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Even after the study was discredited, headlines such as “Now It’s Official:
            FDA [Food and Drug Administration] Announced That Vaccines Are
            Causing Autism!” continued to circulate online. Some actors, powerful
            politicians, and committed activists also falsely claimed that vaccines
            can cause autism. Believing the false stories, many American parents
            have refused to have their children vaccinated for whooping cough,
            measles, diphtheria, and other infectious diseases. Vaccine refusal puts
            communities at high risk for disease outbreaks. In fact, disease outbreaks
            and even deaths of unvaccinated children have occurred. In 2014, for
            example, a measles outbreak began at Disneyland in Southern California.
            Because many California parents had not had their children vaccinated,
            the disease quickly spread. Soon measles infected more than 150 people
            in the United States, Canada, and Mexico.

            Fake News Isn’t New

            Fake news didn’t begin in the social media era of the twenty-first
            century. People and organizations have been spreading lies, rumors,
            and false allegations for thousands of years. One of the earliest known
            cases of fake news occurred in ancient Rome in the first century BCE.
            Octavian, a politician, wanted to take power from General Mark
            Antony, one of the rulers of Rome. Octavian obtained a false document
            claiming that Antony had shifted his allegiance from Rome to Egypt.
            Octavian read the document to the Roman Senate. Upon hearing this
            fake news, the Senate stripped Antony of his command and forced him
            to flee the country.
               Fake news flourished in succeeding centuries, with the information
            spread by word of mouth. In Europe, the majority Christian population
            frequently persecuted the minority Jewish population. Some Christians
            spread rumors that Jews were killing Christian children and using
            their blood to make wine and bread for the Jewish holiday of Passover.
            One such incident occurred in the French city of Blois in 1171. Fueled
            by the false news of Jews killing Christian children, the authorities








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