying the results will be taken by others
and used in ways beyond the control of this group.
I mean, that's just fucking true.
Yeah.
Sometimes you publish things and bad faith actors
are going to do fucked up shit with them.
And like, we should talk about that before we publish them.
It's also like a real misunderstanding of FOIA requests.
The implication here is that if you have to FOIA something,
that it must be part of a cover-up.
Yeah.
But like people like all day long in like state and municipal
and federal government get like all of their emails foya,
the particular topic or whatever,
that's not the same as like,
someone is facing charges.
We've built the case and we know.
Also, what's wild about foyaying the transcript of this
is that if it's so fucking secret,
why did the CDC keep a transcript?
Why did they invite a transcriber?
Number one rule in a cover-up, create a paper trail.
So it's like, he's doing something that we see
in conspiratorial media a lot,
where it's like, I found these secret documents.
But it's like, well, were they really meaningfully secret?
Was anyone really trying to cover this up?
Or was it just a hassle for you to get this?
There's actually a huge difference
between those two things.
Yeah.
So the thing is, like, we're sort of joking around
because like both of our brains
are completely fucking broken by hosting the show.
Uh-huh.
But what this article is alleging,
and I think quite effectively, if you sort of zoom out,
is basically that like there's mercury in the vaccines,
right, which is like really freaky to people, right?
We're literally injecting kids with mercury.
And the CDC knew about it.
There's all these studies showing that mercury is really toxic to kids. Like, of course, it is.
Everybody's like, that's the one thing we all know about mercury. It's fucking poisonous, right?
Yeah.
And the CDC has like a secret fucking meeting to be like, make sure we don't tell anybody about this.
Like, let's massage this a little bit. Like, for people at the time that did not host health
and wellness podcasts, a lot of people looked at this and were like
Jesus fucking Christ. This is like really worrying. Well, and the like tacit endorsement of publishing this in salon and Rolling Stone
Totally man Rolling Stone has some stuff to answer for dude. I know this in Taiibi
I know I think they also gave like Led Zeppelin for like a negative review. Wow
Maybe. I think they also gave like Led Zeppelin IV like a negative review.
Wow.
They mad about their lists.
Canceled.
So we are now going to rewind.
And we're going to learn a little bit more context.
And later, we will read the same excerpt.
And we will understand more about it with more layers.
The first thing that we need to talk about is, is there mercury in the vaccines?
So that's another thing that sort of bumped me about this little passage was the opening
says
Mercury in childhood vaccines and then down a little ways into the piece
he says something about oh
Mercury based
Preservative and I was like, does that mean that it has Mercury in it?
Does that mean that Mercury is used in the processing of it?
Like, what's happening?
I'm about to tell you what's happening.
Tell me what's happening, Michael.
Everything what's happening.
I'm confused.
Tell me what's happening.
So this, just as a thing to start out with,
I'm only slightly exaggerating when I say
that mercury is in literally everything,
because mercury is in the earth's crust.
And when water bubbles up to the surface of the earth
and we drink it, it has a couple of particles of mercury
in it.
It has a couple particles of everything.
They can test water and find micrograms,
which are 1 millionth of a gram of all kinds of shit.
And this is not because like Dupont is pouring chemicals
in the water or like industrial revolution,
whatever, like you can take a teaspoon
of the freshest cleanest spring water
from like the Swiss fucking Alps.
And you will find trace elements of,
I found a list of like various publications that I read.
It will have lead, iron, arsenic, radium,
radon, lithium, chromium uranium zinc copper silicon
phosphorus and mercury. We live on earth. This is the earth. I mean, but listen, as you were talking
about that, I was thinking about how much that sounds like I was an anxious kid. And if you made a
dessert like bananas foster or something, something with alcohol in it, like a brand-of-be-fruit
cake or something. I would get worried about getting drunk of the alcohol in the dessert.
And I feel like this is a like, am I going to get drunk off the alcohol in the dessert?
Yeah. Sort of level of analysis here.
This is something that like we've said on the show before, but we should probably say
like at the top of every show and like at the beginning of every conversation with every human being for all time is that the dose makes the poison.
Yes, there are very few substances that are poisonous regardless of how much of it or in what form of it you are ingesting.
The obvious one is water, right? If you don't drink enough water, you die. But then also, if you drink too much water, you die. You can drown from the inside out.
There's all kinds of other compounds
that are totally fine in a couple of millions
of a gram a day.
You know, there's all of this sort of ambient freak out
about chemicals in the water.
Yeah.
I would say a couple of things.
One, water is chemical.
Oh, you know what I mean?
Like inherently already chemical. Sorry.
Tell them tell them not Aubrey telling you about chemicals,
but also a partner of my one of my good friends used to work for
a like water treatment here in Portland. And she would always just be like,
people are always talking about,
like, we don't want chemicals in the water.
And she was like, I guess you don't want us purifying water
because I don't know what you think that process is.
If you've got an open air reservoir,
that means at some point an animal is gonna poop
in that reservoir and you're gonna have to do something
chemical to like counteract the poop
or get the poop out of there or whatever, just
because you're adding chemicals, quote unquote, right?
Like adding baking soda to your cake, that creates a chemical reaction.
That doesn't mean that it's sinister.
It's really weird to me.
It's also a very weird argument to make about mercury specifically because not only is
mercury in like all of the water, but mercury is also in the air because mercury comes out of volcanoes.
So the air that we breathe will also contain a few micrograms of mercury.
So the average baby ingests around 360 millions of a gram of mercury in the first six months of its life.
So the average vaccine dose does in fact contain about 25 micrograms of mercury. So 25
millions of a gram, however, not only is that a really, really, really small dose of mercury,
but it's not mercury as we think of mercury. When ordinary people talk about mercury,
what they actually mean is methyl mercury,
which is like a naturally occurring kind of mercury. They're sort of elemental mercury
and then it interacts with bacteria. And then it becomes like the metal liquid T1000 thing
that we're all used to. Right? I do love the stebunkang. Isn't it fun? It's so fun!
