Rfk Jr Saying Autistic People Will Never Play Baseball

2025Political gaffe / reaction meme / community calloutsemi-active

Also known as: "They'll Never Play Baseball" · RFK Jr. Autism Baseball Meme

RFK Jr Saying Autistic People Will Never Play Baseball is a 2025 reaction meme where U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. claimed autistic children never play baseball, sparking baseball fans on X to debunk him with neurodivergent MLB players.

"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

The meme centers on a specific clip from Kennedy's April 16, 2025 press conference where he described autistic children in sweeping, deficit-focused terms. The line "they'll never play baseball" became the flashpoint because baseball fans found it both factually wrong and darkly funny. The sport has documented autistic players at the professional level and a fan culture that openly jokes about the neurodivergent tendencies of its athletes, particularly pitchers1.

The meme format typically involves quoting Kennedy's claim, then replying with evidence of baseball players doing unmistakably autistic-coded things: planting sunflower seeds in geometric rows, memorizing weather patterns, or chasing fire trucks mid-game. It blends genuine outrage at the stigmatization of autism with the baseball community's self-aware humor about its own quirks3.

On April 16, 2025, Kennedy held an impromptu press conference in Washington, D.C. following a CDC report showing autism diagnoses had risen to 1 in 31 children (up from 1 in 36 in 2020)2. He attributed the rise to environmental toxins and described autism in extreme terms:

> "These are kids who will never pay taxes, they'll never hold a job, they'll never play baseball, they'll never write a poem, they'll never go out on a date. Many of them will never use a toilet unassisted."1

ABC News shared the full address on YouTube, where it pulled in over 17,000 likes within a day4. The clip spread rapidly across X, with the account @RT_com posting the relevant segment and collecting over 1,000 likes in hours4. Kennedy's framing drew immediate backlash. He was describing only the most severe end of the autism spectrum as though it represented the whole, while pushing his long-running theory that vaccines cause autism, a claim debunked by decades of peer-reviewed research3.

Origin & Background

Platform
C-SPAN / news broadcast (source clip), X / Twitter (viral spread)
Key People
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., baseball fan community on X
Date
2025
Year
2025

On April 16, 2025, Kennedy held an impromptu press conference in Washington, D.C. following a CDC report showing autism diagnoses had risen to 1 in 31 children (up from 1 in 36 in 2020). He attributed the rise to environmental toxins and described autism in extreme terms:

> "These are kids who will never pay taxes, they'll never hold a job, they'll never play baseball, they'll never write a poem, they'll never go out on a date. Many of them will never use a toilet unassisted."

ABC News shared the full address on YouTube, where it pulled in over 17,000 likes within a day. The clip spread rapidly across X, with the account @RT_com posting the relevant segment and collecting over 1,000 likes in hours. Kennedy's framing drew immediate backlash. He was describing only the most severe end of the autism spectrum as though it represented the whole, while pushing his long-running theory that vaccines cause autism, a claim debunked by decades of peer-reviewed research.

How It Spread

The baseball community on X moved fast. Within hours of the press conference, fans were posting counterexamples that ranged from sincere to absurd.

On April 16, X user @LiamFennessy_ shared a video of Seattle Mariners pitcher Luis Castillo meticulously planting sunflower seeds in the dirt near the dugout, captioning it "Need I say more?" The post hit over 30,000 likes in a day. Also that day, @BaseballHSTRN posted news clips of Los Angeles Angels outfielder Mike Trout, a self-described "weather geek" who regularly visits his local weather station to help with forecasts. That post pulled 13,000+ likes.

The jokes leaned heavily on pitchers. User @Dandy_Roddick wrote: "Autistic people will never play baseball, the sport where 90% of players have an insanely-complicated, completely unique pre-game routine that cannot be altered or interrupted in any way". @YankeeWRLD asked if Kennedy had "ever seen a left-handed relief pitcher". @BWDBWDBWD declared: "I know of what I speak: MLB players are the most autistic group in pro team sports".

Fans also pointed to historical players. One user brought up Rube Waddell, an early 1900s pitcher who "ran off the field mid-game to chase fire trucks" and could be distracted by opposing fans waving "puppies and shiny objects". Though Waddell pitched decades before the term "autism" existed, his behaviors align with what would now be recognized as hyperfocus and sensory-seeking.

