No, I'm saying that people weren't diagnosed with ADHD at the turn of the century because it literally had not been discovered. Some people just had kids that were more hyperactive or less focused than others, and that's just the way it was until it was discovered to be a clinical condition. Just like anxiety, depression, etc.
I'm not handwaving anything away, brain science wasn't much of a thing before vaccines were a thing, and you're just deciding that correlation equals causation, because they happened to have massive advances in brain study post-vaccine era. Tons of people probably had autism too, but they weren't diagnosed with a specific mental disorder, they were just institutionalized or exterminated with the rest of the generally mentally handicapped.
[–] KinkRaven 0 points 1 point 1 point (+1|-0) ago
Oh god not this stupid argument, correlation does equal causation when there is a link, this is classic hand waving of the underlying problem.
No they didnt, contrary to your weak argument they kept records and you can go back and check this. The symptoms will still be in the records even though their diagnosis would be wrong.
There is well documented increase is health issues since the introduction of glysophates to the food supply and the mechanism for the problem suggests that glysophates is replacing glycine during protein synthesis.
The paper will be released soon for peer review and we will see where it goes, however just assuming these issues have always been present at these numbers is intellectually dishonest.
They weren't, things like diverculitis didn't exist before the 1900s (its hard to miss, causes a giant abscess on the colon), in the last 30 years now people as young as 20 are being diagnosed with it.
[–] altident ago
There is no link other than the timing, which is literally the exact scenario in which "correlation does not equal causation" applies.
Source.