Robert Kennedy Jr: Autistic people will never hold a job, pay taxes or write a poem

The whole “vaccines cause autism” lie was the gateway drug for like three generations of dangerous wingnuttery. Robert Kennedy Jr. was an early adopter of the lie, and that was the beginning of his larger anti-vaccine movement which has left thousands of dead people in its wake. Now Kennedy is Donald Trump’s Health and Human Services Secretary, and Kennedy is using the office to cancel flu shot research and encourage the spread of measles. On Wednesday, Kennedy gave a speech about autism which was full of dangerous lies and misinformation.

In remarks laced with scientific inaccuracies, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, said on Wednesday that autism was preventable while directly contradicting researchers within his own agency on a primary driver behind rising rates of the condition in young children.

Mr. Kennedy made his comments at a news conference, responding to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention showing that rates of autism had increased to one in 31 among 8-year-olds, continuing a long-running trend. Blaming environmental risk factors for the uptick, he accused the media and the public of succumbing to a “myth of epidemic denial” when it came to autism. He also called research into the genetic factors that scientists say play a vital role in whether a child will develop autism “a dead end.”

“Genes don’t cause epidemics,” he said. “You need an environmental toxin.” Mr. Kennedy vowed that under his leadership, the health department would focus on looking into certain substances, like mold and food additives, and parental obesity to try to reverse rising rates of autism in children.

“These are kids who, many of them, were fully functional and regressed because of some environmental exposure into autism when they’re 2 years old,” he said. Scientists have not ruled out the possibility that both genes and environmental factors could influence whether a child develops autism. Still, there is no evidence to suggest that autism can be avoided, and researchers immediately criticized the suggestion. Dr. Eric Fombonne, who is a longtime autism researcher and professor emeritus at Oregon Health & Science University, called Mr. Kennedy’s claim “ridiculous.”

“Autism is not an infectious disease. So there aren’t preventive measures that we can take,” said Dr. Joshua Anbar, an assistant teaching professor at Arizona State University who helped collect data for the C.D.C. report.

Though Mr. Kennedy did not specifically mention vaccines in his remarks on Wednesday, he has previously sought to tie childhood vaccinations to rising rates of autism. Dozens of studies have failed to establish a link between autism and vaccines. Nevertheless, the health department recently hired a discredited vaccine skeptic to examine the theory.

[From The NY Times]

Beyond the dangerous lies and bad science, Kennedy used his platform to engage in sweeping ableism towards people with autism, saying outright that autistic people can’t work, earn a living or pay taxes, and that autistic people and children are burdens on society. It’s perfectly clear (to me) where all of this is heading.

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Cover Images, Backgrid.

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118 Responses to “Robert Kennedy Jr: Autistic people will never hold a job, pay taxes or write a poem”

  1. OriginalMich says:

    Cripes. He is an insane jackass.

    Also, don’t they think Mozart had autism?

    • ML says:

      Elon Musk, who is in this administration, has autism. I do NOT find him a typical neurodivergent representative, but I DO think that RFK needs to square this with other members of Trump’s government and stop there.

      This is NOT okay!!!

      • OriginalMich says:

        Oh. Wow. You’re right. I forgot about him (lol!).

        Noted about Elon not being “a typical neurodivergent representative” His behavior over the last decade has everything to do with drug abuse and having his brain warped by money and power and nothing to do with being neurodivergent.

      • orangeowl says:

        We don’t know for sure if Elon is autistic. Even if he was, it’s no excuse for any of his monstrous behavior.

      • Kitten says:

        I think ML’s point is just the hypocrisy of it all. It’s like screaming about “merit-based hires” while stacking his cabinet with unqualified toadies. It’s like fuming about immigrants while allowing a guy from South Africa to run our country. It’s like alienating our European allies even as Trump is married to a woman who was born in Europe. It’s just their utter fucking exceptionalism. It’s not even cognitive dissonance–it’s just that their own ideological rules never apply to them.

        I don’t know if Musk is autistic or not but if he is, he should be offended by this. But he won’t be because he’s a Special Billionaire™ completely insulated from the worst policies of his administration.

      • Ashley says:

        Elon Musk does not have autism.

      • Houli says:

        Elon Musk announced a couple years ago that he was diagnosed with “Asperger’s.” It was about the time he hosted SNL. He *is* autistic.

      • hmm says:

        Elon Musk does have Autism. He has Aspergers, which is a form of autism.

