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Why Is The Science™ Seemingly Indifferent to Skyrocketing Autism and ADHD in Kids?

AP Photo/Susan Walsh

Anthony Fauci, embodiment of The Science™, jibber-jabbers nonstop about the important of manna-from-heaven vaccines to combat the deadly threat posed by a mostly innocuous coronavirus. The Brandon entity launched a multi-billion-dollar Cancer Moon Shot initiative to end cancer (my guess is that’s going nowhere except straight into the pharmaceutical industry’s coffers).

            Related: HHS Set to Roll Out Bird Flu Vaxes by the Millions

Yet these institutions and their representatives never seem to prioritize, or even mention, skyrocketing rates of autism and ADHD in children — which, if anything could be legitimately said to be a public health crisis, they are.

Which seems odd, given the stark numbers.

Via Journal of Clinical Child & Adolescent Psychology (emphasis added):

Approximately 1 in 9 U.S. children have ever received an ADHD diagnosis (11.4%, 7.1 million children) and 10.5% (6.5 million) had current ADHD. Among children with current ADHD, 58.1% had moderate or severe ADHD, 77.9% had at least one co-occurring disorder, approximately half of children with current ADHD (53.6%) received ADHD medication, and 44.4% had received behavioral treatment for ADHD in the past year; nearly one third (30.1%) did not receive any ADHD-specific treatment…

Pediatric ADHD remains an ongoing and expanding public health concern, as approximately 1 million more children had ever received an ADHD diagnosis in 2022 than in 2016.

A million new ADHD diagnoses in an eight-year window: is this a freak occurrence of nature or an act of God — or something with a more rational, earthly explanation that the Public Health™ authorities might be interested in looking more fully into?

Via Statista (emphasis added):

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), the prevalence of autism among U.S. children has risen significantly in recent years. While 6.7 in 1,000 children were diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) in 2000, that number had risen to 27.6 in 1,000 children by 2020. This means that currently 1 in 36 children in the U.S. get diagnosed with ASD, up from 1 in 150 children 20 years ago.

The reasons for this increase in prevalence are not fully understood and likely complex. Some possible factors that have been proposed include better awareness and screening for autism, changes in diagnostic criteria* and environmental or genetic factors. Regardless of the reasons, this rise in the number of children with autism highlights the importance of early identification and intervention to help children with ASD reach their full potential.

*Here we go again with the common argument that autism is more prevalent now from a statistical reporting perspective simply because it’s more diagnosed.

These people would continue saying this if 90% of the child population were autistic. It’s simple denialism because of an inability to cope with reality and unrelenting corporate and government propaganda that wants Americans to look anywhere but the food supply and perhaps — dare I even broach this topic? — pharmaceuticals.

CDC guidelines currently recommend twenty injections by the time a baby is six months old, a multi-fold increase in a matter of decades. It was a small handful in 1960. Do with that information what you will. 

I’m not making the claim that vaccines cause autism. I am claiming that something causes autism — be it increasing drugging of the American public in the name of medicine, the food supply, the water supply, tech addiction, or something else entirely.

I’m also claiming that the governing authorities and the corporate state media, which depends so heavily on pharmaceutical advertising, as it so happens, perhaps a coincidence or perhaps not, seem to have little to no interest in discovering what that something is — an odd oversight, again, for a presidential administration that prides itself on obsessing over “root causes” in the context of illegal immigration.

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