T1000, let's go. So mercury is not like iron. There's no like minimum
recommended amount of mercury that you're supposed to get. Metal mercury is like really nasty
stuff. But one of the principles of mercury is it's actually a very
good antiseptic. So before we knew how poisonous it was, there was a thing that you would put on your
wounds called mercury-acrome, which would prevent them from getting infected, like this bright orange
thing. So like, it's actually a very good antiseptic. It's just not worth it because it's also really poisonous.
I love this idea of like thinking about potentially harmful substances as like, is it worth it?
Yeah, I love the bitter almond flavor that comes with arsenic, but the side effects are real
bear.
So in the 1920s, the Eli Lilly Company comes up with something called Ethel Mercury, which is different from methyl mercury.
It's a substance that has the same antiseptic properties
as the bad kind of mercury, but it clears your body much quicker.
So the problem with mercury mercury,
like the type Intuna and shit,
is that it builds up in your system.
You don't clear it.
It stays inside of you.
So you have this little ball of metal
that is just like accumulating for years
inside of your body, which is really bad for you.
But Ethyl Mercury doesn't do that.
It only has a half life of three to seven days
and you clear it quite quickly.
So like things can be chemically very similar
and have very different properties.
Interesting.
And so in the 1920s, the Eli Lilly Company,
after they invent this inorganic form of mercury,
they mix it with something called
phyosalicylate, and that becomes thymarousal,
which is what is up for debate here.
This is the thing that R.F.K. juniors
talked about.
There's thymarousal in the vaccines, right?
So the way that they ship out vaccines,
still now, but much more than,
is they would ship vaccines in 10 dose vials.
So on TV, when you see that thing of a nurse holds up a vial
and she puts in a syringe and sucks a little bit out,
she does that 10 times.
Yeah, exactly.
I mean, with different needles, but yes.
That's typically the way that they do this to make it easier
because shipping a bunch of glass vials
for every single dose is just wildly expensive
and it's much easier to do this with 10 doses. But in the 19 teens and 1920s,
there's a couple of cases where the vaccines get bacteria in. Like, somehow a needle got put in
twice, it only takes a little bit of bacteria to get in that bottle, because it often sits on the
shelf for a long time. So vaccines can get infected. So there's a case where they basically inject a bunch of kids with
like the stapholo caucus bacteria and like kids fucking died. So like this is a real danger. You
have to have some sort of preservative in the vaccine, something that will kill bacteria in case
a couple of little tiny particles of bacteria get into the vaccines because it will grow and spread
it. You won't know that it's in there until it's too late. Gotcha.
So in the 1920s, they realized that this chimerisol thing is a very effective antiseptic.
You put a tiny little bit into one of these 10 dose files.
And no matter what, it can't get infected.
Another thing that RFK Jr. doesn't like to admit is that there was actually like a lot
of safety testing of chimerisol before they started putting it into the vaccines.
There's these animal studies where they inject 2,000 micrograms into rabbits.
Whoa.
They do this.
There's no effect of it.
There's a meningitis outbreak in the late 1920s.
And there's a time when they think cymerisol could be like antibiotic.
This is before the invention of penicillin.
They're like, oh my God,
maybe this will help cure meningitis.
So there's like a whole hospital ward
of people with meningitis.
They inject them with two million micrograms
of thimerisol, hoping that it will cure the meningitis.
It does not cure the meningitis,
but they find out that it doesn't have any safety effects.
They don't, you know, they don't puke,
they don't pass out, they don't have any health effects of the actual vaccine itself. So because like, okay, well, this doesn't like cure diseases on its own,
but it's also not like dangerous to give people. So I feel like what I'm hearing from you is that
there are different forms that Mercury can take and only some of those forms will cause harmful health effects in a big way.
And others will just sort of pass through you.
They're like vaccine o'lestra.
Yeah.
It was just bounce right through.
So in the 1930s, they start adding it to vaccines.
This is completely non-controversial, boring,
like nobody notices this stuff,
until the late 1990s.
So in 1997, there's kind of an ongoing thing where people are concerned about mercury
and fish.
Like mercury is just getting more of a profile as like something that we should be worried
about.
And so in the 1997 FDA Modernization Act, a senator includes like a little amendment
to just be like,
hey, let's make sure we're being transparent about where Americans are being exposed to
mercury.
This is like the bad mercury.
It's a study bill.
Yeah.
Yeah, they're just like, let's give us a kind of baseline.
Yeah.
And so as a result of this transparency bill, people at the FDA look around and they're
like, well, there is Ethel Mercury in the vaccines.
So like we should sort of publish that.
Like we should, we should tell people if there's Ethel mercury in the vaccines. So we should sort of publish that. Like we should tell people
if there's ethyl mercury in the vaccines.
So they look at the whole vaccine schedule,
the amounts of ethyl mercury
and all the different vaccine doses.
And they show that there are 187 micrograms
of ethyl mercury for children in their first,
I believe it's one year of life,
which is very small.
I mean, keep in mind, just being alive, you get 360 micrograms. Yeah. The next chapter of the story is
extremely bizarre. This comes from Paul Offitz book Autism's False Profits, which is extremely good.
There's basically one guy named Neil Halsey, who's a pediatrician at Johns Hopkins, and he's sort of on the committees,
like the vaccine committees.
Paul often describes him as a vaccine insider.
And so in 1999, Neil Halsey sees the reports
that kids are getting 187 micrograms of Ethel Mercury
and he starts to get concerned.
He was one of the people who wanted to expand
the vaccine schedule for kids.
He's somebody who's always been pushing
for like kids who get all the vaccines
that are available to them.
I do think that like because there's so much
fucking bad faith, like question asking around this issue,
it is important to say that like he's not an anti-faxor,
he's not doing this in bad faith.
This is a guy who's like genuinely concerned
about children and like genuinely supportive of vaccine safety
But he feels misled. He's like we've been expanding the vaccine schedule for years now
And I'm only just finding out that there's
187 micrograms of Ethel Mercury in all of the vaccines that kids are getting. He starts looking around
He's like well, what are the
limits? Like, what's the sort of daily maximum for Ethel Mercury, right? And he goes to all of
the different agencies and like, no one really has one. Like the EPA has one, but that's like,
you know, living near water kind of prolonged exposure. The FDA has a limit for Mercury,
but that's in like food, like food that you're eating regularly.