      • Ashley says:

        Houli and hmm, I know the family personally. He is not on the ASD spectrum in any way at all. He says he is for narcissistic reasons. And if you don’t believe me, his daughter Vivian has written extensively on this.

      • Dutch says:

        And Elon Musk doesn’t pay taxes … so the logic tracks?!?

      • Megan says:

        I’m autistic. I played eight seasons for softball when I was a kid, I own a business that employs 20 people, I pay a shitload of taxes, I’ve been married for 32 years, I won a middle school poetry contest in 1983, and I have been wiping my own ass for 53 years.

      • HelloDannie says:

        Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg are also rumored to be on the spectrum, plus both associated with 🚫rump’s terrible cabinet

      • Nicole r says:

        I’m autistic, and I’m not sure why neurotypicals keep insisting Elon Musk isn’t…he clearly is. It’s so obvious he didn’t even have to announce it.
        It’s insulting that people don’t think someone could be both autistic and an asshole. We are actual people, with actual personalities.

      • knotk says:

        I knew the younger Elon and, yes, he does have Aspergers. Now, and unrelated to any neurodivergent diagnosis (which may have been helpful to him), he is just a Ketamine-riddled, narcissistic destroyer.

      • Jilliebean says:

        I don’t even believe he has autism- all the same lies spewed by people.

        He is just a narcissistic greed monger

      • Frankly says:

        Asperger syndrome is no longer a diagnosis and was named after a Notsee dr., so if everyone could quit using the term Asperger’s, that would be greeeaaaat.
        – Autistic mom of autistic adult

        Wiki –
        Asperger syndrome has been merged with other conditions into autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and is no longer a diagnosis in the WHO’s ICD-11 or the APA’s DSM-5-TR.

      • Friendly Crow says:

        Dear. God.

        Everyone please look into the Germany 1933 regimes establishment of “Asperger’s”.

        It’s also not a recognized diagnosis. The diagnosis is autism spectrum disorder. Disorder itself being under heavy contention as it’s not a disorder but a different neurological subset with incredible evolutionary benefits to both the world as a whole – animals, ecosystems and conservation – as well as to humanity.

        Almost every foundational leap in human knowledge in most fields was done by an individual who was highly probably autistic. Or at least presented many of the outward “traits” used to characterize it.

    • Dee says:

      My niece has autism and a PhD!

    • Josephine says:

      Those who present with symptoms that used to be classified as Asperger’s (now just considered part of the spectrum) can have astonishing writing skills; it can be one of the hallmarks used to diagnose those on the spectrum.There is evidence that the group includes, among many very famous writers, Emily Dickinson, you know, a poet. But he’s too stupid or too lazy to do his homework.

    • Friendly Crow says:

      The vaccines lead to autism myth has led to a heartbreaking truth.

      Parents would rather risk their child’s life than risk them “getting autism”. Death is preferable to autism. That’s the quiet part that they don’t say out loud.

  2. Amy Bee says:

    This is terrible and frightening.

    • Irish Eyes says:

      As mother of an autistic son, this is indeed frightening. My son was diagnosed aged 16, almost 20 years ago now. The headmaster of his primary school freely admitted that, during my son’s years there, autism was not something anyone really thought about, it is only through research and education that more children are being diagnosed, and so getting the help they need.
      And please note, Mr. Secretary, my son lives in his own home, drives his own car, works in an administrative position, cooks, cleans, plays saxophone, goes running with the athletic club, is a volunteer at the animal shelter and regularly visits the gym. Oh yes, he can also use the toilet by himself.
      Get your facts straight Sir.

      • Kitten says:

        Right. The increased diagnoses is simply due to the fact that we understand autism more now and we’ve broadened the definition to include a wider spectrum.

        My bestie’s son is neurodivergent and just made Dean’s list for his freshman year in college. It’s so gross to describe autistic folks as if they cannot have fully-functional, rich and productive lives. He’s a fucking monster.

      • orangeowl says:

        Yes. It is frightening. My son was diagnosed when he was very little. It was clear almost from day one of his life that he experienced the world a little differently than most typically developing kids. He has a master’s degree and recently did his taxes on his own, imagine that.

        He enjoys exploring new places, works out diligently and is full of laughter and fun. His life has been full of challenges, which he handles with determination and grace and it is no “less” than anyone else’s.

