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Anti-Vaccine Site Mocks ‘Muslim Measles’

WorldNetDaily today responded to reports(link is external) that the Somali-American population in Minnesota has witnessed an outbreak of measles after anti-vaccine activists(link is external) warned community members, which once had a higher vaccination rate(link is external) than the state’s population at large, that vaccines are connected to autism(link is external).

With the headline, “Midwest Muslim Measles Outbreak Nearly Doubles(link is external),” WND connected parents’ refusal to vaccinate their children to Islam, rather than the efforts of the anti-vaccine(link is external) campaigners(link is external) who recently pounced on the community and exploited fears about autism.

While WND mocked “Muslim Measles,” the right-wing outlet has actively promoted anti-vaccine conspiracy theories.

Just last month, one WND writer insisted(link is external) that “pro-vaccine advocates do not hold the high scientific ground,” denied ties between outbreaks of diseases like measles to unvaccinated children, and endorsed “natural immunity based upon zinc” over vaccines.

WND last year ran an article, “Stunner! Whistleblower Claims Feds Hiding Vaccine-Autism Link(link is external),” which quoted WND columnist Lee Hieb(link is external), an author of numerous(link is external) anti-vaccine(link is external) posts, saying that the vaccine against measles, mumps, and rubella (MMR) is dangerous(link is external). Another WND article announced(link is external) that “Measles Vaccines Kill More Than Measles,” which is a nonsensical comparison given that the vaccine has been so successful in largely eradicating cases of measles—of course, people who get the vaccine aren't dying of measles.

Rather than trump offensive rhetoric about “Muslim Measles,” maybe WND can reflect on their own anti-vaccine “reporting.”