The McDowell triplets were developing normally and then, within hours after a vaccine shot, became severely autistic.
There are thousands of similar stories from parents all over the world of their child developing normally and then, hours to days after a vaccine, the child all of a sudden transitioned into exhibiting classic ASD behaviors, generally for the rest of their lives.
Yet there are no such stories of sudden onset autism happening in the week BEFORE a vaccine appointment:
Grok says this is because parents who noticed this have no reason to post their stories. But I said there are plenty of pro-vax parents who would like nothing more than to show that the anti-vaxxers are wrong. If any such a story existed, even if it was just a single one, I would be hammered with that story any time I posted on the topic of whether vaccines can trigger autism.
I asked Grok to explain the asymmetry.
Grok gave nearly exactly the same response it gave before, claiming that those experiencing rapid onset autism before a vaccine appointment have no “narrative hook” to post their story even after I pointed out the hook exists for both sides.
There are 15,000 pediatric practices in the US. Nearly every single one is run by pro-vax doctors. These practices would be expected to have the data on when the PARENTS first noticed rapid onset autism in their medical records.
If autism is not related to vaccination, we’d expect to aggregate the data and find that the rapid onset autism rates happened with equal rates before vs. after the vaccine appointment.
But as far as I can tell, there are no such pediatric practices with more rapid onset cases before the vaccine vs. after the vaccine. Most don’t want to look and when you ask them to look, they will refuse to look.
When researchers study these cases, they never request exact date of onset or the onset date relative to the nearest vaccination date.
Claude finds all of this very troubling (see my Claude conversation).
Claude finds the asymmetry compelling and is deeply troubled by the medical community refusing to look at the timing data and pre-maturely declaring that the science is settled.
The Taylor study found a higher incidence in autism reports 6 months after vaccination, but wrote it off as an “artifact.” Of course! Why didn’t I realize that! That explains it perfectly, doesn’t it? It was an artifact of imprecision.
From the paper:
“No significant temporal clustering for age at onset of parental concern was seen for cases of core autism or atypical autism with the exception of a single interval within 6 months of MMR vaccination. This appeared to be an artifact related to the difficulty of defining precisely the onset of symptoms in this disorder.”
The study was deliberately structured to avoid finding a signal. They didn’t ask for the DATE of onset, but simply asked for the child’s age (e.g., 18 months). They did determine DATEs of vaccination. So there is no possible way for them to determine if the autism happened before or after the shots. The deliberately construct these studies to find no signal and make fun of you if you question them on this practice.
The parents, in THOUSANDS OF CASES, have the exact relative dates between the nearest vaccine and autism. We know that because they post their experiences on X with precise recall. But scientists never request the dates so they can do the study.
I’m willing to put my money where my mouth is.
I shouldn’t need to do this. AAP should just survey their members and prove me wrong. They could do this with a single email to their members. We’d know instantly. Just ask the members to report two numbers: week before # and week after #.
Will they do this? I don’t think so.
The fact that they aren’t proactively jumping on this to prove they are right is troubling, isn’t it? A single email could settle this important issue and prove they are right.
I emailed their media relations for a response and will update this article if I receive a reply.
You can’t have tens of thousands of kids becoming rapidly autistic within 1 week after a vaccine appointment vs 0 kids regressing in the week before the appointment if there is no causality.
This is not a reporting artifact.
As far as I know, there is no pediatric practice in the world where the statistics are anything but severely lopsided for rapid onset autism.
And not a single mainstream autism expert will acknowledge the obvious asymmetry because none of them want to destroy their career. So they stay silent and keep recommending the shots.










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