Vaccines CAUSE Autism! - Steve Kirsch on "Redacted News" Sept. 8, 2025
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Well, RFK Jr. is reportedly about to drop a hammer on autism, connecting Tylenol, acetametaphen pushed on newborns for decades, that it's now linked to over uh almost more than half of all autism cases in the United States.
So get ready for Bobby Kennedy to drop that hammer.
The study shows that mothers who took Tylenol while pregnant.
I think the number is 300% increase in autism.
But it's remarkable.
So we're going to wait on that one.
But first, we had some breaking news just a short time ago, right before our show today, President Trump posted an unbelievable post on Truth Social.
A lot of people thought it was uh fake, but no, it was real.
He posted it on his own Truth Social account, a short video featuring a doctor who claims that all vaccines are essentially have some form of poison or toxin in them.
Steve Kirsch from the Vaccine Safety Research Foundation also fell off as chair.
Actually, I don't know if that's true, uh, when he saw this.
Um, who's been Steve has been fighting for truth on this subject for for his most of his life, uh, has given his life to this subject.
Steve, first on that, before we talk about RFK and Tylenol, like what's your thought about President Trump posting this video about poisons and toxins and vaccines?
Uh certainly surprised me.
And when I saw it, I thought, could that be fake?
Uh it's been reposted on X. And uh, yeah, so it's it's legitimate.
And uh he has uh uh a uh good backing to be concerned, and uh we'll we'll see uh what comes of that.
Um, but definitely the science is there showing that uh vaccines uh uh uh can contain things like um thimerosol and aluminum, which get into people's brains and and they stay there.
Then uh Professor uh Christopher Xley has been studying this for decades, and he finds that people who have autism when they die and they can uh cut their bodies and look at their brains, and they've never seen uh uh accumulations of aluminum that are as high as they are in people with autism.
So there's definitely a connection there.
Well, what the liberal media will say is that it's damaging to say this at all to ask these questions.
They act like vaccines are a protected class, like veterans or lesbians, or you can't say anything against those types of things.
But vaccines are not a protected class.
They were never studied in combination.
Doctors willy-nilly decide which ones to give at any given time, and we have no study behind that.
And so what would you say to the liberal media that treats you like a baby and says you can't put these doubts in your head, we shouldn't ask these questions.
Oh, well, you know, science is all about questioning uh what the facts are, and and we should never be taking things for granted as a scientist.
And so it's just a really, really important that we look at the data and we follow what the data says, not what people believe.
And for very for way too long, we've been following what people believe.
And so, for example, the belief is that vaccines don't cause autism, and yet um we have a study that was done by the CDC back in 2004.
And we have testimony from William Thompson, the CEC scientist who was in charge of that study, saying he was ordered to destroy all the evidence that linked vaccines and autism.
And we're not talking about just regular evidence here.
We're talking about statistically significant evidence.
And so when the CDC found an association back in 2000 between vaccines and autism, they ordered the scientists to delete um and actually that they had a little uh meeting where they had a uh trash bin and everybody was supposed to put their documents that showed that vaccines uh the vaccines were linked with autism in that trash can so that they could then destroy the contents of the the trash can.
So that was the way that the CDC dealt With evidence that it didn't like.
Now, most people would think that that's not very scientific, and they would be correct.
That is not the way science is supposed to operate.
That is extremely corrupt, and no science should be done that way.
So, Steve, let's talk about Tylenol.
And I see can see in our chat room, people are confused about this Tylenol segment.
Um, or the specifically what what RFK is about to come out and talk about because people are saying, no, no, no, it has it probably has nothing to do with Tylenol, it's all about vaccines.
But I think what our RFK is going to talk about with Tylenol being linked to autism is that they they're in tandem.
That it's vaccines on the one hand, potentially, yes, causing these problems, but also Tylenol, yes.
The combination of which I don't even want to think about.
So can you talk about that?
They're not mutually exclusive.
We're not just saying, hey, the problem isn't vaccines at all.
Tylenol is just also another huge problem, it seems, right?
No, that's correct.
But they're not, it's not Tylenol is not an independent problem.
It's linked.
So if you were to just get vaccines, you can get autism.
If you get a vaccine and then you get uh inflammation, you get a fever, and your doctor prescribes Tylenol for that, that actually makes things worse.
So there's going to be a connection between Tylenol and autism, but it's not the root cause.
You can't just take Tylenol and become autistic.
The Tylenol is simply amplifying your chances.
It's like getting an additional bite at the apple to become autistic.
And the aut the Tylenol essentially just raises your chances of becoming autistic.
And so it's kind of a one-two punch.
Within a certain time frame of getting the vaccine, if you take Tylenol as a response.
Because generally within uh it has the fever happens within uh within 24 hours uh after you get the vaccine, you take the Tylenol, and that just makes things worse.
So it's very temporal to the vaccine.
You take that you take Tylenol at other times, it's much less likely to result in in autism.
Okay.
And and so and what's so unbelievable to me is that so many pregnant women are just kind of handed this at the hospital, you know, they're just they're just given this.
