TD: you certainly haven't been able to counter effectively the various points I made
- I'm not particularly interested to work on detailed countering of your more extreme opinions that are outside the bounds of science. Where you've been reasonable I've actually agreed with you. I also noticed that you haven't countered any of the more reasonable opinions of Dr. Hyman that I cited other than by sidestepping them with comments to the effect that she has to say those things (implying she is lying, which undercuts your use of her as a source to support your claims).
TD: the autism epidemic is simply a myth
- I agree there has been a change in how it's reported, but it's difficult to ferret out how much of the increase is due to that and how much might be due to environmental factors affecting epigenetics, such as diet, nutrition and lifestyle. To assume based on a study or two and your opinions and assumptions that the entire increase can be written off to changes in reporting and that all other potential variables can be assumed to be nonfactors would be incautious and unscientific and I don't know of a single scientist who does this--and Dr. Hyman certainly doesn't do this. If the increase is due solely to changes in reporting, then we should expect to see autism spectrum rates level off in the near future, unless reporting criteria and methods change dramatically again. I agree with Dr. Hyman that we need more research and that it is OK for parents to carefully try an RPD if they wish. After all, it provides benefits irrespective of any possible effect it might have on the disorders of the autism spectrum, or what you term its minor "issues" and "side effects". If it only helps with the "issues" and "side effects" of the autism spectrum, I can't imagine a parent who wouldn't want that, can you? Don't let your commitment to your hypothesis blind you to the bigger picture.
TD: diet cannot sort out autism
- I don't know what you mean by a vague word like "sort out" and you have a habit of interpreting such vague terms as suits you, with subtle changes as needed. Dr. Hyman remains open minded about
potential benefits from dietary therapy and that seems like a reasonable perspective to me, at least until there has been more thorough research. I take no firm stand on the issue, but I do see ruling it out in absolutist fashion as an unscientific step at this time. I can understand trying to discourage reckless adoption of AV's claims and views on autism, but I think you've gone way overboard.
TD: the vaccines-notions are bogus
- I agree and I think the evidence on that is now sufficiently strong that it's a waste of time to spend significant resources pursuing that angle when there are other more promising angles to pursue, like customized raw Paleo diets. However, it is interesting that single dose vaccines free of thimerosal are again becoming available in this country and given the choice between a vaccine containing thimerosal and one that is thimerosal-free, I would choose the latter (based on the precautionary principle, the simplicity principle, the experience principle and the biological template/milieu principle).
No scientist claims to know what all the genes and epigenetics involved in autism are and none claim to know with certainty what all its underlying causes are, so that alone is worth further research. Surely you can at least agree on that?
TD: I'm simply leery of the many conspiracy-theories out there and wish to avoid snake-oil-like suggestions that diet can cure absolutely everything.
- Agreed, diet cannot "cure absolutely everything." Has anyone here said that it can? Yet another straw man. Your capacity for producing straw men is amazing, but not surprising.
Broken record time
Bingo!