RFK Jr. Completely Shatters The Media’s Favorite Lie About Autism
He brought the hard data and dropped one undeniable truth the denialists can’t explain
HHS
Secretary Robert Kennedy Jr. appeared on Hannity Thursday
evening and unloaded on the predominant autism narrative. It started with a
bombshell reveal from Kennedy’s own childhood.
Hannity
asked: “What was the number when you were a kid—and what do you think is going
on?”
Kennedy
replied: “There’s really good data on that.”
He pointed
to one of the largest studies ever conducted—900,000 children in
Wisconsin, published
in a top-tier medical journal.
“It looked
at 900,000 kids. It was published in a high-gravitas journal, peer-reviewed
study, and they found the rate to be 0.7 out of 10,000.”
That’s less
than 1 in 10,000. Today? It’s around 1
in 31.
Let that
sink in.
That’s when Kennedy sounded the alarm on what’s happening now—and why it’s so catastrophic. He said the rise isn’t just in frequency—it’s in severity.
“Two years
ago, it was 1 in 36. The CDC data we released this week shows 1 in 31,”
Kennedy said.
“The worst
state is California,” Kennedy continued, “which actually has the best
collection methodologies. So they actually, probably reflect what we’re
seeing nationwide.”
“In
California, it’s 1 in every 20 kids, and 1 in every 12.5 boys,” he
explained.
Even worse,
he said the numbers are likely underreported in minority communities. And for
many kids, the symptoms are devastating:
“About 25%
of the population of those kids with autism, about 25% of them are nonverbal,
nontoilet trained,” Kennedy explained.
“They have
all of these stereotypical behaviors, the head banging, biting, toe walking,
stimming, and that population is growing higher and higher.”
“It’s
becoming a larger percentage, so we’re seeing many more cases that are now
linked to severe
intellectual disability.”
He says it’s
a glaring red warning sign—and it’s past time to start acting on it.
And this was the moment that Kennedy took a flamethrower to the media narrative about autism. He shattered the core excuse we’ve all been fed—that this epidemic isn’t real, that it’s just a change in how we count it.
He’s not
buying it.
“The media
has bought into this industry canard, this mythology, that we’re just seeing
more autism because we’re noticing it more. We’re better at recognizing it or
there’s been changing diagnostic criteria.”
But the
scientific literature, Kennedy said, says otherwise.
“There is
study after study in the scientific literature going back, and they decided
that the literature going back says decades that says that’s not true.”
He then
cited a major investigation by California’s own lawmakers.
“In fact,
the California legislature… asked the Mind
Institute at UC Davis to look exactly at that topic. They [asked], is it
real or are we just noticing it more? The Mind Institute came back and said,
‘Absolutely this is a real epidemic. This is something we’ve never seen
before.’”
And he made
it painfully clear:
“Anybody
with common sense, Sean, would notice that, because the autism—this epidemic is
only happening in our children. It’s not happening in people who are
our age. And if it was better recognition, you’d see it in 70-year-old men.”
But we don’t.
And after
laying out the data, dismantling the media narrative, and exposing the severity
of the crisis, Kennedy concluded with a clarion call to get to the bottom of
this epidemic.
That’s why
he says it’s time to dig deeper—leave no stone unturned, and we may have
answers sooner than you think.
“President
Trump asked me to find out what’s causing it,” he told Hannity.
“And I am
approaching that agnostically. We are looking at everything, we are going to
do, we’re going to be very transparent in how we design the studies.”
To get real
answers, he’s farming the research out to top institutions across the
country—with full transparency from day one.
“We’re going
to farm the studies out to 15 premier research groups from all over the
country. And we’re going to be transparent about our protocols, about the data
sets, and then every study will have to be replicated.”
The list of
possible factors is long—and nothing is being ruled out, Kennedy explained.
“We’re going
to look at mold. We’re going to look at the age of parents. We’re going to look
at food and food additives. We’re going to look at pesticides and toxic
exposures. We’re going to look at medicines. We’re going to look at
vaccines. We’re going to look at everything.”
When asked how long it would take, Kennedy didn’t miss a beat.
“I think
we’ll have some preliminary answers in six
months. It will take us probably a year from then before we can have
definitive answers because a lot of the studies will not go out until the end
of the summer.”
For the
first time in decades, someone is asking the hard questions—and demanding real
answers.
This time,
nothing is off-limits.
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