Recueil de poèmes en hommage aux deux auteurs
The Morning: Trump’s Tylenol claims
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We have more on these stories below. But first, a fact-check of the medical misinformation that emerged from the White House’s autism announcement.
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At the White House yesterday. Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times |
Bad medicine
The scene at the White House yesterday evoked the early days of the Covid pandemic: President Trump, standing at a lectern, offered Americans medical advice that contradicted scientific research.
This time, though, the subject was not hydroxychloroquine or injected bleach. It was a rise in autism diagnoses — and a purported connection to Tylenol and vaccines.
For years, scientists have studied a possible link between pregnant mothers’ use of acetaminophen, the active ingredient in Tylenol, and neurological conditions like autism and A.D.H.D. The findings are complex. Some studies suggest a link; others do not. None have found proof of a causal relationship.
Yet Trump spoke as if the connection were definitive. He instructed pregnant women to avoid the drug. “Don’t take Tylenol. Don’t take it. Fight like hell not to take it,” he said.
Trump also said that he and Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the health secretary, had long discussed the possibility that vaccines are linked to autism. “They pump so much stuff into babies, it’s a disgrace,” he said.
Dozens of studies over the last three decades have failed to find any link between vaccines and autism. Scientists say the idea has been debunked.
Fact-check
Much of what Trump said during his press conference was untrue. Here’s a fact-check.
Vaccines: The president said that the childhood immunization schedule “loads up” children with too many vaccines — as many as 80 different shots.
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Hepatitis B: Trump said the disease was sexually transmitted — and that children should not be vaccinated against it until they are 12.
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Tylenol: Speaking about the risks for pregnant women, Trump said, “There is no downside to not taking it.”
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Why now?
Research on acetaminophen use during pregnancy is not new, as my colleague Azeen Ghorayshi, a science reporter, recently explained. So why did the White House make this announcement now?
Last month, scholars published a review of 46 existing studies. Taken together, they suggest there is evidence for a connection between acetaminophen use during pregnancy and neurodevelopmental disorders.
Those findings circulated widely on social media, including among autism parent groups, many of whom consider Kennedy a champion of their cause.
But the researchers cautioned people about inferring too much: “We cannot answer the question about causation,” Diddier Prada, an epidemiologist at Mt. Sinai’s medical school and the first author on the review, told The Times.
Most doctors believe autism cannot be easily attributed to a single cause; rather, they say, it involves a complex mix of genetic and environmental factors.
The F.D.A.’s notice to physicians yesterday about a possible link between acetaminophen and autism was far more measured than Trump’s riff. It noted, accurately, that “a causal relationship has not been established” and that the matter was “an ongoing area of scientific debate.”
More coverage
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PALESTINIAN STATEHOOD |
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In Gaza. Eyad Baba/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images |
France said yesterday it now recognized Palestine as a state, declaring that “the time has come.” About 10 other countries, including Britain and Canada, have also recently done so. Why is this happening now? Aaron Boxerman, a Jerusalem-based reporter, explains what changed.
Then. For years, Israel’s Western allies generally put off recognizing a Palestinian state. Israel argued that they would be meddling in a peace process between two adversaries. Maybe they could use recognition as a carrot to induce Palestinian concessions — demobilizing armed groups or swapping certain tracts of land, for instance.
This was plausible. Benjamin Netanyahu had said he would be willing to negotiate Palestinian independence.
Now. Israeli leaders today rule out a future Palestinian state in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Netanyahu boasts about blocking it, saying it would simply help Hamas, which attacked Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, killing about 1,200 people. His political allies say they hope to rule Gaza and build Jewish settlements there. “For years, I have prevented the creation of that terrorist state, against tremendous pressure at home and abroad,” Netanyahu said on Sunday.
In response, Western nations see no reason to hold back. They won’t complicate Middle East negotiations, because there are none. Although recognizing statehood won’t bring about a sovereign Palestinian government, foreign leaders now hope it will strengthen the chance of a diplomatic, negotiated peace — and weaken hard-line groups like Hamas.
Related: Aaron explains why a Palestinian state still seems more remote than ever.
THE LATEST NEWS |
Jimmy Kimmel
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Jimmy Kimmel Richard Shotwell/Invision, via Associated Press |
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Justice Department
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More on Politics
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International
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Alaa Abd El Fattah Mohamed El Raai, via Reuters |
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Other Big Stories
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PAY TO STAY |
Trump is imposing a $100,000-a-year fee for H-1B visas, which let skilled foreign workers like software engineers come to the United States. Fees have become a staple of the Trump administration’s immigration crackdown. Evan Gorelick, a writer for this newsletter, catalogs some examples.
Gold cards. These visas cost $1 million, or $2 million if a business is sponsoring an applicant. The commerce secretary said they would function like green cards but raise billions of dollars from people of “exceptional value.”
Visitor fees. Millions of tourists, business travelers and students will be subject to a new $250 fee.
Asylum applications. It used to be free to apply for asylum, a form of legal protection for foreigners who face persecution at home. Now, it costs $100 to submit a new application, and another $100 each year the application is pending.
Temporary protected status. Applications now cost $500, up from the previous $50 fee. The program grants legal status to people for whom it might be unsafe (because of war or famine) to return home.
Work permits. There’s a new $550 minimum fee to submit an application. (It used to be free.) There’s also an additional $275 fee to renew or extend a permit.
Travel bonds. Some visitors must pay bonds of up to $15,000 to ensure that they do not overstay their visas, under a State Department trial program announced in August. They get it back when they leave.
Related: Trump’s H-1B visa fee knocks down a bridge between the U.S. and India. Indians won 71 percent of the visas in the 2024 lottery.
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OPINIONS |
Recognition of Palestinian statehood is at best empty symbolism and at worst a distraction from Israel’s war in Gaza, Mustafa Barghouti writes.
Here’s are column by Michelle Cottle on gerrymandering.
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MORNING READS |
Renaud Philippe for The New York Times |
Cold strawberries: High in the Canadian Arctic, where no trees grow, a new greenhouse provides fresh produce to Inuits.
Ask Well: Experts say ginger really can help soothe an upset stomach.
Your pick: The most-clicked story in The Morning yesterday was about Trump’s speech at Charlie Kirk’s memorial.
High Holy Days: Today is Rosh Hashana, the Jewish New Year. The Times spoke with a rabbi about this era of American Judaism. “The divisions feel really real,” he said.
Repentance: Every major world religion has a process for moral accounting. That can be really good for your health — even if you’re not religious.
Hang 10: Ron DiMenna, a founder of the Ron Jon Surf Shop who helped expand surfing into mainstream culture,