Right, totally.
Nothing is set up for these like very deliberate injections
of vaccines, and there's really no data on ethyl mercury.
All of the limits are about methyl mercury,
which is like the bad kind.
So this basically becomes a crusade for this one guy.
To be like, hey, we should actually do way more studies on this.
And we might want to take thymarisol out of the vaccines.
And there's like an optics part of this as well, right?
Which is like, people are going to freak out about this.
And I would like to be able to tell them with certainty that their kid is
completely safe.
And they have nothing to worry about.
And we know this for a fact.
There's also something really interesting here too
about the weird circularity of once the anti-vax movement
is as empowered as it is in the late 1990s,
people keep trying to come up with ways
of like placating the anti-vax movement.
So part of the argument for making such a big deal
about mercury in the vaccines is like,
well, these anti-vaxers are going to yell at us
if they find out about this,
and they're inevitably going to find out about this.
So, like, this becomes the debate behind the scenes,
and this is very weird.
So, it all happens in two weeks.
This one guy, Neil Halsey starts pushing,
we gotta do something about this,
we gotta do something about this.
It's like summer, a lot of people are on vacation,
but there's the annual meeting of the American Academy
of Pediatrics coming up.
And he's like, before this meeting,
we need to know what the deal is with Mercury.
Like, we can't have this meeting
without having a clear statement on this
and like knowing what our policy is going forward.
So he starts like holding all these teleconferences
with all the various agencies.
That you know, there's all these like safety committees of vaccines.
Basically this one guy just keeps like pushing
and pushing and pushing.
Apparently everyone else in the entire like vaccine
safety sector is like, Neil, there's no reason to be worried.
There's literally no evidence that this is dangerous.
And we're talking about 187 micrograms,
which is like way fucking less than like
the environmental exposure to mercury.
People, you get mercury in like apples and bananas and shit.
Yes, this is an issue.
Yes, we should study it further.
But I really don't understand the urgency to move on this.
Right? This has been in the vaccines for 60 years.
And according to Paul Offitz's book,
Neil Housey sort of sees other people's stonewalling
and he threatens to go to the press.
Wow.
He's like, if you guys don't do something on this,
I am going to release a press statement saying,
I'm concerned about the amount of
Ethelomircurry in the vaccines.
And so again, everything gets so much fucking harder
when there's these conspiracy movements around, right?
Because everyone's like, imagine what the anti-vaxxers
would do with this, right? Because everyone's like, imagine what the anti-vaxxers would do with this, right?
Someone within the vaccine safety system
is like, I'm worried about this trace element in the vaccines.
So basically, as a way of appeasing him
and trying to get to like, the least bad option,
they agree to put out a statement
saying that thymarisol will be removed from the vaccines.
Okay.
So on July 9th, 1999, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Public Health Service
issue a statement saying, from now on, we're going to be removing the fimera saw from all of the
vaccines. It's going to take like a year or two to sort of work its way out because a lot of
the vaccines have already been produced. But like from now on, we're not gonna have it in the vaccines anymore.
And there's no evidence that it's unsafe.
There's really nothing to worry about.
This shouldn't affect your decision
to vaccinate your kids at all,
but out of an abundance, like an absurd abundance of caution.
We're going to do this to make, you know,
to go from like 99.99% safe to 100% safe.
Uh-huh.
This is a fucking huge mistake.
Like a historical blunder, right?
Because of course, when this statement comes out,
every single person in America is like,
holy fuck, there's mercury in the vaccines.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, if I'd name my fucking kid, what?
I didn't know there was mercury in the vaccines.
This is stress and effects times 100.
It's this totally fascinating thing to me because of course,
Archeid Jr. has made this like mercury in the vaccine's thing,
his mission for the the next 20 years after this announcement.
But like this announcement comes from the scientific establishment,
being like too overzealous in protecting children.
Right now, everything that he says in this article,
everything that he says throughout all of his public statements
is kind of like all the scientific establishment,
they don't care that this is harming kids.
But actually, this is the entire system
being like too hardcore about ensuring that vaccines are safe.
We used to do polling around this stuff
and you'd ask people like,
hey, do you support an increase in taxes?
And people would be like, no.
And they'll be like, change the question to,
do you support an increase in education funding,
senior services and healthcare?
And like the ratios flip, right?
Yeah.
Based on like how you ask the question really really matters.
And this seems like a core case of folks asking the question
in a way that raised people's hackles more than they combed them down.
And so what's wild is this announcement that safe vaccines are about to become
even safer, ends up emboldening another wave of anti-vax organizing.
And this is really the arrival of the antivax movement
to the United States.
I mean, the Wakefield stuff was kind of centered in the UK.
But this then sparks a wave of media coverage
around like, oh, there's a debate about the safety of vaccines.
Did you hear about this mercury thing?
Right.
This is like if you got a notification
if there was a big announcement from NASA
that was like, hey, everybody, not to worry,
there's a 99% chance that we're not about to be destroyed by an asteroid. Yeah, exactly. Yeah.
This is also the period when the anti-vax moms find RFK junior. Uh-oh. He has been working on
mercury that's getting dumped from coal plants. As part of this cleaning up waterways work.
These like moms start showing up at his talks
and they're like, well,
if you're really concerned about Mercury,
wait till you hear about the vaccines.
Antivax moms going around politicizing
Kennedy's interactive direction
is like Bizarre World P flag.
Yeah, I'm like, what if P flag was like, what if I was an ally,
but for misinformation,
from the ally for lying, an ally.
Perbidos.
I love my disinformation son.
Okay, so this finally brings us to the secret CDC meeting.
So just after this happens in early 2000,
the, this is really funny.
The head of the CDC's like immunization program
was on vacation when all this like stuff was going on.
And this was before like zoom and shit.
So I guess he just like comes back from vacation
and he's like, wait, we announced what?
He's got like the flip-flop tan line.
Yeah. He's got his back of McAdamian, that's.