      • TOM says:

        My brother was a non-verbal man with autism. He died in January of this year, age 70. He worked in a recycling center, distributed those advertiser newspapers, refilled your bird feeders, weeded the town’s medians. He took calculus at the local community college. He watched “Bonanza” reruns and listened to Dixieland jazz. He picked up every flyer and brochure everywhere for his collection. He ate toast with honey for breakfast. He had family and he had friends. People loved how he smiled with his whole body. He loved and was loved. He lived in a group home. His life had value, whether or not he was a non-verbal man with autism. He was a human being.

      • UpIn Toronto says:

        HE IS VILLIFYING AUTISTIC AND NEURODIVERGENT PEOPLE

        This administration’s attack on the disabled is SICKENING!!!

        The only thing this administration respects is money and this is how they are attacking people w autism by lowering their value in the public eye. SHAME!!!

      • Giddy says:

        @TOM, your brother sounds as if he was a lovely, good-hearted man. He was obviously a much loved and much valued individual, who never hurt a soul. That is so much more than I can say about RFK jr.

      • Friendly Crow says:

        @Tom
        I’m so sorry for the loss of your brother. He sounds like an incredible human being who lived a full life. He gave back to his community not because it was required of him, but because he truly wanted to. That shows what kind of an amazing person he was. May his memory be a comfort and consolation.

    • SIde Eye says:

      One Redditor posted this comment this morning: “the road to fascism is paved with people who told you you were overreacting.”

      That one hit hard. How many times did we try to warn people to be labelled alarmist and gaslit?

  3. Brassy Rebel says:

    Eugenics. That’s the common thread for all of these horrible members of the regime. It’s disgusting and leads nowhere good for sure. As for this brain-wormed mf’er, he is singlehandedly destroying whatever good was left of his family’s name. His father by the end of his life was the polar opposite of his horrible namesake. It’s tragic that this is how most people will remember him.

    • Kitten says:

      It really is. And they’re not even subtle about it.

      • Lilly (with the double-L) says:

        Yes add to disgusting, evil and I rarely expect so called Christian values from so called Christians. But, I yearn for any type of kind, intelligent, inclusive values.

    • Kiki says:

      This.

    • Alarmjaguar says:

      It is totally eugenics and terrifying. But I’m curious how the anti-abortion wing of the party, which often argues that people get abortions rather than have special needs kids (which may or may not be true and is certainly too simplified, but bear with me) will respond to what RFK Jr’s remarks imply…
      Either way, he is absolutely gross all around.

    • bisynaptic says:

      🎯

  4. Nutella toast says:

    When the therapists explained my son was on the spectrum they told me, “if you ever need brain surgery, you better hope your surgeon is on the spectrum. If you get on a plane, you would be fortunate if the last mechanic was on the spectrum because everything would be meticulous. This will require seeing the world differently and it’s your job to prepare him for a world that doesn’t always understand hyper fixation or the need for order or linear emotions, but he has a place and value in the world and don’t let anyone tell you different”. I realize many kids are unable to live alone and require far more care but dammit – they are of no less value. Do NOT put your ableist racist crap on the back of our beloved family members.

    • Gilly says:

      Former orthopedic RN here.
      Two of the orthopedic surgeons at the practice I worked at were on the spectrum. Absolutely brilliant people with outstanding success rates. Those are the kind of brilliant minds you want analyzing your diagnostic imaging and performing your surgery.
      Was their bedside manner their strongest skill? No. But that’s where I came in, and the PAs assigned to each of them. We took care of the patient communication, that’s our best skill.

      • nutella toast says:

        @gilly thank you for this. Most of my favorite people are nurses and they really make the medical world go ’round – you are right that everyone has their skill set and we fill in the gaps for each other. I appreciate your compassion and support for persons on the spectrum and recognizing that their particular passions make the world a better place.

      • QuiteContrary says:

        My orthopedic surgeon is NOT on the spectrum, but he has a terrible bedside manner. I don’t care — he’s an excellent surgeon.

        People of all personalities and abilities have value. Their ability to pay taxes isn’t one of them.

      • Friendly Crow says:

        Surgeons – nt or nd – are universally know for atrocious bedside manner. 😂 thank the universe for nurses ❤️

        It’s hard to determine if people who are detached and clinical are more drawn to that profession or if it’s a cultivated psychological response. Cutting into a human being as a non psychopath requires a lot of emotional distance and even dissociation. It is fascinating regardless.

