RE: Stein's Wifi and anti-vaxx stances, I've seen nothing at all that she's actually firmly holds either of those positions. She's courting those votes because those people are listening to her, but she's only courting them by basically listening. The wifi she just says "well, maybe we should take a closer look at it." With the vaccines the only thing I've ever heard her say definitively is that the Pharm companies need more oversight. I've never heard her say that vaccines are bad or shouldn't be required.
It's pretty ridiculous the kind of stuff that gets spread around without even listening to the source it comes from. Almost like there's a narrative being pushed by a group that's afraid she'll be a spoiler vote.
Yes, you got me. After months and months of being anti-Clinton, they finally broke me down by playing guitar at me LCS-style. I'm an anti-Green Hillbot now.
Dude, she didn't say "we should study this more", she said:
Person from crowd: What about the wireless?
Jill Stein: We should not be subjecting kids’ brains especially to that. And we don’t follow that issue in this country, but in Europe where they do, they have good precautions around wireless—maybe not good enough, because it’s very hard to study this stuff. We make guinea pigs out of whole populations and then we discover how many die. And this is like the paradigm for how public health works in this country and it’s outrageous, you know.
In just the last hour or so I've delved into the anti-WiFi community on the Net, and it's extremely similar in mentality to the anti-vaxxer crowd: any studies which claim no harm are "industry propaganda" while any studies which claim harm (no matter how flawed or criticized or debunked) are "scientific proof". And if you think that the potential risk, if any, is outweighed by the utility of WiFi in an educational setting, then you hate children and are a greedy, corporate denialist.
There's also a strong strain of neo-Ludditeism intertwined with it, wherein a number of people are arguing that children shouldn't be using computers AT ALL in school. Which is what Stein was discussing and agreeing with just prior to the question and response about WiFi. Sorry, but we don't have a bright future as a nation if we have a President who wants to revert classrooms back to textbooks and an abacus.