Apparently, Jamie McGuire is a best-selling author.
According to Yahoo Lifestyle, she is the “author of 20 books in the New Adult genre (for ages 18-30), including Walking Disaster — which debuted at No. 1 on the New York Times, USA Today and Wall Street Journal bestseller lists — as well as the apocalyptic thriller Red Hill.”

And she wants everyone to know that she does not consent!
Can You Prove That Jamie McGuire Books Don’t Make Teens Do Drugs?
What does Jamie McGuire not consent to?
Since her whole post is about proving this and that about vaccines, which she seems to think are bad, I am guessing that she does not consent to getting vaccinated or to vaccinating her kids.
The thing is though, no one is trying to force her to vaccinate her kids.
You can just say that you don’t want to vaccinate your kids, coming out as another anti-vaccine pseudo-celebrity, without hijacking “I do not consent” messaging.
Anyway, her concerns about vaccines have been addressed. Indeed, they have been talked about a million times. If she were truly aware, she would stop being misled by anti-vaccine arguments that scare parents away from thinking that vaccines are safe, with few risks, and necessary.
Do we have proof? We have evidence!
And as the title says, can you prove that her books don’t make teens do drugs?
More on Jame McGuire and Consent
- VAXOPEDIA – How Do Anti-Vaccine Folks Think?
- VAXOPEDIA – Dear Anti-Vaxxers,
- VAXOPEDIA – This Is the Modern Anti-Vaccine Movement
- VAXOPEDIA – Making Sense of Anti-Vaccine Arguments
- VAXOPEDIA – Answers to Anti-Vaccine Talking Points
- VAXOPEDIA – 50 Ways to Get Educated About Vaccines
- Vaccine Myths Debunked
- 100 bad arguments against vaccines
- Don’t Be Distracted by Vaccine Myths and Misinformation
- The 20 Most Frequent Objections to Vaccinations
- Tactics and Tropes of the Antivaccine Movement
- IAC Answers Your Vaccine Questions
- WHO – What are some of the myths – and facts – about vaccination?
- 15 Myths About Anti-Vaxxers, Debunked – Part 2, Part 3
- Nine Questions, Nine Answers.
- Yes, vaccines did save us from disease: a graphic analysis
- 131 Research Papers Supporting the Vaccine/Autism Link…or Not. No, They Don’t.
- Misconceptions about Vaccines
- Academic Earth Takes On an Anti-vaccine Myth
- Six myths about vaccination – and why they’re wrong
- Vaccine Facts and Myths
- Toxic Myths about Vaccines
- Don’t Be Distracted by Vaccine Myths and Misinformation
- The Zombie Apocalypse of antivaccine myths that won’t die
- Anti-Vaccine Myths, Pharma Shill Gambit and Vaccine Court
- Mommy Bloggers “Babble” About Vaccine Myths
- 5 bad arguments against the influenza vaccine
- 7 Biggest Lies of the Antivaccine Movement Debunked