He's like, hey man, I'm still on island time.
Yeah.
He comes back and he's like, what's the Mars-Rovian fuck
did we just do?
We just made this like pretty big decision
and put out this big statement,
but we still don't actually have any information.
Right, there is no evidence that Fimerisol is bad.
And all evidence indicates that it's not,
and that it has nothing to do with any of these things
that people are linking it to.
So we have to actually understand this, right?
So he assigns Tom first-rate who's a researcher at the CDC
to look through their database.
They have a database of like children's health records,
a couple hundred thousand kids,
you know, separate the kids into, you know, vaccinated kids, unvaccinated kids,
and just try to figure out like, is there anything to this? Is there any condition that is linked to
Fimerisol in the vaccines? Okay. And so Tom first, right, and looks through the database,
and he finds that children who received vaccines are more likely to have attention deficit disorder,
more likely to have speech and language delays,
and more likely to have ticks,
these sort of twitches that are sometimes
a symptom of autism, sometimes not.
Importantly, he does not find an association with autism.
So this head of the immunology of the CDC,
the guy crunching on macadamia nuts, does something
that like you and me are constantly saying that we wish scientific institutions would do,
and which basically like filled fucking Lancet should have done in 1998. They're like, look,
we have this like really incendiary finding. Before we publish this into what we know is the social
and political environment around this issue.
Let's stress test it a little bit.
Let's talk about it.
Let's make sure that it's correct before we put it into the public bloodstream.
This is classic big if true, Terri.
Exactly.
Exactly.
And it's your job to make sure that it's true.
And so they gather together.
It's roughly 50 people.
It's people from different fields of epidemiology.
It's people from various departments of epidemiology, it's people from various departments
of the CDC, it's different agencies, I think there's like FDA people there. And it's like, let's get
everybody together and just like talk about this. So they do, in fact, rent space, that there's like
Methodist retreat center thing outside of Atlanta, they all meet. And Tom Verstrate, you can,
you know, you can read the transcript, Tom Verstratein presents the data to everybody.
He's like, here's what we did.
Here's the methodology.
Here's what we found.
After he presents his data, people point out the massive flaws in the data.
So the first is the thing that you pointed out earlier that this is all completely
correlational.
Yeah, totally.
The problem with this vaccinated versus unvaccinated grouping is that vaccinated kids and unvaccinated kids are not identical in other ways.
There's numerous vaccines that you have to get in the first two years of life.
If you're getting all those vaccines, what's that basically means that you're going to the fucking doctor a lot, right?
You're going to the doctor 15, 20 times, which means you're way more likely to get diagnosed with things like speech and learning
delays, with things like ticks, with all kinds of other things that when you're at the doctor,
the doctor goes, is there anything else? Oh, you know, my son, he's not talking as much as
the other kids' age. Yeah. And in the US, that's also going to be correlated with like access to care
period. Exactly. So it pulls in social factors, it pulls in like all kinds of other
influences that are really complex and that you would need to account for in some way.
Exactly. In doing this kind of research. Yeah. The other thing that people point out is
that a huge amount of their data is just garbage. So a lot of what they think of as like
this kid was diagnosed with this.
So like this kid has like speech and learning delays.
A lot of that has just stuff that like,
people might mention in a doctor's visit
and gets written down on their chart,
but isn't like a formal diagnosis.
So often times parents will come in
and they'll be like, oh yeah, his like language
is like a little bit delayed.
It's, you know, it's not where we think it should be.
But then he comes in a month later
and they're like, oh yeah, it's really fine, he caught up.
Yeah, I mean, listen, this is one of the core lessons
of early childhood brain development.
It's like kids move at different rates.
They're just all over the place.
Yeah, this is like, of course he would flag
these little things along the way.
Right.
Those are snapshots of moments.
They're not necessarily like a holistic sort of like we've evaluated this whole situation.
And here's what we think is going on.
Well, this is why I think this kind of process is so important.
And ultimately why this meeting is really good that it happened.
We we found this data.
There's some incendiary findings.
Let's talk about it with people who are experts in other fields and people
who have more familiarity with this data. This to me is like science working as intended. People at this meeting are like,
you might want to actually go back and I know it's boring, but you have to actually cross-check
the kid's medical charts with formal diagnoses and figure out whether that's their actual condition
because the data is just kind of noisy like that. Arfke Jr. describes this as some sort of secret meeting where scientists put pharma
profits over the health of children.
And actually what really happened is just a bunch of scientists sat in a room.
I've also read the fucking transcripts of this meeting.
They're unbelievably boring.
It's like really technical, methodological stuff.
Think about how boring your meetings are if you go to meetings regularly.
And then imagine reading transcripts
of someone else's two-day meeting.
Again, it's like it's so funny that he cast this
in Rolling Stone is like so nefarious
when like what actually happens is after this meeting,
conference straight is like these are really useful comments.
He goes back, they rerun the numbers
and they find ways of controlling for health access,
so they can actually compare vaccinated kids.
And they eventually, in 2003, publish the data.
And so there are some differences in health conditions
between vaccinated and unvaccinated kids,
but autism is not on there,
and the magnitudes are so small.
It says in the conclusion of the paper,
they're like, we don't really think this means anything.
Like ticks, for example, these like,
twitches was actually more common among vaccinated kids
and unvaccinated kids, but like,
it doesn't make sense that a symptom of autism
would be more common, but autism itself is not more common.
We think this is probably just like
some kind of weird coincidence random thing.
Yeah.
So, you know, he alleges this huge cover up,
but like the data was published. Yeah, you know, he alleges this huge cover up, but like the data was published.
Yeah, you can go read the paper two full years before this article came out, no? Yeah,
exactly. So this paper had been published for two years by the time he writes his Rolling
Stone article. Yeah. Speaking of which, we are now going to reread the section of the Rolling
Stone article that we read earlier. We're returning to the scene of the article of the nonsense bullshit. Yes.
In June 2000, a group of top government scientists and health officials gathered for a meeting
at the isolated Simpsonwood Conference Center in Norcross, Georgia. Convened by the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention, the meeting was held at this Methodist retreat center to ensure complete secrecy.