    • SIde Eye says:

      Everything you just said Nutella Toast! Thank you for this post.

  5. LooseSeal says:

    As a tax-paying business owner and published poet with autism, it’s not my limitations that concern me.

    • delphi says:

      As a tax-paying government worker and artist with ASD, I respectfully say to Wheezer Kennedy “F&@k you, sir. At least I don’t have brain worms.”

  6. CROWHOOD says:

    I hate to even engage in the “look at this important autistic person!” Conversation because the truth is, all people are important. I have A lot of differently abled family members and our family learned patience, humor, and perspective from each. I’m a better person for having them in my life.

    That said, Temple Granger anybody? She quite literally changed an entire industry.

  7. Genevieve says:

    I have a conspiracy-nut uncle and I still remember to this day when he made a comment about my brother being autistic (as well as developmentally delayed) because of vaccines. Well, joke’s on you, Uncle Idiot, because my whole family was flaky about vaccines for our whole early childhood, and my brother had had not one single shot.

    But we did have measles and chicken pox and whooping cough.

    But that’s a side note. Uncle Idiot was momentarily shaken, but not ultimately swayed from his commitment to ignorance. Neither will these people be able to process anything that doesn’t support their bigotry.

    I’d like to go on about all the wonderful and talented students I’ve had with ASD, but I’m mentally paralyzed. The “useless eaters” rhetoric is here, and I’m terrified (some more) for where the US is going.

  8. somebody says:

    So his thought process is that it is better to not vaccinate your child and have them die of a preventable disease than to have autism? It is wild to me that any parent would think that way. Who will be in his sights next? Older people who require care, no longer pay taxes and live longer so are a drain on social security (according to Musk)?

  9. Jay says:

    Yeah, we see exactly where this kind of rhetoric is heading. I always found this argument to be a strange one – there’s no convincing evidence that the MMR vaccine causes autism, but even if there were, I would still prefer that my child was protected against a deadly disease like measles.

    Also, for what it’s worth? RFK is trying to “prove” that people with autism are in some way less valuable as human beings because they “will never pay taxes, they’ll never hold a job, they’ll never play baseball, they’ll never write a poem”. You know who that describes perfectly? His boss, the tax-avoiding, orange nepo baby himself. He’s never been hired to work a real job. I would bet my life that he’s never played a team sport. Do we think he’s ever been inspired to write a poem? Of course, being on the spectrum doesn’t actually prevent you from doing any of those things (as I know from my own family), nor does it mean that your life isn’t worthwhile. I just thought it was interesting that Agent Orange himself would fail this “test”.

    • Ciotog says:

      My parents lost a child to a disease that we now have a vaccine to prevent. They also have a child on the spectrum (and truly, we all have some autistic/ADHD traits). I can tell you in no uncertain terms which of those outcomes they prefer. Also, vaccines don’t cause autism!

    • Pabena6 says:

      @Jay
      And according to people who worked on The Apprentice, he couldn’t exactly handle his own toileting needs, either.

  10. Amyb says:

    My daughter is on the autism spectrum. Like most women she was diagnosed later as her symptoms were not the same as boys and men and chalked up to other things or ignored. She works, pays taxes, and just got her license. RFK Jr comes from a family that took differently abled people out of the dark and brought them into the light. His aunt established the special Olympics. RFK jr. Is not a trust fund baby he is truly giant piece of garbage who will make day world better when he leaves it.

    • TigerMcQueen says:

      RFK’s Aunt Eunice might have founded the Special Olympics, but that was likely a reaction to his grandfather’s willingness to lobotomize, institutionalize, and never speak of his Aunt Rosemary again because she was mentally incapacitated and a potential embarrassment to the family. By all accounts, Rosemary’s siblings adored her (especially Teddy). Maybe RFK, Jr. got more of old Joe’s genes than his own father’s.

  11. HeatherC says:

    This angered me.

    My son is in his 20s. He is dual diagnosed autism and mental illness.

    He has a job. He pays taxes. He played baseball. He has a girlfriend.

    I know his family doesn’t talk to him, but he could open up a website and see his Aunt Eunice founded the Special Olympics where kids play baseball.

  12. Erin says:

    Has RFK, Jr done any of those things? Has he ever come by a job (and held it for a significant period of time) without using the Kennedy name? Has he paid his taxes honestly? Do I even have to ask if he’s ever written a poem?