So when we talk about like the pregnancy side of this and women who who are pregnant, they're they're given this.
Well, what part of that is tied to, I'm just curious, like the the vaccine piece of this, you know, because this seems to be a major concern, at least from the reports, that it's pregnant women specifically being given this this Tylenol.
Well, it's not the Tylenol is really uh uh affecting the child.
It's when the child gets vaccinated and takes the Tylenol.
It's not so much in uh a pregnant woman.
No, uh yeah.
Okay.
Because when you take your child to get a vaccine, they will say, if they get a fever, you can give them Tylenol, but don't take an advil or something like that because you want to have an inflammatory response.
So Tylenol does not reduce inflammation.
Uh, an advil or a motor or something of that that class will.
And so they are telling, they tell you specifically that that is an acceptable response to a fever caused by vaccine.
And and it's just about it's the basically the worst thing that you can take.
And so I think that what's going to be revealed is this connection between autism and Tylenol, but uh there's no doubt that the vaccines are causing uh are the root cause of autism.
So he's taking it, I think one step at a time here.
And uh, you know, there's the things like the McDowell triplets that there's I'm not aware of any time in history, in human history, in the entire human history where triplets became autistic within hours of each other.
And the only time that that has happened that I'm aware of, is within hours after taking a vaccine, where the the triplets are vaccinated.
They're all vaccinated at the same time.
And then without within hours of each other, the triplets all become suddenly autistic where they were totally normal before.
Now, there's no way you can explain anything like that.
You know, this is a rare event, and it just so happens that it happened within about two hours or so after the triplets were given a vaccine.
And it's uh simply uh defies uh credibility to think that it's anything other than the vaccines uh causing that autism.
So we have the Tylenol piece, and I think you're right.
Maybe this is like the sort of canary in a coal mine thing.
We're gonna get the Tylenol bit out there.
And also find it very curious, and then we'll then we'll move on to vaccines, maybe it seems like that's what RFK is doing here, but I don't I don't know exactly.
But I find it interesting, Steve, that back in 2023, Johnson and Johnson spun off Tylenol from their main holdings and formed a new LLC under which to house Tylenol.
It's almost as if they knew this was coming.
I don't know.
I just find it very curious that they decided to spin this off and protect it legal shield liability underneath another LLC, don't you?
I uh it's uh that's like uh Deborah Burks going to Texas and having the measles outbreak just happened to be in the town in Texas where Deborah Burks is has moved to.
So there's some interesting coincidences that happened, and we often find that these coincidences are are not just uh coincidences, but uh there's something behind them.
So in this case, it seems pretty likely that they did that in order to uh shield themselves from liability to re reduce any kind of liability that they may have.
Well, can I can I ask a question really quick of Steve?
Yeah, go ahead, David.
So I don't I know Steve, you've studied the Amish community extensively.
Like, do they deal with autism the same the same way we do?
I don't know how they deal with autism because there's so little of it in the Amish community.
So I traveled to Pennsylvania to uh talk to them personally and uh uh you know meet them in person, see how they live, and uh uh and get to know them.
And uh there's and I couldn't find an autistic child who um who is not vaccinated, right?
Because not all Amish children are fully unvaccinated.
A large number are, but there's some children that are vaccinated, but I couldn't find an unvaccinated Amish child who has autism.
And so, you know, people should be studying that to say, hmm, what's what's different?
And should we study Amish children who were vaccinated versus Amish children who are not vaccinated?
That study just never seems to get done.
But we know because there's a I know of a clinic and they're located in the United States.
I won't say where, because they don't want the doctors to have their medical license revoked.
But these doctors recommend to their to the parents, do not vaccinate your child for anything.
And every parent that took that advice, none of their kids were autistic, became autistic.
And this is over 25 years, and this is in a community where the autism rates are uh are the highest in the nation.
So how is it that this one little clinic which does one thing differently, which is to say, don't vaccinate your kids.
They have no autism in 25 years.
And of course, we can't tell the story about it because they don't want to get outed and have their medical licenses taken away because that would be a disservice uh to their uh uh to their patients and uh and to the community.
So the story basically uh is is not told in the medical literature.
No, I'm noticing again how you know mainstream politicians are reacting to RFK Jr. just today, Liz Warren, Senator from Massachusetts, is going crazy about indications that RFK Jr. might limit access to the abortion drugs.
And she says on X, the abortion drug is absolutely safe, and this is misinformation.
But there is a lot of indication that Mephistoprone, I think is how you say it, has high levels of complications.
Why can she just Say this.
That's misinformation to say that this is unequivocally safe.
The fact that a U.S. senator can just say this, there's not a community note, as far as I know on this on this post yet.
Doesn't it make you crazy bonkers bananas that they can say things like this while ignoring real world data of harm?
Well, I I would love to appear before a Senate panel and ask them those questions.
They tend to switch it around to say, hey, we're asking the questions here.
Like when Bobby Kennedy in his hearing, he tried to ask questions of the senators, and the senators simply flatly refused to answer any of his questions that he threw back at them.
