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

Megyn Kelly; Barack and Michelle Obama
Dia Dipasupil/Getty Images; Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Megyn Kelly Slammed After Criticizing Michelle And Barack Obama's Marriage In Bonkers Rant

Conservative radio host Megyn Kelly was called out for criticizing Michelle and Barack Obama's 33-year-marriage after she said during a recent episode of The Megyn Kelly Show that two should never have gotten married in the first place.

Earlier this month, Michelle Obama addressed rumors that she and her husband were getting a divorce, noting that her decision to step back from the limelight after leaving the White House in 2017 meant some people were so unable to "fathom that I was making a choice for myself that they had to assume that my husband and I are divorcing."

Keep Reading Show less
Bob the Drag Queen; Donald Trump
Valerie Terranova/FilmMagic/Getty Images; Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Bob The Drag Queen Roasts Trump Over Health Report's Absurd Claims About Trump's Height And Weight

The findings of reelected Republican President and MAGA messiah Donald Trump's first annual physical exam were released on April 13, 2025.

A memorandum addressed to White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt and signed by Captain Sean P. Barbabella—doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (D.O.), Medical Corps (MC), United States Navy (USN), physician to the President—was shared on the White House website.

Keep Reading Show less
Screenshot of Brian Kilmeade and Pete Hegseth
Fox News

Fox News Host Accidentally Calls Hegseth 'Former Secretary' In Awkward Live TV Flub

Fox News host Brian Kilmeade might think Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's days are numbered, given that he introduced Hegseth as the "former secretary" at the start of an interview before quickly correcting himself, an awkward moment that underscored the impact of Hegseth's numerous scandals.

Democrats have called for Hegseth's firing amid revelations that Hegseth shared details about U.S. military operations in Yemen using his personal phone in a 13-person Signal group chat that included his wife and brother—despite a prior warning from an aide advising him not to share sensitive information over an unsecure channel ahead of the operation.

Keep Reading Show less
Jennifer Aniston; Bella Ramsey as Ellie
Jon Kopaloff/Getty Images; HBO

Jennifer Aniston Has Classic Reaction To Her 2003 Magazine Cover Popping Up On 'The Last Of Us'

Jennifer Aniston may not appear in The Last of Us, but according to the series’ season 2 premiere, she’s one of the few celebrities to survive the apocalypse—at least in magazine form.

In the April 13 episode, Bella Ramsey’s Ellie and Isabela Merced’s Dina patrol a ransacked store, where Ellie falls through the floor into a basement. There, she discovers a weathered 2003 issue of People magazine featuring Aniston on the cover of a “Best & Worst Dressed” edition.

Keep Reading Show less
Larry David; Bill Maher
Tommaso Boddi/Variety via Getty Images; Christopher Polk/Variety via Getty Images

Larry David Epically Trolls Bill Maher's Dinner With Trump In Satirical 'My Dinner With Adolf' Essay

Curb Your Enthusiasm actor Larry David had social media users cackling after he penned a satirical essay for the New York Times about an imagined dinner with Adolf Hitler to jab comedian Bill Maher over Maher's recent White House dinner with President Donald Trump.

Earlier this month, Maher said on his show that Trump was “gracious and measured" during their late March meeting. Maher, who has a history of criticizing Trump, stressed that he did not turn “MAGA” and “to the president’s credit, there was no pressure to” do so.

Keep Reading Show less