It's very funny that he keeps like mentioning the secrecy of this. The reason it was held
at this Methodist retreat center is because it was June and they were planning the meeting
at short notice, right, because they didn't know this was going to happen. And it's
fucking Atlanta in the summer and all the hotels are booked. So it's not like we need to
be out in the woods you guys.
Like god damn it. This is so silly. It's also funny to me because like you can have secret meetings in
Atlanta. He's like oh it has to be at the Memphis retreat center. It's like you just go to the
Mary out and have a secret meeting. This is like big Bahamian Grove energy. Yeah exactly.
Where you're like no no no no no no no. Right here is the next couple of paragraph.
Like what?
The federal officials and industry representatives had assembled to discuss a disturbing new study
that raised alarming questions about the safety of a host of common childhood vaccines administered
to infants and young children.
A CDC epidemiologist named Tom Verstraten had analyzed the agency's
massive database containing the medical records of 100,000 children. He found that a mercury-based
preservative in the vaccines, Thymarazole, appeared to be responsible for a dramatic increase in autism
and a host of other neurological disorders among children. Remember, autism wasn't on there.
This is a straightforward lie.
The data, even the preliminary data, did not show an increase in autism.
Quote, I was actually stunned by what I saw,
where Straton told those assembled at Simpsonwood,
citing the staggering number of earlier studies that indicate a link between
thymarazole and speech delays,
attention deficit disorder,
hyperactivity, and autism.
The other lie here is that there's no staggering number of earlier studies that indicate a
link.
This was the whole controversy over whether or not to remove thimerazol from the vaccines,
there's no fucking evidence that thimerazol has any link to anything.
Except the tens of thousands of studies, Michael.
I remember some things from last time.
It's also, there's also a very conspiratorial thing here too,
because he's saying that there's a staggering number of studies showing that Phimera's all
is poisonous, right? But then why the fuck are the scientists moving to cover it up?
Yeah. Like this is what always just like doesn't compute
in my brain of like if it's so fucking obvious
that the vaccines are bad for kids,
why would hundreds and thousands of scientists
not give a shit, man?
Come on dude, people are writing it down.
Like I just don't, I'm getting to the point of exasperation.
I don't really like halfway done, Aubrey.
Save your ulcer, get an ulcer.
I love that you're like, we're not gonna record
for three and a half hours today.
I know.
We are one hour and 45 minutes in,
which is exactly half of three and a half hours.
But I'm gonna pack as much stress into that.
Ha-ha-ha-ha.
All right, here is the next one.
But instead of taking immediate steps to alert the public and rid the vaccine supply of
thymarezol, the officials and executives at Simpsonwood spent most of the next two days
discussing how to cover up the damaging data.
According to transcripts obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, many at the meeting were concerned about how the damaging revelations about thymarazole would affect the vaccine industry's bottom line.
So what's amazing about this passage is he doesn't mention that thymarazole had actually been removed from the vaccines at this point.
These same fucking people decided to remove it. Also, did anybody say anything about profits for vaccine makers?
Did that come up in the transcripts at all?
This is a missing context thing because when you remove thymaresol,
which they now have, you have to ship all of the vaccines in single dose vials,
which is much more expensive than shipping them 10 doses at a time.
So one way to put that is, oh, they're worried about big farm as bottom line,
another way to put that is we want to get vaccines to people as cheaply as possible.
That's a real conversation to have. That's not some like conspiracy thing.
It's like if you're operating in good faith for the safety of kids,
you would talk about like, well, what's the most cost-effective way of doing this?
Yeah.
And listen, they're a government agency.
That means that their budgets are a matter of public record.
That means that they're going to have to ask for allocations and have an externally
defensible answer.
And they've got to think about how to move people who may not be in that room.
Yeah.
There are mechanics that they need to mind
and some of these mechanics are around cost.
And also, also note, the phrase here is that he says
they spent two days discussing how to cover up
the damaging data.
That's not what happened.
No one was able to cover it up.
Everyone was operating under the assumption
that this would be published and it was.
They were trying to make sure it's fucking true.
Yeah.
And then here's the last paragraph that we read.
Dr. John Clements, vaccine advisor at the World Health Organization, declared flatly
that the study, quote, should not have been done at all and warned that the results, quote,
will be taken by others and will be used in ways beyond the control of this group.
The research results have to be handled.
So we've kind of already covered this, but it's like, yeah, he's just straight
forwardly right. They do have to be handled. But we are going to read his quote in
full from the transcript. This is what he actually said.
Interesting that they didn't put the entire quote in.
Yeah, it's interesting how it goes kind of in and out of quotes.
It's like paraphrasing in between.
Yeah. It's just a couple goes kind of in and out of quotes and it's like paraphrasing in between. Yeah.
It's just a couple, quoting a couple words at a time.
Quote.
I'm really concerned that we have taken off like a boat going down one arm of the mangrove
swamp at high speed.
When in fact, there was not enough discussion really early on about which way the boat
should go at all.
And I really don't want to risk offending everyone in the room by saying that perhaps this
study should not have been done at all. And I really don't want to risk offending everyone in the room by saying that perhaps this study should not have been done at all, because the outcome of it could have, to
some extent, been predicted. We've all reached this point now where we are left hanging,
even though I hear the majority of the consultants say to the board, they are not convinced there
is a direct link between thimerazole and neurological outcomes. Jesus, that's a different quote.
So yeah, this is part of a much longer kind of monologue that he gives about this.
But when he's saying this shouldn't have been done,
he's not saying like the truth cannot reach the American people.
That's not what he's saying at all.
What he's saying is something that we say on this show all the fucking time.
It's like, if you come through data,
looking for associations, hundreds of associations, right? This Tom Verstrateen guy was looking through this data, looking for anything that was biologically plausible that could be linked to
vaccines, you're going to find something, right? This is the way these big correlational cohorts
work. You're going to find something. And when you publish it, the anti-vaxxers are going to latch onto it
with their little talons and they're never going to let it go.
He's not saying the data should be suppressed because it's true.
He's saying it's probably not true.
