A.k.a.
Megan Redshaw [current name]
Megan
Heimer is a naturopath and “wellness” blogger for a blog called Living
Whole, a cesspit of woo, pseudoscience, conspiracy theories and – of course –
antivaccine (https://rationalwiki.org/wiki/Anti-vaccination_movement) lunacy. (In fact, there seems to
be several blogs of that name, and the suspicion that a name like that
shouldn’t inspire trust is flagrantly borne out by most of them.) Indeed,
Heimer, whose credentials, according to herself, are “a degree in Political
Science and [I] am an Attorney, Doctor of Naturopathy, Certified Natural Health Educator,
Registered Power Yoga Instructor, writer, and stay-at-home mama,” rejects all
medicines she deems non-“natural”, not just vaccines – her approach
really has nothing to do with facts or (really) health at all but with
fundamentalist adherence to a more trendy set of religious tenets that allow
her to feel a very religious form of righteousness and nurture a cadre of
acolytes who treat her various pronounciations as authoritative – but she is
indeed most famous for her antivaccine activism. Note, by the way, that
although naturopathic schools in general offer nothing more than
pseudoeducation, Heimer’s diploma – on the basis
of which she has called herself “Dr. Heimer” – is from Trinity College of Natural Health, which is a straight-up diploma
mill and which is, for instance, on the list of institutions whose degrees are
illegal to use in the State of Texas.
And Heimer
will use – and has used – most antivaccine PRATTs in the antivaccine toolbox to push her case, including lying
through her teeth. In her (viral) “rebuttal” to a very sensible article on antivaccine activists’ lies,
Heimer for instance asserted that “the vaccine court has rule [sic] that
evidence of a causal relationship between autism and MMR exists”; she
didn’t provide any link or even reference to any such ruling, of course,
because the assertion is a pretty obvious and easily checked lie. Relatedly,
Heimer just stated, utterly falsely, that “vaccine inserts, and countless court cases have
confirmed this link”.
Again, of course, no such inserts or court cases (this one obviously doesn’t count) exist
outside Heimer’s febrile imagination; indeed, court cases have quite clearly established the opposite conclusion (in an update to her post, she
did, in fairness, provide one link to a vaccine court case she claimed “ruled
that evidence of a causal relationship between autism and MMR exists” even
though the court explicitly did not rule on the question of causation). Or in other words: Insofar as it
is obvious even to her readers that Heimer herself has no background whatsoever
in any field that would make her a credible authority on vaccines (and despite
her stand that “it takes no credentials, no formal education, and no ‘M.D’
behind your name to take an educated stance on this issue”), she does at
least recognize the need to invoke authoritative sources (also beyond other
non-experts like Neil Z. Miller); so she just makes them up. And
yes: it is, for all practical purposes, lying: We have no doubt Heimer believed
her own claims when she wrote them, but the fact that she responded to
commenters pointing out her errors not by addressing the criticisms or updating
her post but by deleting the comments and blocking the commenters, demonstrates
in abundance that honesty is not her strong suit.
We don’t,
by the way, feel the need to comment on her apparently popular post “God
Does Not Support Vaccines” (she is, of course, not the only one who has tried to make that case). Here, however, is a discussion of her
Dunning-Kruger approach to Vitamin K shots for newborns, which synthesizes
virtually every myth or piece of misinformation about Vitamin K shots and
vaccines in general ever produced for the Internet and draws its conclusions on
the ‘makes sense to me’ strategy and Heimer’s lack of knowledge or
understanding of the issues she is discussing. Of course, as Heimer sees it, criticism of her misinformation,
lies and quackery is hate speech, no less.
Her
response to a CDC questionnaire that tells
you what vaccines are recommended for people with chronic diseases (from back
when the CDC were trustworthy on these issues) is telling: “First,” says
Heimer, “vaccines don’t prevent chronic disease”, which is a rather
typical response, given that the CDC was claiming no such thing but rather gave
their recommendations based on the fact that patients with certain chronic
diseases are more susceptible to complications from many vaccine-preventable
disease. “Secondly,” says Heimer, “vaccines cause chronic disease. It’s written all over the package
inserts, PubMed database, and thousands of peer-reviewed studies. (Don’t bother telling the CDC,
they already know.)” Do you think she actually provides any sources?
