The RFK Jr. Playbook
Deny excellent studies, promote poor studies, and call anyone who disagrees with you a shill for Big Pharma
In 1998, Andrew Wakefield, a now discredited doctor in the United Kingdom, published a paper claiming that the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine caused autism. Wakefield’s paper wasn’t a study; it was a report of eight children who had recently received an MMR vaccine and developed autism. The paper was eventually retracted when it became clear that Wakefield had falsified clinical and biological data.
Despite the fraudulent nature of the paper, Wakefield had raised a question: “Does the MMR vaccine cause autism?” This was a scientific question best answered in a scientific venue. And it was. More than a dozen studies performed in seven countries on three continents involving tens of thousands of children found that children who had received the MMR vaccine were not at greater risk of autism than those who hadn’t.
On January 30, 2025, the issue of vaccines and autism resurfaced during Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s confirmation hearing for Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS). In his opening statement, RFK Jr. said that more children are now suffering from chronic diseases than ever before. Later, he gave a specific incidence: 1 in 36, which is the incidence of autism spectrum disorder in the United States. For years, RFK Jr. had been paid by his organization, Children’s Health Defense, to convince the public and the media that vaccines cause autism. During his confirmation hearing, he used three strategies typical of personal-injury lawyers paid to represent a position.
Strategy #1: Deny the existence of studies that don’t support your position. Senator William Cassidy (R, LA) asked RFK Jr. to reassure parents that vaccines don’t cause autism. “If the data is there,” said Kennedy, “I will absolutely do that.” Senator Bernie Sanders (I, VT) was surprised by RFK Jr.’s answer, pointing out that “dozens of studies done all over the world make it very clear that vaccines do not cause autism.” Still, Kennedy refused to acknowledge them.
Strategy #2: Promote any study that supports your position, no matter how poorly done. Toward the end of the hearing, RFK Jr. offered a “high quality” study that he believed proved his point that vaccines caused autism. The study, which included 9-year-old children enrolled in the Medicaid program in Florida, was critically flawed:
1) It was published on a Word Press Blog, not in a medical or scientific journal.
2) It was “peer-reviewed” by Peter McCullough, a well-known anti-vaccine activist.
3) Both study authors had previously published studies on vaccines that were retracted.
4) The study was funded by the National Vaccine Information Center, an anti-vaccine group.
5) The authors failed to determine whether their “unvaccinated” children had been vaccinated outside of the Medicaid system, such as through the Vaccine for Children’s Program.
6) The authors ignored confounding factors such as healthcare-seeking behavior. Parents who choose not to vaccinate their children might also visit the doctor less frequently, causing the diagnosis of autism to be missed.
7) The authors didn’t determine whether the diagnosis of autism was made before or after the first vaccine was given.
These methodological flaws rendered the paper meaningless, begging the question why RFK Jr. chose it to counter the dozens of other studies that had been well controlled, peer reviewed, and published in excellent journals.
Strategy #3: Say that anyone who disagrees with you is a shill for Big Pharma. During the Senate hearing, RFK Jr. claimed that Senator Bernie Sanders, who had subjected him to tough questions, had received “millions of dollars from the pharmaceutical industry to protect their interests.” In truth, Sanders hadn’t received a penny from pharmaceutical company executives. RFK Jr.’s claims of Big Pharma influence reached the level of parody when he was asked to comment on a letter signed by 77 Nobel Prize winners stating that he would put American public health in “jeopardy.” RFK Jr. quickly responded that the senators should check the Nobel Prize winners “conflicts of interest.”
Should he be confirmed, RFK Jr. will no doubt continue with his playbook to promote false claims about vaccine safety. This time, however, it will be written on the letterhead of the Secretary of HHS. Under RFK Jr.’s leadership, will new parents feel comfortable vaccinating their children?
Since there are several large studies now demonstrating that there is no difference in the rates of autism between vaccinated and unvaccinated children, this obviously means that there are some unvaccinated children diagnosed with autism. How does Kennedy explain that? Or does he just deny this inconvenient fact? As the number of unvaccinated children increases, the number of unvaccinated children with autism will grow. Somebody should do a long-term study on unvaccinated children and document all the disabilities they have, including autism. Autism has been with us since long before vaccines, even if we didn't always identify it correctly, and eliminating vaccines will not magically eliminate autism, no matter how much we wish it so. I wish some good sleuthing reporter would research and write about all the unvaccinated kids with autism.
The irony of Offit. Thank God RFKjr, and not this jab fanatic. Offit projects his own special denial of excellent studies, promotes his pure propaganda, and calls anyone who disagrees with with is BS a "Aids denialist", "Climate denialist, blah, blah--all the standard ad homium attacks. Offit traffics in the greatest medical lie: Before vaccines and antibiotics, millions died. The truth? Deaths from infectious diseases had already dropped to zero or near zero. Think about it. See link below:
https://substack.com/@romanbystrianyk/note/c-86518624?utm_source=notes-share-action&r=ege8u
GO RFKjr!! Show us the real data!!!