It's probably just random chance.
Not only does he think it's not true,
but he's saying I hear the majority of the consultants say
to the board that they are not convinced that
there is a direct click, right?
Not only do I not think this is true, most people here don't seem to think this is true.
This is another thing that I cannot believe.
This was not mentioned in his entire 5,000 word article in Rolling Stone.
Fimerizal was removed from vaccines in Sweden, Canada, and Denmark in 1992, eight
years before. It had no effect on autism rates or ADHD or ticks or anything else. If it was
causing autism, we should see a huge reduction in autism in Canada, Sweden, and Denmark since 1992.
We don't see that.
We still see the same rises that we do here.
It's the trajectory of autism in these other conditions.
It's still happening perfectly in parallel,
regardless of whether they have femyrazole in the vaccines or not.
So like, there's no biologically plausible mechanism
by which Ethel Mercury would be causing these disorders
because there's now millions of children who didn't get
Fimerizal. There's 10 years of real world data. Yeah. Being like, no, it's fine. It would be like if, you know, five years ago or so,
you tried to trot out the old argument that was used in like mostly massachusettsachusetts around same gender marriage.
Did you try to make that claim today?
There would be many, many, many, many, many parts of the country
that you could point to, would be like,
Hey, yeah, we have it.
Look what didn't happen.
The funny thing is they did actually make those arguments
in the 1990s, even though the Netherlands and Denmark had already
had gay marriage for two decades by that point.
But it doesn't matter.
Because other countries are not real.
Other countries are not real other countries are not real
Yeah, again not talking about facts and information talking about feelings
You could go through the whole fucking article. It's like you can't go a paragraph through this article without like losing your fucking mind
I'm sure it's like the entire the entire article. There's the most egregious one is he's talking about like the dangers of thymarisol
And he's like people in the 1920s like this word full of people with meningitis
were given injections of thymarisol and they all died.
And it's like, right,
because they had terminal meningitis.
They died of meningitis.
Right, right, right.
They didn't die of the fucking shot.
What the fuck are you talking about?
They're terminal, you just said that they're terminal, man.
This is the brain rot of like,
cancer doesn't really exist.
It's the chemo that's doing that.
And you're like completely the whole fucking thing.
So this whole episode, the fact that this article is published at all is like so
embarrassing. It's not totally clear to me how this article even got published,
but you and I have both been through formal fact checking process.
Yes. I have no direct evidence of this, but it is very obvious to me that this did not go through through formal fact checking processes. Yes. I have no direct evidence of this.
But it is very obvious to me that this did not go through
a formal fact checking process.
A good fact checking process, like a really thorough one,
makes you so mad at the fact checker.
Oh my God.
It's like, it's an insufferable process
and it is essential, right?
You're googling like how to murder someone through Zoom.
Like you're so fucking mad.
Not because they're calling you out on stuff
you don't wanna be called out on,
not because they're telling you you're wrong,
but because they're like, you know, you go,
oh, this new toy markets for, you know,
like sells for 1999 and they'll be like,
source.
Oh, my fuck, I was just about to say that.
You're like, oh, this guy is blue.
They're like, how do you know?
Can we prove?
How do you know?
Can we prove it?
Yeah.
The thing I kept thinking of throughout this article, I mean, we only covered the first
whatever, 6% of it or something, but like the staggering number of studies finding a
link between fine parasol and autism, there's no fucking way
that would have gone through a formal fact checking process.
None.
Zero is a staggering number.
Yeah, exactly.
To find staggering from it.
Whoa, not one.
Not even one.
So I do not know how this article got published.
I do know that RFK Jr. and Jan winner,
the publisher of Rolling Stone,
are close personal friends and go hunting together.
They go hang out with Larry Davis.
Yeah, exactly, like an Aspen and shit.
So what I think happened is like Jan winner
and R.F.K. Jr. were, like at Davos or some shit.
And he's like, hey, you should write about this for us.
And then he wrote about it and Jan Wender
like pushed it through the fact checking process.
And so, I mean, in the same way the Lancet
really did not cover themselves in glory
with the Wakefield stuff.
Both Ceylon and Rolling Stone did not retract
this article until 2011.
Wow.
So it took six years. And they appended a couple corrections,
but the corrections are all dumb corrections.
It's like, oh, this guy's like job title was wrong.
You know, sorry, the basic factual error,
like they didn't find a link with autism,
you're not gonna fucking add that.
Part of what?
I find so frustrating about this is this is what,
this is what many editors have thought
that I was trying to do.
I feel like I get the fact checking that, Jay, Jr. should be getting it right.
I absolutely remember like an extended conversation with a fact checker at one point where I had
written at one point that there were no fewer fat children after X, Y, and Z policy interventions.
And the fact checker wrote back and was like,
well, the rates did plateau for a little bit.
So it didn't increase.
And I was like, yeah, there are no fewer.
Yeah.
I don't think that's an inaccurate thing to say, right?
But like, boy, I'm getting the rates plateaued a little bit.
And they're like, yeah, yeah, secret meeting,
total government cover up seems fun.
But so one thing I didn't know until I started researching
this episode was how this article
and RFK Junior in general kicked off
like a real glory day period for the anti-vax movement.
Immediately after this article comes out,
he's on the daily show.
He is on Oprah in 2007.
She doesn't actually ask him about the vaccine stuff,
which is interesting, and I feel like they probably
just cut it out of the broadcast.
But like, she's still adding to the idea
that this is like a prominent figure worth listening to, right?
She does this like very softball interview with him.
He goes on Don I miss a bunch.
Don I miss has an autistic kid and really like went for it. Boy. It's actually really Blake the guest list on Don I miss, a bunch, Don I miss has an autistic kid and really like went for it.
Boy.
It's actually really Blake, the guest list on Don I miss.
He had Joe Lieberman, Chris Dodd, and John Kerry
all on to talk about vaccines,
cause I'm autism.
Oh!
It's really bad.
Joe Lieberman is like from a cursed nonpartisan underworld
or something.
These are people who have been trying to forget
and this book made me remember, I'm really mad about it.
