Rfk Jr Saying Autistic People Will Never Play Baseball
Also known as: "They'll Never Play Baseball" · RFK Jr. Autism Baseball Meme
"RFK Jr Saying Autistic People Will Never Play Baseball" is a meme born from U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s April 2025 press conference where he claimed autistic children would "never hold a job" and "never play baseball." Baseball fans on X (formerly Twitter) immediately clapped back with examples of neurodivergent MLB players, obsessive pitcher rituals, and personal stories that proved him wrong. The backlash turned Kennedy's soundbite into a punchline, with posts racking up tens of thousands of likes within hours.
TL;DR
"RFK Jr Saying Autistic People Will Never Play Baseball" is a meme born from U.S.
Overview
Origin & Background
How It Spread
How to Use This Meme
The format is simple. Quote Kennedy's "they'll never play baseball" line, then respond with one of:
- A video or photo of an MLB player doing something obsessive, ritualistic, or hyper-focused (planting seeds in rows, memorizing stats, checking weather maps) - A reference to a historically eccentric pitcher - A personal story about being autistic and playing baseball - A joke about pitcher behavior being indistinguishable from textbook autism traits
The tone typically mixes genuine frustration with deadpan humor. Posts often use the quote as a setup and the example as a punchline, sometimes adding "BRO HAVE YOU MET A PITCHER???" energy.
Cultural Impact
Fun Facts
Kennedy announced plans to determine the cause of autism "by September" 2025, appointing David Geier, a vaccine skeptic with no medical degree, to lead the study.
The CDC report that triggered Kennedy's press conference found autism rates of 1 in 31 among 8-year-olds, based on 2022 data.
Rube Waddell, the early 1900s pitcher cited by fans, peaked before the word "autism" was even coined by Paul Bleuler in 1911.
Ryland Zaborowski, a college baseball player at Miami University diagnosed with autism at age three, told The Miami Student: "You couldn't take me away from it" when describing his love for the game.
The Autism Science Foundation maintains a comprehensive list of peer-reviewed studies confirming no link between vaccines and autism, directly countering Kennedy's central thesis.
Derivatives & Variations
"Have You Met a Pitcher?" posts
— A sub-format where fans specifically call out pitcher behavior as evidence, with @Goo_Tycoon's "THEYRE ALL AUTISTIC!!!" tweet going viral[2].
Historical deep dives
— Users posted lengthy threads about Rube Waddell and other early baseball figures, turning the meme into impromptu baseball history lessons about neurodivergence[1].
Autistic self-advocacy posts
— People on the spectrum shared personal accomplishments in direct response format, with Helena's tweet about holding a job, playing baseball, and being signed to a record label becoming one of the most-shared examples[2].
Luis Castillo sunflower seed video
— The clip of Castillo planting seeds in the dugout dirt became a standalone reaction meme used beyond the Kennedy context[4].
Mike Trout weather station posts
— News clips of Trout at weather stations were repurposed as reaction content, gaining a second life as "proof" of baseball autism[4].
Frequently Asked Questions
References (4)
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