Waleed Aly has spoken against the ‘no jab, no pay’ policy.
Thinker, writer and The Project presenter, Waleed Aly, has revealed his son has autism in his latest column.
As an opponent of the anti-vaccination movement and father to a son with autism, Waleed Aly has spoken out against the Government’s new ‘no jab, no pay’ policy in a column for Fairfax..
The policy would mean that parents who refuse to vaccinate their children will miss out on certain Government benefits. The measure was announced by Prime Minister, Tony Abbott last week and it means parents could lose up to $15, 000 per child.
“I can’t stand the free-riding hypocrisy that, under the protective, disease-free cover of everyone else’s dutiful vaccination, affords itself the luxury of a “personal choice” to abstain,” Aly wrote for The Sydney Morning Herald.
In reference to the anti-vaccination movement, He wrote of his shuddering at the suspicion of 'Big Pharma' and of his detest for the scepticism of medical science.
"And the sheer quackery that, even after the most thorough scientific discrediting, persists in connecting vaccination to autism? As the father of an autistic son, this stirs in me a uniquely furious revulsion. I lack the words for it, and words are kind of what I do."
Despite absolutely no justification or evidence, the linking of vaccinations to autism has been a strong argument from anti-vaxxers for a long time.
US based writer, Sarah Kurchak, writes about her experience of autism. She says autism is not the awful trajectory that so many make it out to be. She has argued that autism is not as bad as measles (or any deadly disease).
"The autistic brain is not particularly good at understanding irony, and yet most people I’ve met on the autism spectrum have, over time, developed a pretty strong grasp of the concept. Many of us have even managed to teach ourselves how to wield it. I’ve begun to suspect that this is due to our constant hands-on experience," she writes.