These are all the names of people
who are like referenced in 30 rock episodes.
Yeah.
The reason your kids don't get 30 rock.
Yeah.
Too many Scooter Libby jokes.
And then, you know, by 2010, one in four parents
thought that vaccine caused autism.
One in four? thought that vaccine calls autism. One in four?
It's bad.
This period was not a time of huge pushback.
That is bleak as hell.
Since 2010, the pendulum has kind of swung back a little bit.
So I got very interested in this
because I think the sort of we must ask questions
about vaccines kind of wave has, has Ebb to thank God.
And it's much more like stigmatized
to be an anti-vaxxer now.
Like I think the establishment institutions
are much more comfortable just being like,
fuck off with this stuff now.
The beginning of it was there were a bunch of measles outbreaks
starting in 2008.
And then in 2010, we get Andrew Wakefield losing his medical license. And then, fascinatingly,
in 2010 or between 2009 and 2011, we get a bunch of court cases where parents tried to get
compensation from this vaccine injury compensation board for their kids having autism. So we talked last time about how there's this
vaccine injury process where if you believe that your kids were harmed by a vaccine, you can take
their case to this board and you can get compensation. We also talked about how the standards of evidence
are way lower. You don't have to prove it beyond a reasonable doubt. All you have to prove is that
it's more likely than not
That a vaccine caused the injury which is actually a really low standard when you think about it and even under this lower
Standard people cannot prove that vaccines cause autism all of these court decisions are public
It was so cathartic to read the decisions. Aubrey because it's like the court cases
to read the decisions, Aubrey, because it's like the court cases, force the anti-vaxxers to like sit down and present evidence and like respond to criticisms, right?
They can't change the subject, they can't like do the conspiracy,
gish gallup, just flood you with bullshit thing.
In a court process, it's like, okay, evidence piece one, evidence piece two, right?
And then the other side can actually challenge that evidence. In 2010, there's a trial where the parents of a girl named Michelle
Sedillo try to get compensation for their daughter having autism. And like, you can see
how much the goal posts have moved over the decades where they have this bizarre theory,
where Mercury in the vaccines harmed her immune system,
which gave her measles, and then measles gave her tummy stuff,
and then the tummy stuff gave her autism.
Basically, the other side in this trial,
like dismantle every single step along the way.
There's no evidence that Mercury affects immune systems.
Like that's not, like Mercury has many very bad effects,
but it doesn't actually weaken your immune system.
There's no evidence that this girl has measles or had measles.
And there's no evidence that measles causes stomach stuff.
And there's no evidence that stomach stuff causes autism.
Like this whole thing is just complete nonsense.
And RFK Jr. still references these trials now.
He's like, we presented 700 studies showing how bad
the mercury is in the vaccines.
And like, that is true that they presented a ton of evidence,
but all of the evidence was just about how bad mercury is.
So it's like there was this mercury spill,
and then like a bunch of kids had these horrible symptoms.
And it's like, yeah. Yes, correct then like a bunch of kids had these horrible symptoms and it's like, yeah
Yes, correct agree. Yeah a different substance is harmful exactly and in very very high doses at one point
They talk about a situation where kids were exposed to 500,000
micrograms of
methyl mercury and the judge is like, oh, we're talking about children being exposed to two
micrograms of methylelmarkery.
So that just isn't relevant to this case.
This all feels like the same kind of class
of health misinformation and sort of misleading
health information that is like,
this, you know, supplement includes heavy metals.
And you find out that they're just talking about iron.
Yeah, yeah.
I mean, no, but we need that.
That's like an important one.
But then the other thing that these court processes do
is they reveal, to what extent there's just no biologically
plausible mechanism for this anymore.
So one of the things that comes up in the Cedillo trial
quite a bit is that, you know, Mercury poisoning
is a real thing.
And Mercury poisoning has real, like, measurable effects, right?
Like kids typically lose their hearing, they have growth impairments,
they oftentimes have like a small head compared to their body.
Like it results in uneven growth.
One of the things that the anti-vaxxers are doing is they're just sort of like shouting,
like mercury and vaccines.
But like people who actually know this stuff are like, no, we can measure mercury and kids.
We can take their blood and measure how much mercury they have
and we can measure their hair and their urine
to see how much mercury they're excreting.
So if there was a problem with mercury exposure
for these kids through vaccines, we would find it.
And like, they've done tests
where they've taken kids blood
the day after they get vaccinated. And like, is there tests where they've taken kids' blood the day after they get vaccinated.
And like, is there a shitload of mercury in their blood?
No.
And so it's just like, no, if there was large scale
mercury poisoning of the population,
that would have specific effects.
It wouldn't just be like, oh, there's more kids
with ADHD now.
And like a bunch of other random shit.
So the final chapter of this story is about where the anti-vax movement is now.
And to talk about that, we are going to watch a clip of RFK Jr. on a morning show.
He's got a new book. It's called Five Marisol. Let the science speak. Rosanna, keep going.
There's a mouthful here. the vaccine. The vaccine is a big, big title. Let the science speak. Rosanna, keep going.
There's a mouthful here.
It's a big, big title.
Let the science speak.
The evidence supporting the
immediate removal of mercury, a
known neurotoxin from vaccines.
Robert Kennedy, Jr. Nice to have
you here on Good Day New York.
So, obviously the book is out
now and you know that the
critics are gunning for you
this morning, right?
I mean, they are really, they've
really had a lot of terrible things to say
about the book and some of your research.
Well, nobody has anything to say about the book
has actually read the book.
I got it.
How do you know that?
Well, because there were 12 reviews of the book
that came out before the book was published.
It attacked me for what they thought was gonna believe,
what was gonna be in the book was, which was basically a discussion of autism which is
not part of this book. Well tell us your favorite set of that for us.
Thymarisol. A lot of them are not familiar with it. What is it? Okay. Thymarisol is
a mercury-based preservative that is still in some vaccines. It was removed
from by order of the FDA from all topical medicines after doing a lot of studies that
showed demonstrated its toxicity. CDC at the same time was recommending higher and higher
doses of vaccines and it was thymarasol in those vaccines and we started to see a giant
rise in neurological disorders among our children.
