Rising Rates of Autism: Economic and Societal Costs

The story of autism is steeped in big pharma corruption and regulatory capture. However, it is also now, the story of an Autism industry – teachers, carers, ABA providers, psychologists, psychiatrists and so many others who now make money from autism. The costs in the USA alone will surpass US$1 trillion per year within the next decade. “We are not just fighting against big pharma and the capture of government, but also the entire sinecure system that rewards people who keep the problem going and don’t ask questions“.

There is also evidence for the promotion and use of euthanasia, especially once the parents of children with autism approach the end of their lives and are no longer available as carers.

One example of the massive corruption taking place is the Simons Foundation, whose entire reason for existence is to attempt to link autism, which has risen exponentially since the 1986 US legislation giving legal immunity to vaccine manufacturers, with a genetic cause. They have spent $200 million in research, with no results.

If there was a genetic cause to autism then the rates would not have changed so dramatically since the late 1980s. Toby Rogers’ mother is a speech and language therapist who trained in the 1950s and spent her career dealing with children who stutter. When she returned to work in the 1990s, she suddenly found an epidemic of children who do not speak at all.

Meanwhile, Rogers speaks about the way the Simons Foundation organised for a retraction of his paper, Autism Tsunami: The Impact of Rising Prevalence on the Societal Cost of Autism in the United States, from the Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders. He describes the process of re-publishing, including further peer review, in the Journal of Science, Public Health Policy and the Law, proving that the retraction had political motivation.

Rogers’ PhD thesis, The Political Economy of Autism, is one of the top ten most-read theses of all time. He writes a substack at Utobian, is a senior scholar at the Brownstone Institute and authors articles at The Defender.

This story shows the dark side of humanity, and the way that financial systems can be established which ride roughshod over basic human rights and decency. Ultimately, we will all pay the price for this.

Toby Rogers spoke with Catherine Austin Fitts and Carolyn Betts days ago, about his thesis, the subsequent work he did with co-authors Mark Blaxill and Cynthia Nevison, and the massive corruption that his work is uncovering.


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