  13. Bryn says:

    Jeez has he ever met an autistic person? In the end all the government is worried about is having citizens who can’t pay taxes.

  14. slippers4life says:

    This is the frog in a slow boiling pot of water analogy. This isnt just an idiot spouting nonsense. This is strategic and planned dehumanization. This is just one part of the overall plan to dehumanize anyone who isn’t white, male, heterosexual, cis gendered, and able bodied. Kamala Harris tried to tell everyone, but they didn’t want to listen.

    • SarahCS says:

      We’ve been here before and people need to keep screaming about that, they are not being subtle in their work and assuming they can keep steamrollering through while people shrug and complain about the price of eggs.

      Its the ‘first they came for’ principle in action and it’s terrifying.

    • Sid says:

      It’s not even a slow boil anymore. A crackhead eugenicist who is obsessed with AI now has full access to the names, adresses, medical, and school records of millions of people thanks to his band of snot-nosed hackers and the scammer in the White House who gave him free reign. History tells us exactly what they are going to do with that information.

    • DeltaJuliet says:

      My first thought upon seeing this (besides “what a jackass”) was, is this who they’re coming for after the Trans folks?

  15. kete05 says:

    I know people who have non verbal autistic children that voted for Trump. Make it make sense!

    Also, this is very Germany in the 1920’s. Perfect humans is the goal and anything less is to be destroyed. Very dangerous rhetoric.

    • Jaded says:

      Came here to say the exact same thing. Devalue everyone who isn’t white, rich and a perfect specimen, especially women of child-bearing age who are seen as baby factories. Ban vaccines, demean people on the spectrum, promote blatant racism, and let the weakest and poorest get weeded out through attrition. This is truly a scary time.

  16. Sid says:

    We are in a fight or flight situation fam. Please make sure you, your families, and your friends are preparing yourselves within your capabilities for what is needed to do one of those two things.

  17. Gilly says:

    This is scary because it goes back to Trump’s idealogy that everyone who isn’t a rich, draft-dodging pervert is a “loser.”
    Losers don’t pay taxes and enrich him & his ass kissing billionaire frenemies. They will double down on these “ideals” they hold.
    I know privatized healthcare has ruined all of us. But if our government would fund our healthcare our medical records would be less private than they already are. How do we keep maga from searching our med records for evidence of “losers” and denying them services or claims based on that bias?

  18. Mia4s says:

    I wish only bad things for RFK Jr. Truly I wish him only pain and misery. He is disgusting and dangerous.

    Well congratulations to the thousands and thousands of employed and productive adults on the spectrum who no longer have to pay your taxes I guess. /s

    This “epidemic” is so clearly advances and awareness in diagnosis there should be no debate. Those of us old enough remember. These kids were always there. They were, and I will be frank, the “weird kid in the back of the classroom”. Those who were low functioning were branded with the r-word and in separate classes. Anyone over the age of 40 who can’t put this together as is either lying or stupid.

  19. Missy says:

    I’m autistic. I work, pay taxes, I’m married, have kids, wow omg I’m composing this post right now!! Shock! And I got all my vaccines WHAT?? Quit using your own hatred to spread lies about my community.

  20. Anna says:

    Say good-bye to Autism and the entire IT industry will disappear. We wouldn’t have modern technology without autistic folks. There’s a reason why my husband’s brain works like a computer (he likes to say he is Linux in a Windows world).

  21. NotSoSocialB says:

    RFKJ is a eugenicist, just like Eloon.

  22. Mslove says:

    Eye contact is considered a threat by almost every member of the animal kingdom, except for neurotypicals.

    Methinks they are the unnatural ones and RFK Jr is a monster.

  23. Cheryl says:

    Medicaid and Medicare are not private. It is very scary to think that Doge or others could be reading medical records and deciding who should live or die.

    • Karma D says:

      Actually, Medicare IS private. It is “administered” through private health insurance companies. It is a different system in each state. I learned this when I moved to NH from ME. My Maine coverage lapsed, I wasn’t informed and suddenly I was uninsured. I tried to pay for an office visit by submitting a copy of my Medicare card when I received the bill. My Medicare card was useless. If I had had a medical emergency (I was 79 at the time), my family and I would have been out thousands of dollars!

