Tuesday, March 5, 2019

Not sure if I should laugh or cry.


So here's a link to YET ANOTHER major study verifying what the scientific community has known for a long time: there is absolutely no evidence whatsoever to suggest that measles vaccines cause autism. Case closed!

Except given the state our modern world is in - and not just America society, but many other countries in the world where we've been seeing measles outbreaks - will this make much of a difference to an ever-growing segment of the population that likes to make up its own facts and create its own belief systems completely unconnected to any empirical evidence? I fear that the answer to that might be..."not likely."

I'm as pessimistic as I am because I recently watched a fascinating, hilarious, frightening, absurd, disheartening documentary on Netflix called "Behind the Curve." It focuses on that other great modern derangement I've been writing about here, the flat Earth movement. The documentary is quite fair to the flat Earthers, actually, as it lets them tell their story in their own words. We see some of the thought-leaders of the flat Earth movement as they explain their beliefs and why they came to believe what they do.

Now the idea that the Earth is flat I will just leave in the same category as the "Pizzagate" conspiracy and the Qanon conspiracy. It is so staggeringly absurd that it's not worth spending the time addressing all of its claims.

What makes the documentary especially fascinating, though, is when we see how this monumental foolishness serves as a magnet, a community, and a surrogate family for people who are and always have been, for whatever reason, completely alienated from consensus reality and any organization or institution of expertise. We see these people congregate in online communities - when they don't get together at actual conventions - and spin their wild yarns of a massive, world-wide conspiracy to hide the truth about the real shape of the Earth. We also see how the people who make up this zany movement already have a propensity for paranoia and for living in their own self-made fantasy worlds. The stars, if you will, of the flat Earth movement profiled in "Behind the Curve," people like Patricia Steere or Mark Sargent, are also staunch believers in vast collection of other conspiracies, everything from 9/11 trutherism to flase-flag-attack theories and all the way to the vaccine conspiracy theories.

But a really sad part of this documentary is when we see people who take their kids to the flat Earth conventions, who teach them to believe in this archaic, utterly unrealistic load of demented nonsense. In my eyes, the behavior of those parents borders on child abuse. It borders on child abuse as much as the behavior of parents who refuse to give their children vaccines. It makes me want to scream that if children can be removed by authorities from families where they are beaten, starved, and tortured, why shouldn't they be taken away from parents who refuse to vaccinate them? Or who indoctrinate them in idiocy like the flat Earth beliefs. That, of course, will never happen. But sometimes it really makes me wish!

So what about our new study debunking the vaccines/autism link yet again? Is there reason to believe it will change minds?

I hope so.

But, then again, when we still have flat Earthers despite all the evidence...

6 comments:

  1. Why don't you try?!?! You libtard communist POS professors try and take our kids away b/c we refuse to be poisoned by the BIG Pharma Illuminati vaccines and you can wait for an uprising like the worlds never seen. That's a promise!

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  2. Dear Anonymous,
    I’m certain that the only uprising we will soon see is the coming backlash against the anti-science, anti-reason foolishness and creative fantasies of the conspiracy community. It’s too bad that it will take illness and death spread by the anti-vaccination movement to bring some sanity back to this culture.

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  3. Sure we're going to believe all the death panic and paranoia spread by the academic establishment funded by the government and Big Pharma. Not even close!! Sorry dear professor but a major fail on your part!!

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  4. Nope, it’s actually not a major fail in my classes at all. None of my students ever leave my classes believing in the dangerous lies of the anti-vaxxers. For that matter they don’t leave the class believing that the Earth is flat either or that 9/11 was an inside job. You also forgot to mention that the academic establishment is funded by Nazis living in bases on the dark side of the moon.

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  5. Dear Dr. Barna and all of your sheeple readers:
    Please see what a truth bomb is and when the lights go out of anti conspiracy elitist professors. Game over! BTW...if this post is removed the article about you will a very long life all over the internet.
    http://stateofthenation2012.com/?p=118942

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  6. Dear R.C.,
    Let me tell you what a truth bomb is not. It is NOT whatever a conspiracy theorist chooses to write on his web page or blog without any evidence to back it up. Links to other allegations of conspiracies are NOT evidence and are not a form of research. Evidence, or “truth bombs,” must be in the form of testable empirical evidence, preferably research that has been checked and double checked according to the impartial, peer-reviewed scientific process. So I’m sorry, but the information in the State of the Nation page is not a truth bomb. The links they present in their piece about me are not persuasive. And obviously you can see that I am not deleting your post to “censor” you or “oppress” you. Incorrect, illogical arguments like yours and those of State of the Nation will be recognized as such and rejected on their own merits by the majority of sensible people that make up this world.

    ReplyDelete