Raw Story reports:
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) drew instant ridicule on Monday when she posted a repeatedly debunked claim linking vaccines to autism. “I fully believe vaccines cause Autism,” Greene wrote on X. “It’s another example of crimes against humanity. And innocent babies, children, and their families are the victims.”
A community note posted after Greene’s X post provided a lengthy trove of links to scientific literature debunking the purported connection between vaccines and autism. The Georgia congresswoman, who first rose to notoriety for being a proponent of the QAnon conspiracy theory, received instant backlash from many of her followers for her claim.
Read the full article. As you can see below, Greene is responding to X’s arguably most prominent QAnon nutbag, who has spread countless batshit claims and has nearly half a million followers.
I fully believe vaccines cause Autism.
It’s another example of crimes against humanity.
And innocent babies, children, and their families are the victims. https://t.co/uR4T1kEsoX
— Marjorie Taylor Greene 🇺🇸 (@mtgreenee) December 16, 2024
Marjorie Taylor Greene has also believed:
• Sandy Hook was staged: https://t.co/hYQC0SPuee
• The 2018 California wildfires were set by Rothschild associates from outer space: https://t.co/R1CCDnvQK1
• The 2024 eclipse was “God telling us to repent:” https://t.co/PWMODJzKdP https://t.co/g5cFOUpZfS
— Frank Luntz (@FrankLuntz) December 16, 2024
Vaccines do not cause autism and this has been proven over and over and over again.
One fake study by a now former physician with manipulated data is not going to ever change this fact.
Vaccines do not cause autism. https://t.co/CQ7lyLiCJB
— Yashar Ali 🐘 (@yashar) December 16, 2024