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The health secretary, Robert F. Kennedy Jr., says he wants to understand what causes autism. It’s a perfectly laudable goal and one that scientists have been pursuing for decades. But after announcing a large new federal study on the topic, he made a shocking choice by bringing in the vaccine critic David Geier as a researcher.

In the scientific community, Mr. Geier is infamous for the deeply flawed studies he conducted with his father, Mark Geier, claiming that vaccines cause autism. Researchers have long called attention to the serious methodological and ethical defects in their work.

The Geiers once created an illegitimate review board for their research, composed of themselves, family members and business associates. They also promoted the drug Lupron, used for chemical castration and prostate cancer, as a supposed treatment for autism, charging $5,000 to $6,000 monthly for unproven therapies. As a result, Mark Geier’s medical license was ultimately revoked or suspended by all 12 states in which he was licensed, and David Geier was fined for practicing medicine without a license.

Because of David Geier’s track record and the fact that Mr. Kennedy has said he believes that autism is caused by vaccines, many public health experts think that the upcoming study may echo the same flawed science. We’ve broken down the anti-vaccine research playbook to help you spot the telltale signs of shoddy studies and show why Mr. Geier is such a divisive choice.

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[-] TehPers@beehaw.org 7 points 2 weeks ago* (last edited 2 weeks ago)

If this were true (big if because we know it isn't), and it could be proven that autism is purely a genetic disorder, then you could very easily argue that vaccines could cure autism too.

They could theoretically also cure down syndrome, DiGeorge syndrome, and other genetic disorders, assuming deletions are reversible in some manner.

Also, vaccines could then be used to change someone's chromosomes between XX and XY.

Wait. I think I found why they hate vaccines now.

this post was submitted on 19 Aug 2025
30 points (94.1% liked)

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