Can you guess why not? “Third, if you have a chronic disease, you’re more
likely to suffer from a vaccine adverse reaction” (by which Heimer of
course means mythical vaccine injuries). The possibly novel spin here,
however, is Heimer’s conclusion that the CDC publishing information about
vaccine recommendations for people with chronic diseases at all, is just a “sad
attempt by the CDC to pit parent against parent. Nothing else works. We’re
educated and we see through their lacking data, intentional cover-ups, and
misleading propaganda, including their latest ploy at ‘scaring’ parents into
vaccinating.” But as Heimer states, “it’s like we’re immune to bull$h*t”,
and we believe that statement: no facts or evidence will sway Heimer for
this has, for her, never been a question of facts or evidence.
As mentioned, Heimer runs through all the familiar antivaxx
tropes and talking points, but she often has an even more unhinged take on them
than even regular anti-vaccine ranters, for instance with regard to the myth of
“aborted baby parts”,
e.g. in her post “What You Didn’t Know About the Aborted Baby Parts in Your
Vaccines” (yes, the post does list a good number of things you certainly
didn’t know, for obvious reasons). Heimer is referring to vaccines made with
fetal embryo fibroblast or retinal cells from cell lines derived (they
replicate infinitely) from a few electively terminated pregnancies (abortions)
in the 1960s to 80; there are, of course, no aborted baby parts or tissue in
vaccines, but Heimer is deeply confused about that: “Have you read the CDC’s
vaccine ingredient list? Why would they list aborted baby parts as ingredients
if they weren’t actually in vaccines?” responds Heimer, assuming that her
readers don’t check and realize that the CDC of course doesn’t list aborted fetal parts as ingredients because vaccines don’t contain them. But
Heimer is not going to let facts and reason resolve a good confusion:
“you might have also heard that only two babies were used and it was a
really long time ago, which justifies the continued use of shooting up live
babies with dead babies” (nope), but that, she concludes, “just simply
isn’t true and if you think it is, watch one of the many Planned Parenthood
videos. These people are harvesting baby parts for a reason,”
imagines Heimer. And since aborted baby parts obviously can’t be an effective
means to achieve immunity from disease, she concludes that CDC is relying on
some form of dark magic: “Aborted baby is supposedly some sort of magic that
makes vaccines more effective”. Nope, she doesn’t try. It’s not her style.
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| Source: Don't remember; please inform us. |
Now, LivingWhole
isn’t (or wasn’t) merely about vaccines, though: as mentioned above,
Heimer rejects modern medicine in general, in favor of Modern Alternative Mama Kate Tietje’s crackpot Earthley products, claims that there is an ongoing war
on homeopathy and that measles is no big deal (“This Mama Isn’t Scared of the
Shmeasle Measles”); according to her blog, she and her family “do not
use any chemical products in our home or on our bodies”, they “believe in natural childbirth and had our last baby un-assisted
at home” and they “home
school”, something that, given her
relationship with facts and knowledge, is a tragedy. Indeed, to many people, she is
probably most famous for the brouhaha around her attempt to adopt two children
from DRC, a story that, even if you trusted to her own descriptions doesn’t exactly
portray her in a very sympathetic light.
And though she
was most famous some years ago, when the adoption story was ongoing, it’s not
like she’s gone. Here is a discussion of her 2025 post (“Why
You Shouldn’t Be Scared of Measles”) about recent measles outbreaks. In the
post, Heimer – now Redshaw – manages to get every claim wrong, and usually even
in ways that can be easily checked if her readers bother, from the claim that
among the people needing hospital care in the recent Texas outbreak “nearly
half were fully vaccinated” (they were, in fact, all unvaccinated; nearly’
is doing some heavy lifting in Heimer’s claim), through misinformation about shedding, to her claim that alarmism about
measles is unwarranted since, even though even she has to admit that people
die, more people die from falling and she doesn’t see fearmongering about “staircases”
or “sidewalks”. Maybe we’re completely off about American culture here,
but we do have the impression that people constructing staircases and
sidewalks, and not the least parents of small children, do have some
concerns about the safety of staircases or sidewalks, and we are accordingly
somewhat worried about Heimer’s execution of her role as a parent of small
children. We are, as previously noted, not the only ones harboring such concerns.
For
insights into Heimer’s lies, falsehoods and inaccuracies – at least up until
ca. 2019 – this thread might be useful. Of particular note
is Heimer’s own deployment of classical sockpuppetry.
Diagnosis: Paranoid,
narcissistic and completely unhinged moron, and yes, we worry about the safety
of both her and the people around her. Nonetheless, she seems to have a number
of readers, and we worry about them, too.
Hat-tip:
violentmetaphors