Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Anti-Vaxxers Are Getting Dragged After Requesting To Be Called 'Vaccine Risk Aware'

Anti-Vaxxers Are Getting Dragged After Requesting To Be Called 'Vaccine Risk Aware'
Daniel Knighton / Getty Images

This week, at the height of the flu season, a group of Anti-Vaxxers came forward with a special request, though the request wasn't to get caught up on their vaccines.

Twitter has been pushing back at the group since Sunday when they requested to retire the term "Anti-Vaxxer," claiming that it was a derogatory term that didn't tell the whole story.


Crazy Mothers is an informational site on all things anti-vaccination, leading with the tagline, "The Rebellion Starts At Home."

The team requested that the term "Anti-Vaxxer" be exchanged with "Vaccine Risk Aware," claiming that the prior term marginalized women and their experiences.

Crazy Mothers tweeted:

"Dear Media,
Please retire the use of the term "Anti-vaxxer." It is derogatory, inflammatory, and marginalizes both women and their experiences. It is [dismissively] simplistic, highly offensive, and largely false. We politely request that you refer to us as the Vaccine Risk Aware."


Within moments, the responses were rolling in, with a resounding "no."

Followers reminded Crazy Mothers that "anti-vaxxer" means just that: someone who is against the use of vaccinations.

Some went so far as to say that the term was meant to be derogatory and judgmental, because the rejection of following standard medical procedures has led to real problems, including the widest spread of measles in decades.

This whole conversation caused an immediate spike in the use of the "OK Boomer" response, adapted just for this occasion.



Some are reminding the Anti-vaxxers of how basic terminology works, stating that "anti-vaxxer" is a perfectly reasonable term to use for someone who is against the administering of vaccines.



But most are taking the opportunity to create their own names for Anti-Vaxxers.







Even leading physicians and scientists started coming up with their own suggested names.



After all of this push-back, it doesn't seem very likely that the name "Anti-Vaxxer" is going to go away any time soon.

Whether or not all of this push-back will lead to deeper, more meaningful conversations about vaccines, and what it truly means to be "aware" is yet to be seen. Unfortunately, it doesn't seem likely.

More from Trending

Screenshots of Randy Rainbow and Donald Trump
@RandyRainbow/X

Randy Rainbow Just Skewered Trump's Second Term With A Sequel To His 'Very Stable Genius' Parody—And It's An Instant Classic

Comedian Randy Rainbow is at it again, this time skewering President Donald Trump's second term with a sequel to his popular 2018 "Very Stable Genius" video, which is a parody of Gilbert and Sullivan's "The Major-General's Song" from The Pirates of Penzance.

It was during his first term that Trump referred to himself as a "very stable genius," a claim that doesn't hold any water for anyone who's kept tabs on the president's mental stability (or lack thereof).

Keep ReadingShow less
In a British GQ article, Idris Elba discussed the realities of becoming 007.
Frazer Harrison/Getty Images

Idris Elba Just Explained Why He Doesn't Think A Black James Bond Is A 'Realistic Thing'—And It's Pretty Depressing

For more than a decade, Idris Elba has been one of the most popular fan-cast choices to play James Bond. But in a new interview, the British actor suggested that racism—not a lack of talent, interest, or fan support—helped make the prospect of a Black 007 feel unrealistic from the start.

Speaking with British GQ, Elba offered an unvarnished take on why the long-running Bond rumors never amounted to anything more than speculation.

Keep ReadingShow less
Bowen Yang on Variety's 'Actors on Actors'
@variety/Instagram; @fayedunaway/Instagram

Bowen Yang Sparks Debate After Revealing That He Left 'SNL' Because He Felt Like He Was Only There As 'Seasoning'

Former Saturday Night Live and Wicked star Bowen Yang has been open since his departure from SNL about his conflicting love for the work and feeling that it was time to go.

Yang initially opened up about this on his podcast, Las Culturistas, opposite Matt Rogers, in which he admitted to feeling sort of like a one-note actor on the show.

Keep ReadingShow less
Michael Knowles and James Barr
@PiersUncensored/X

MAGA Commentator Dragged After Insisting To Gay Comedian That He Doesn't Have G-Spot 'In His Bum'

It's Pride Month, the traditional time of year when conservatives celebrate their love for gay-panic crash outs over the details of people's personal lives that have no impact on them whatsoever!

And this month, former actor and Daily Wire talking head Michael Knowles decided to celebrate by being so gay-panicked he was willing to deny the basic science of his own body.

Keep ReadingShow less
Screenshot of Neil DeGrasse Tyson
Club Shay Shay/YouTube

Neil DeGrasse Tyson Shares Powerful History Lesson In Viral Rant About Anti-Vaxxers—And He's Spot On

Speaking during an appearance on Shannon Sharpe's Club Shay Shay podcast, astrophysicist Neil DeGrasse Tyson gave a powerful history lesson about why he thinks anti-vaxxers will make the next pandemic even worse.

Tyson has made his name as one of the most prominent science communicators of the last few decades and regularly spoke out against misinformation and conspiracy theories that were all the rage throughout the COVID-19 pandemic. And he expressed frustration that "we still have anti-vaxxers running around" with the capacity to make even more trouble for public health officials.

Keep ReadingShow less