So that tells you a lot.
But yeah, I would love to be able to question these senators as to what evidence do they actually have where to back these claims that are absurd.
You know, the most the most egregious, of course, is that vaccines don't cause autism.
And they'll wave these papers saying, well, Mr. Kennedy, look, there are these 10 papers that show that no link between vaccines and autism.
But you see, a paper that finds no link is just a flawed study that's unable to find evidence of a link.
It's like uh a detective on a on a murder scene, he doesn't find a killer.
That doesn't mean there wasn't a killer.
That just means that he wasn't able to find it.
And these studies are deliberately designed not to find a signal.
So the you know, the studies in in Denmark uh uh, for example, well, you know, the the autism, you know, typically it's diagnosed at a fairly young age, but in Denmark it's diagnosed at a at a different age, and the vaccine schedule is different in in Denmark as well.
And so trying to thinking that you can replicate a study that was done in the US and then failing to replicate it in Denmark doesn't mean anything.
But most people don't know that because most people don't know the Danish system.
So it looks like, oh, they couldn't replicate, they couldn't find a link between vaccines and autism.
It's there, and it's there in spades.
I know a uh Dr. Holstead, Dr. Doug Holstead in in California, he had uh 44 cases of autism in his practice where the autism happened kind of overnight.
In other words, the kid is just normal and then within a day uh just exhibits extreme signs of autism.
And in those 44 cases, in every single one of them, they happened within a week after the child was vaccinated.
Not a week before, but a week after.
That's like flipping a coin 44 times and getting heads each time.
It's that's not a fair coin.
It means that that something caused that, and the only possible link there uh is the vaccines.
I yeah, I have yet to find a child who became autistic right before their their wellness check.
Right.
Nicholas Holscher, um, doctor, he's an ep epidemiologist, uh, administrator at the McCullough Foundation.
He I think you know him well.
He's gonna be at the Senate hearing tomorrow.
And he just tweeted that he is about to unveil a long-hidden vaccinated versus unvaccinated study.
And he says it's over for the vaccine cartel.
What do you any thoughts on that before we let you go, Steve?
Uh I tried calling Nick earlier today and he uh just got his voicemail, so maybe that's the reason he's probably on a plane to DC, though that would explain it.
Um, but yeah, he's a he's a great guy.
Um, we talk often.
He didn't mention this to me, so uh so I guess they're keeping it pretty under wrap.
So uh this is uh I I think this will be uh some pretty damning evidence.
Uh but you know, the there have been all these studies um that that show uh that vaccinated kids have higher rates of autism, uh ADHD, um uh chronic diseases, uh they have uh sexual orientation issues, and and there's such a long list of of things that are associated with vaccination that that people don't realize.
Um the allergies uh, for example, uh strongly linked to uh uh to vaccination.
So lots of these things, lots of these chronic diseases are all linked to autism, which is why kids who had don't have any in every single study.
There have been 10 studies in the peer reviewed literature in 100% of those studies comparing the fully vaxxed versus fully unvaxxed, the unvaxxed kids are always healthier on every single metric that they look at.
Wow.
Well, I think the dam is finally starting to break.
And uh, you know, obviously, with a lot of thanks to you and what you guys have been doing at the Vaccine Research Center and being able to get this message out there, Steve.
Um, thank you for your continued work on this.
And you know, with having the Vaccine Safety Research Foundation like pushing out, like, hey, we're just asking questions.
Like, why are we not allowed to ask questions?
That's at the heart of it, right?
And more importantly, is why won't anyone answer them on camera?
We can't have a discussion on camera uh with anyone about these issues.
You know, I've got a friend at the CDC press office, and I said, hey, I'd like to be able to just I've I've got some pretty critical questions that I would love to have someone at the CDC answer as to, you know, for example, hey, what study are you guys relying on where you think that the vaccines are actually saving lives?
Because every single study I'm aware of are are extremely fraud, flawed.
So where's the study that is that was well done where you actually looked at the non-COVID all-cost mortality of the unvaccinated to make the claim that the vaccine saved lives, because I sure as heck can't find one.
And I asked for this, the answer to these questions about two months ago, and I've still received nothing.
Jeez.
Well, because they don't have it.
Yeah, right.
That's at the heart of it, Steve.
You know that.
Uh propaganda works, though, right?
And they call you anti-vaxxer.
Absolutely.
Anyway, Steve, great to see you.
Thank you so much for this.
Um, we really appreciate it.
And uh, we'll be watching what happens at the Senate hearing this week.
And we'll be watching what happens with Tylenon autism in September.
It's gonna be very busy September, so keep your phone ready.
We're gonna we're gonna have you back on in the next few weeks.
Definitely will be, but she'll be an exciting month, Clayton.
Thank you.
Yeah.
Thanks, Steve.
Great to see you.
All right.
Coming up.
Yeah.
Go ahead.
Yeah.
I'll say what's coming up.
Yeah, please.
I'll take a drink.
Uh coming up, we're gonna talk about what sex torsion is, why the uh US government is warning that you should talk to your kids about it.