  24. D says:

    My 11 year old autistic daughter, who is also years above her peers in academics, was showing repetitive behaviors as an infant. So no, she wasn’t “normal” and then became autistic suddenly at 2 years old. Many autistic children develop slower than peers so it’s around 16 months to 2 that you can really start to see the lag in motor skills and speech. Of course many kids mask or don’t have signs that seem significant until older or were once just considered quirky. Also there is no acknowledgement that the rates went up when they changed to one umbrella diagnosis of autism for things that were called Asperger’s or PDD NOS in the past.

    Also notice he blames the parents saying many are obese (I’m not) or they somehow expose just that one child to harmful environmental issues but not their other children? Quack nonsense said by a man who is not a doctor or a scientist!!!

    I’m enraged.

  25. EM says:

    As an Autistic tax attorney, I hate this guy.

  26. Chelsea says:

    Obviously Kennedy is a total wingnut beyond cognitive redemption. And his comments are hurtful and untrue. But I did have to comment on this statement: “Autism is not an infectious disease. So there aren’t preventive measures that we can take,” said Dr. Joshua Anbar, an assistant teaching professor at Arizona State University who helped collect data for the C.D.C. report.

    Actually, you can mitigate risks. Viral infection in third trimester is an increased risk factor, and it’s how researchers model autism in rodents. It’s one of the reasons that autism diagnosis corresponds to the flu season. So vaccines against the flu is a means to mitigate risk.
    I hate this administration, and my stupid provincial government in Canada (Alberta) is right on board with this bullshit.

    • Pabena6 says:

      I also saw a recent study that they think there’s a link between maternal diabetes and autism, including if the mother only has gestational diabetes.

  27. Aiglentine says:

    Has he never met anyone in the tech industry? The entire industry runs off the efforts of people on the spectrum. If you’re not on the spectrum, you will adopt some of the traits to succeed.

  28. Me at home says:

    Eff this dangerous wingnut. Temple Grandin, anybody? But apart from that, all humans are valuable. Even those with different mental abilities among us.

  29. Whalesnark says:

    What a winner. And THIS is why Cheryl Hines is so desperate to keep you all from him, ladies! She knows that with his looks, excellent judgement and huge brain that we’d be all over him given the chance.

  30. Eating Popcorn says:

    I wish he would go away.

  31. Michelle says:

    I’m on the spectrum and have held the same job for over 20 years. I pay my taxes and can easily write a poem. This whole government is a complete disgrace and destroying every good thing in the states. My Government is awful but i truly feel bad for my friends and good people across the pond.

  32. Giddy says:

    There is a fascinating autistic woman on TikTok named Nina Pool. She has created practically an entire industry around her observations. She reads ingredient lists of expensive skincare products and then finds their duplicates at the Dollar Store or Walmart. In the Dollar Store they now have signs up with a list of the products she recommends. On Amazon they advertise a package deal with her most valued products. This autistic woman, who RFK Jr would find has no value, is followed by millions of devoted fans, conquered TikTok, and created a whole new market for these lower cost products. Like many others, what Nina Pool recommends, I will buy. That is marketing power! I will never have the pleasure of meeting her, but I am a huge fan.

  33. square_bologna says:

    Roses are red,
    Violets are blue,
    The worms in your brain
    Made an @$$ out of you!

  34. schmootc says:

    He might as well just have stood up and said that he’s a monstrous huge ignorant jackass as given this ‘speech.’ Same thing.

  35. Tessa says:

    What a horrible thing to say.shame on him

  36. Grandma Susan says:

    I guess he forgot that his buddy, Elon Musk, claims to be autistic?

    • paintybox says:

      Yes. And honestly, he looks like a living nightmare. That photo – yeeesh – like his face is going to crack and an alien spider is going to come out and try to eat people’s brains.

  37. Walking the Walk says:

    At this point everyone needs to admit the Trump Administration wants to cleanse the U.S. from anyone not white, Christian, and “perfect.”

  38. LaurenAPMT says:

    My nephew was born autistic. It was clear as day from birth. To say that his parents are at fault for it by giving him vaccines is absolute BS and beyond insulting to them. RFK, Jr. can take his imaginary medical doctorate and shove it up his @$$.

  39. K8erade says:

    AuHD person with a Masters in Social Work on her lunch break. I work with other autistic children to help them become their most functional selves. RFK Jr can go straight f**k himself.

    I hope his “research” shows that autism is simply neurological evolution. But we know this is just his eugenics plan coming to formation.

  40. MsIam says:

    All of the things that R Freaking K mentions could happen to anyone who has a major stroke or a closed head injury as well as dementia. Are all these people “useless burdens” too? And so-called Christians support these monsters.