Like autism?
Well, ADD, we don't discuss autism because it's such a radio-active issue.
So we just looked at the other neurological disorders.
80D, ADHD, speech delay, language delay, tick, misery, and X things that we didn't know
as a kid, but this generation, it's part of who they are.
We got to go run this by from Time Magazine, the editor-larger.
The problem is, Kennedy, he's wrong, utterly wrong.
So wrong, it's hard to even know what the biggest piece
of that wrongness is.
He says, as the levels of Fimerisol have decreased,
we've seen this autism increase.
So the cause and effect are not there.
Fimerisol is going away.
Again, again, he's wrong on all of his science.
First of all, the levels of Fimerisol if I Marisol is going away. Again, again, he's wrong on all of his science.
First of all, the levels of thymarisol
have are essentially equal to what they were in
before they were moved from pediatric vaccines.
And here's why.
It was removed from pediatric vaccines in 2003,
but that same year, CDC recommended the flu vaccine
for all Americans and the flu vaccine contained
very, very high levels of dimarice.
So I absolutely love when he's like,
Yammeron on the anchor going, okay.
All right.
All right.
Like I appreciate the anchors of Good Day New York for kind of holding his feet to the
fire in a way that like other media does not appear to do.
And like I hear him about reviews before books.
You're on his side.
No, I'm just like, this is like a legit thing.
There's been some press coverage recently about like,
when my first book was released,
it had an average of 1.1 stars.
Yeah, nice.
On Goodreads, I agree with him that people
should not review a book before they have read a book.
But like, boy, oh, boy, oh, boy,
that doesn't make him right.
The theme of this entire episode is the way that conspiracy theorists move the goalposts, right?
So we went from the protestus vaccine to the measles vaccine to mercury in the vaccines, right?
And we went from like sort of every developmental issue to food allergies to autism.
And then what is he saying this clip twice? He's like, oh, we don't do autism anymore.
We're back to, it causes everything.
And you'll also notice, they mentioned,
it's sort of so fast that you can't really latch onto it.
But they're like, in Time Magazine, this guy says
that Fimerizal was removed from the vaccines in 2001.
So if it causes autism, autism should be falling.
And he's like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
it's in the flu vaccines.
Wait, wait a minute, no, I mean, it is,
but most kids, or like roughly 45% of kids
do not get flu vaccines.
And only around somewhere between 10% to 30%
of the flu vaccines have thymarasol
because they're multidose bottles.
Most of them are single-dose bottles, which don't have thymarasol anymore.
The fucking balls of this man to write a book in 2015 saying,
we demand the immediate removal of thymarasol when it was removed in
fucking 2001. His approach is like, there's like an old
Mr. Show sketch where they're sort of talking about two competing grocery stores.
And one of them is like a big store that moves in from out of town
and keeps running ads that are like,
unlike some stores, we don't have any rats.
Oh yeah.
Unlike this other store, you'll enter with your kid
and you'll leave with your kid.
Your kid won't get kidnapped in our store, right?
Like that's the level that he's operating at is this like continued assertion kind of level.
Well, that's that's also kind of striking to me about this clip and about other interviews
that I've seen with him.
It's like, if you watch this clip, you can easily walk away from it thinking he like won
the exchange.
Yeah.
Right? Like he seems very confident.
He's like, well, they haven't even read the book,
which is a pretty good argument.
The fundamental flaw in what he's saying
isn't ever really pointed out to you
with the gravity that it needs to be.
This guy is telling us to remove something
that hasn't been in the vaccines for 20 years.
Pim!
That's a joke thing to come on TV and fucking say. That's a premise for 20 years. PMM. Like that's like kind of a joke. Like it's a joke thing to come on TV and fucking say.
That's a premise for a sketch.
But like I don't think the hosts kind of know well enough
to be like a bro year.
What are you even fucking doing with your career at this point?
People don't have like the sort of the context
or like the confidence potentially
to just like point this out very clearly.
But he seems very confident,
and he has this kind of scoffing,
like, everything, every single thing that he says is wrong.
And it's like that sort of rich guy,
legacy admission, confidence,
that I think has carried him so far.
Yeah, what he needs from a media perspective
is he needs Jake T a media perspective is like he needs like Jake
Tapper on a bad day. Yeah, that guy will sometimes get like a dog with a bone and be like,
no, I asked you this. Yeah, someone who has to be willing to make it weird and uncomfortable.
Or Katie Curric, being like, sorry, what magazines do you read? What newspaper? This is the fourth time. Nema newspaper.
It's so fucking funny to me that that's what did it.
It was Sarah Baylin.
It's what he really is to me.
It feels like it's the Billy on the street approach to journalism.
Yeah.
She just ran up to her and was like,
Nema woman!
She's like, uh, uh, fuck.
So this marks the end of our journey
into anti-vaxx bullshit.
I did not want to do this,
but we're going to do another part of this,
specifically on COVID stuff,
where we're finally gonna get to the vitamin D trothers,
and like the weird hydroxy-
I'm so desperate to know what the fuck that means.
Ah, still you can't, you still can't Google,
you still can't Google.
I'm not gonna Google, but like I want to know.
But I wanna end with a quote from
Jonathan Burman's book where he's talking about
the anti-vaxx movement of the 1800s
and this continues to be very useful today.
He says, they started with a complex network
of personal reasons for objecting to vaccination
and approached the science as a source of prestige
that could be borrowed for their arguments.
From this viewpoint, no experiment can be well enough designed,
no controls, adequate, and no evidence convincing.
Yeah, and that is where we are with this, right?
They've literally had their day in court.
Yeah.
Yeah.
The entire scientific establishment has done everything they want
and they refuse to take yes for an answer.
I don't know, man.
This feels like a real, mmm, I'm trying to think of a,
sorry, you're trying to think of a joke to end with,
but you don't have one,
because I bummed you out too much.
That's right, I'm just gonna type in,
find the man, see?
Truth that.
All right, all right, all right.
Now you're holding your options. All right, fine, fine, fine, fine, fine, fine, fine. truth Thank you.