Calls for “debate” on subjects like vaccines aren’t really invitations to communicate with a large audience. Many reasons for this, one of which is Brandolini’s Law:

The amount of energy needed to refute bullshit is an order of magnitude bigger than that needed to produce it.

The whole thing is a set-up.

It’s an asymmetric proposition.

The format they want doesn’t allow for the slow, methodical scientific processes needed to reach sound conclusions and refute misinformation.

At the same time, participation by scientists creates an environment where claims that mimic scientific rigor, acquire legitimacy.

On top of that it isn’t actually a debate. There’s no moderator agreed on by both parties, no standard for the dividing line between fact and opinion. Those are sort of essential for debate!

If folks asking for a debate really wanted to “get to the bottom of this stuff” they would go spend time with scientists doing the work.

People like Joe Rogan or RFK Jr could absolutely get that access if they really wanted it. They’d have to do some work to convince others it was in good faith, but they could do it.

It will take time and isn’t designed to get clicks, unfortunately. But they’d get real answers and could ask all the questions they want.

@mcnees I have a quote saved about how most conspiracy theories are people 'asking questions' and then refusing to listen to the answers.
@jewishreader sounds about right
@mcnees @jewishreader Michael Crichton spent a day at my office talking to climate scientists. Then he wrote STATE OF FEAR.
@roadskater @jewishreader Yeah I’m not saying it will always work, but if they earnestly want to investigate these things there’s really only one meaningful way to do it.