I’ve always admired Oprah. To me she has been the perfect example of the American dream, while retaining her moral compass and behaving ethically. Until recently, she managed to make her billions by keeping the best interests of her audiences at heart. She had my admiration and my respect.
But no more.
Keep in mind, that when I mention ethics and morals, I’m not suggesting she avoided controversy or wasn’t willing to stick her neck out politically. Of course, Oprah has been at times controversial and political.
As she has every right to be! It’s her show / magazine / network / production company / conglomerate! She hasn’t earned her following by being neutral or wishy-washy. Even when I have disagreed with her opinions on some topics, I still believe she has had every right to voice them.
But until recently, when she has taken a stand, she has done so to improve her audience’s knowledge of a topic, or to help them understand why she believes the way she does. Oprah has helped us understand point-of-view, whether or not it’s our own point-of-view.
And until recently, I have admired her ability to bring so many and varied points-of-view to her audiences, without her #1 focus being how she could make money from it. Granted, she invites guests who will maximize the size of the audience, meaning, indirectly, increased income from sponsors, magazine and TV show advertisers, etc.
That’s fair.
What’s wrong is what she has done recently and that is, she has signed a contract with Jenny McCarthy. McCarthy is no longer a once-in-awhile guest. Now she’s one of Oprah’s annointed ones. It marks a shift for Oprah, a shift in the wrong direction.
And now, I am no longer a fan. For the first time, I believe Oprah has traded her media soul to the money-making devil. And that has tainted everything she will do from now on.
In case you don’t know who Jenny McCarthy is, she is a former playboy bunny – come – self-proclaimed expert in autism. McCarthy has a son who she claims to have cured of his autism. She has written books, marched on Washington, and been very vocal, presumably on behalf of families of children with autism.
For the record, I do not claim to know much about autism at all, and for all I know, maybe she HAS cured her son.
What I object to is not McCarthy’s work in autism — rather — her stance that since she believes her son’s autism was caused by vaccines, she now adamantly advises new parents to refuse to have their children vaccinated for childhood diseases. Her son was born in 2002.
Here’s the problem with that:
First — there is no proof that vaccines cause autism. In fact, all the proof is to the contrary. The agent contained in vaccines that some argued may have caused autism was called thimerisol. Thimerisol has not been used in any vaccines since 1999. Yet, the number of children diagnosed with autism is on the rise. Clearly, something else is causing it.
The second problem — that vaccines have been developed strictly to destroy the diseases that destroy lives, but they can’t do their job if they aren’t being used. Think of the millions who were injured or killed by polio before the polio vaccine. Today, the only people getting polio are those who have not been vaccinated. If children are not vaccinated they will risk polio and it’s their parents who, by choosing not to have their children vaccinated, will put their children at risk. That’s true, too, for every other childhood disease.
Read Time Magazine’s interview with McCarthy. And McCarthy’s very classy quote,
“I do believe sadly it’s going to take some diseases coming back to realize that we need to change and develop vaccines that are safe. If the vaccine companies are not listening to us, it’s their f___ing fault that the diseases are coming back. They’re making a product that’s s___.”
(Those are Time Magazine’s bleeps, not mine.)
As one friend put it: Jenny McCarthy is systematically destroying children’s and families’ lives by taking such a dangerous stand. How is that any different from Adolph Hitler?
Jenny McCarthy is not an MD. She has no medical credentials whatsoever. Yet young parents are listening to her because they are desperate to find someone who can help them with their autistic children. If they listen to what she has to say about helping their child recover from autism — great. But to listen to McCarthy’s medical advice about vaccines? That’s foolish.
Now — returning to Oprah. Oprah has had Jenny McCarthy on her show any number of times. That’s a good way to showcase McCarthy’s point of view, especially when it’s contrasted with those who are experts, those who really do know something about autism and vaccines.
But to sign McCarthy on, as she has with Dr. Phil McGraw and Dr. Mehmet Oz? They ARE doctors! What message is that sending to those who can’t discriminate who does and who does not have good information? (And I wonder how Dr. Phil and Mehmet Oz feel about being in the same media camp as McCarthy?)
And won’t it be interesting when McCarthy spouts her medical opinions (opinions, NOT facts) on her show, a parent does not get her child vaccinated, that child and others are debilitated or die from McCarthy’s advice? I wonder if Oprah will be sued along with McCarthy? Afterall, it’s Oprah who has given her the platform.
Oprah — sorry — but you’ve stepped over a line of trust and respect. You made that flip to the darkside, all in the interest of growing your franchise and making money.
