WE MUST NEVER FORGET! VACCINES KILL—NOW THEY’LL CALL ME A VACCINE DENIER. “Please, I am begging you—do your research. If you don't know where to start, start with the book 'Dissolving Illusions.” @RefugeOfSinner5 @RobertKennedyJr A long and heartbreaking story that no mother ever wants to tell. We must learn from others.
Claim | Result | Source Reference | Source Quote |
---|---|---|---|
Vaccines kill people. | rejected | https://apnews.com/article/fact-checking-442746112813 | Kirsch’s claim is not supported by data, according to Capobianco, who said the FDA “strongly disagrees with the analysis Mr. Kirsch put forth during the VRBPAC meeting, as we believe the data from VAERS that he referenced were not properly interpreted. This is due to the limitations of VAERS itself, as well as the limitations regarding certain private patient information that is not available to individuals outside of FDA and CDC.” |
Vaccines kill people. | inconclusive | https://www.bbc.com/bitesize/articles/zgfgf82?xtor=CS8-1000-%5BIn_Article_Promo_Box%5D-%5BNews_Promo_In_Article%5D-%5BNews_Promo_In_Article_BBCGeneric%5D-%5BPS_BITESIZE~N~zgfgf82~Covidvaccinemythsdebunked_2109_news%5D | |
People who question vaccines are called vaccine deniers. | rejected | https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2022/apr/25/anti-vaxxers-trust-diphtheria-polio-measles-jabs-covid-19 | Some find this term offensive: they may not be “anti” anything but have questions or concerns about a vaccine or vaccines. The reality is that vaccine hesitancy is a spectrum. At one end are the hardliners whose appetite for absorbing attention is insatiable but who are not for changing. At the other are those whose views are not yet permanently fixed. |
People who question vaccines are called vaccine deniers. | inconclusive | https://www.theguardian.com/science/audio/2020/dec/24/covid-19-vaccines-anti-vaxxers-conspiracy-theories-podcast | |
The book 'Dissolving Illusions' challenges mainstream beliefs about vaccines. | inconclusive |
🤖 Conclusion [10/100]: The primary claim of the statement is that vaccines kill people, and while the possibility of rare adverse events exists, overwhelming scientific evidence supports that vaccines are safe and effective, and the number of deaths directly attributable to vaccines is extremely low. The referenced sources explicitly reject the claim that vaccines kill, noting that misinterpretation of data (like VAERS reports) leads to false conclusions. The statement also implies that critics of vaccines are always called 'vaccine deniers,' but sources show this is an overgeneralization—there are many people who question or are hesitant about vaccination for a range of reasons and are not necessarily labeled as 'deniers.' As for 'Dissolving Illusions,' it is a book that challenges mainstream beliefs about vaccines, but no claim about its accuracy is substantiated by the sources. Therefore, the overall truthfulness of the statement is very low.