  41. Lau says:

    Bold from the guy with a worm-eaten brain.

  42. Maja says:

    I have the suspicion that these people are trying to let “nature” decide and that all the achievements of modern medicine are “awake” and should be abolished. For me, this is clearly about enforced “selection” by omission, just as fascists imagine a “healthy people’s body” as the result of omission. This is reminiscent of the beginnings of the radical eugenics of the National Socialists and is the most disgusting attempt to destroy our humanity and all the supposedly weak by omitting modern medicine.

  43. Karma D says:

    If autism is indeed a “disease,” as RFK alleges, is there a vaccine to be developed that we should give to babies?

  44. blue says:

    RFK should talk with Amy Schumer. She’s dsaid openly that her husband is autistic. He’s a noted chef, pays taxes, and they have a son.

  45. SenseOfTheAbsurd says:

    This is very, very sinister. We know where this goes.

    • Tre says:

      “they used to sterilize people with issues”. She was talking to me. She said it because some guy liked me or her! When I said “ why are you saying that” she instantly became unbrave and said “no reason”. She then ran outside.

      The whole reason President Regan and the governors was allowed to close mental hospitals was because they were being abused. Just locking up different people to hide them or steal from them.

  46. HelloDannie says:

    I’m autistic and pay too much in taxes, worked full time 20+ years, married 12 years, homeowner, write shitty poetry, played youth softball and use the restroom unassisted so WTF is he on about

  47. kirk says:

    Meanwhile, the American Medical Association (AMA) with a raft of lobbyists in D.C. keeps their silence. Pulling out of WHO? Why should AMA say anything? Prohibit the CDC from communicating with public? AMA is totally on board with shutting up CDC. Why worry about an E coli outbreak says the silent AMA. What’s the AMA even about you ask – besides collecting fees from doctors to join, and limiting scope for nurse practitioners? Huh.

  48. J.Ferber says:

    Hitler also put “mentally defective” people in concentration camps. All he is doing is widening the pool of those “homegrowns” to be deported to Salvadoran prisons and eventually our own
    “homegrown” concentration camps. Hispanics, undocumented or American citizens, are already on this list, obviously. And more will be included bit by bit. They are normalizing disposing of “useless” people and that definition can expand to include many more–TERRIFYING!!!

  49. bisynaptic says:

    RFK, Jr. can f—- all the way off.

  50. Tre says:

    Well, let’s be honest. A lot of people feel that way. I’m glad he brought it to light. Im neurotypical. People will gaslight you and lie in order to try and make you “less than”. It’s a prejudice. My life has been negatively affected because of this. People become defensive when they see an autistic person thriving.

    I have learned to watch what I say and rethink everything. People think we are superhumans and don’t feel pain!

    My advice to parents of neurotypical children is to teach them how to teach themselves. THEY MUST BE WELL-READ. THEY MUST HAVE A BROAD VOCABULARY.

    If you don’t believe me look at rfk jr. if someone told him an autistic person committed a crime more than likely his first thought would be “ probably”. It’s a cruel world when you are different.

  51. Tre says:

    Rfk jr looks different to me. He needs to have an mri and some test done. I say the same thing about dr Ben Carson. They have these far away looks and their voices are different. Rfk has always been out there but he even talks about his life-long topics differently.

  52. Northernlala says:

    I’m autistic. It’s who I am. It’s not a disease. I was born autistic. I’d like to find a cure for looking like a piece of shrivelled leather. I’ll take autism over being a sociopathic, serial cheating, piece of crap any day. All these ass*oles need to go extinct.

  53. Blubellah says:

    I know quite a few autistic young adults who do all of those things.
    Also, quite telling that he leads with they will “never be able to pay taxes.”

  54. T says:

    Garbage. The man and all the stuff that comes out of his mouth. Disgraceful, repugnant, vile. It’s horrifying that he has any position of power, but especially the position in HEALTH.

  55. StLuGal says:

    I’m not sure RFK knows what autism even is. It seems to me he is conflating maybe one end of the spectrum with severe developmental deficiencies, but most people are not that far on the spectrum and there hasn’t been an increase of those incidences anyway.

  56. AR says:

    There is no one to analyze! He is a typical flat earther (I don’t know how to translate that into English), meaning the earth is flat, otherwise everyone would fall off.🤣 That’s all he can handle with his deficient brain.

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