You’ve lost this fan, and I suspect, many others.
Update 5/31/09: Apparently Newsweek agrees with me. Oprah has truly stepped over the line.
|
|
|
Want more tools and commentary for wise patients? Sign up for Every Patient’s Advocate email tips |
– – – – – – – – – – – | |
Join Trisha in the Patient Empowerment Forum at About.com | |
– – – – – – – – – – – | |
Or link here to empower yourself at EveryPatientsAdvocate.com | |
|
|
![]() |
I’m sorry Trisha, but I would have to disagree with you. First of all, I don’t think Jenny McCarthy claims to be or even pretends to be an EXPERT of anything. It seems that you yourself have labeled her that.
You also have to remember, the training that you talk about, and “lack of evidence” of vaccinations and Autism all come from a medical community that is set in their ways about vaccines. They will never question whether or not vaccines are necessary because they are taught to do so. The fact that so many children become Autistic withing 24 hours of getting vaccinations is so compelling that I would have to disagree with the so called “experts” that deny it.
There is BIG money in vaccines. Could you imagine what would happen to the drug companies if they actually did admit that vaccines are unnecessary? They are constantly coming up with some new vaccine for this and that. The first of several hepatitis B shots is given within 12 hours of birth. Hepatitis B is commonly spread by sexual intercourse or blood transfusion, or from mother to newborn during birth. If the mother does not have Hepatitis B, why would the infant need multiple doses of this vaccine? I don’t think there are any infants out there having sex. It’s preposterous!
The link you provided to the CDC (which by the way is staffed with medical personnel that all believe in vaccines) shows no information about Thimerisol. In fact it’s a dead link. It might have moved within the site, but I did a search on Thimerisol and came up with only 1 hit on the CDC site at this time and it makes no mention of the reduction of Thimerisol in vaccines…
I have checked other sites, Government sites, and they talk about the reduction of Thimerisol, but it has not been completely eliminated. Specially in influenza vaccines.
http://articles.latimes.com/2005/mar/07/business/fi-merck7 Page one shows that Merck distributed thimerisol containing infant vaccines until 10/2001 and that “it still is present in most flu shots” On page two of the same article it states, “The Times disclosed a leaked Merck memo from 1991 showing that the company was aware at that time of concerns about thimerosal. In the memo, a former Merck scientist calculated that 6-month-old children who received their shots on schedule could receive a mercury dose up to 87 times higher than the guideline for the maximum daily consumption of mercury from fish.”
Regarding your comments on Polio:
During 1962 U.S. Congressional hearings, Dr. Bernard Greenberg, head of the Dept. of Biostatistics for the University of North Carolina School of Public Health, testified that not only did the cases of polio increase substantially after mandatory vaccinations — a 50% increase from 1957 to 1958, and an 80% increase from 1958 to 1959-but that the statistics were deliberately manipulated by the Public Health Service to give the opposite impression.
According to researcher-author Dr. Viera Scheibner, 90% of polio cases were eliminated from statistics by health authorities’ redefinition of the disease when the vaccine was introduced, while in reality the Salk vaccine was continuing to cause paralytic polio in several countries at a time when there were no epidemics being caused by the wild virus.
Jonas Salk, inventor of the IPV (the Polio vaccine), testified before a Senate subcommittee that nearly all polio outbreaks since 1961 were caused by the oral polio vaccine. So your statement, “Today, the only people getting polio are those who have not been vaccinated” is the EXACT OPPOSITE of what the ACTUAL INVENTOR OF THE POLIO VACCINE STATES!!!!
In 1985, the CDC reported that 87% of the cases of polio in the US between 1973 and 1983 were caused by the vaccine, and later declared that all but a few imported cases since were caused by the vaccine-and most of the imported cases occurred in fully vaccinated individuals.
You are condemning this woman because she truly believes there is enough evidence to stop using vaccinations and is letting others know that you don’t always have to follow what Doctors tell you, because they are NOT always right.
You compared Jenny to Hitler in your writings (which is an extreme comparison) but I would compare you to the people that believed that the Earth was flat, and that you should not believe otherwise. Belief in the earth being round would be extremely dangerous because you would fall of the edge of the world and die!
Please don’t bury your head in the sand and instead look at all the data. And even when you come to a conclusion, keep you mind open to new data.
I myself believe in not vaccinating my children, they are very strong and healthy. That doesn’t mean that I will not continue to look at the data that both sides of the argument present.
As a parting thought, remember that the anti-vaccine community has nothing to gain but the welfare of others.
Many pro-vaccine groups have a financial interest in the continued use of vaccines.