On Reddit, user /u/justletmeregisteryou posted to r/GenZ writing "The fuck does this dude think Autism is?" and collected over 3,000 upvotes in a day.

The most direct rebuttal came from X user Helena (@HelenaKnowsBall), who wrote: "I hold a job, play baseball, and write music well enough to be signed to a record label." Her profile showed her as a Mets fan who is openly autistic.

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

Kennedy's comments drew formal pushback from Autism Speaks, which called them "Extremely disappointing and damaging". The organization specifically rejected his framing that autism is caused by environmental toxins, stating it "contributes to decades-old misinformation and distracts from the real needs of autistic people and their families".

The backlash also spotlighted real inclusion efforts in baseball. Tarik El-Abour made history in 2018 as the first known professional baseball player diagnosed with autism when he signed with the Kansas City Royals. Diagnosed at age three, he started playing at 10 and won back-to-back Rookie of the Year awards in independent baseball before getting his MLB contract. His mother credited his autistic hyperfocus for his dedication: "Being autistic, this was completely normal to Tarik. His briefcase was his baseball bag".

At the youth level, Little League's Challenger Division already provides structured baseball environments for children with disabilities, directly contradicting Kennedy's blanket claim.

Scientists and autism researchers also weighed in. The Skeptical Science blog published a detailed breakdown of how Kennedy misrepresented the word "regression" from autism research. In context, regression refers to autistic children finding it harder to engage socially as demands increase with age. It does not mean a healthy child suddenly develops autism. Dr. Daniel Geschwind, director of UCLA's Center for Autism Research and Treatment, noted that autism's rising diagnosis numbers reflect better detection, not an actual increase in prevalence.

The meme fed into a broader pattern of Kennedy facing ridicule for his health claims. As one fan put it, "he knows even less about autism" than he does about baseball.

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

Rfk Jr Saying Autistic People Will Never Play Baseball

2025Political gaffe / reaction meme / community calloutsemi-active

Also known as: "They'll Never Play Baseball" · RFK Jr. Autism Baseball Meme

RFK Jr Saying Autistic People Will Never Play Baseball is a 2025 reaction meme where U.S. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. claimed autistic children never play baseball, sparking baseball fans on X to debunk him with neurodivergent MLB players.

"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

The meme centers on a specific clip from Kennedy's April 16, 2025 press conference where he described autistic children in sweeping, deficit-focused terms. The line "they'll never play baseball" became the flashpoint because baseball fans found it both factually wrong and darkly funny. The sport has documented autistic players at the professional level and a fan culture that openly jokes about the neurodivergent tendencies of its athletes, particularly pitchers.

The meme format typically involves quoting Kennedy's claim, then replying with evidence of baseball players doing unmistakably autistic-coded things: planting sunflower seeds in geometric rows, memorizing weather patterns, or chasing fire trucks mid-game. It blends genuine outrage at the stigmatization of autism with the baseball community's self-aware humor about its own quirks.

On April 16, 2025, Kennedy held an impromptu press conference in Washington, D.C. following a CDC report showing autism diagnoses had risen to 1 in 31 children (up from 1 in 36 in 2020). He attributed the rise to environmental toxins and described autism in extreme terms:

> "These are kids who will never pay taxes, they'll never hold a job, they'll never play baseball, they'll never write a poem, they'll never go out on a date. Many of them will never use a toilet unassisted."

ABC News shared the full address on YouTube, where it pulled in over 17,000 likes within a day. The clip spread rapidly across X, with the account @RT_com posting the relevant segment and collecting over 1,000 likes in hours. Kennedy's framing drew immediate backlash. He was describing only the most severe end of the autism spectrum as though it represented the whole, while pushing his long-running theory that vaccines cause autism, a claim debunked by decades of peer-reviewed research.

Origin & Background

Platform
C-SPAN / news broadcast (source clip), X / Twitter (viral spread)
Key People
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., baseball fan community on X
Date
2025
Year
2025

On April 16, 2025, Kennedy held an impromptu press conference in Washington, D.C. following a CDC report showing autism diagnoses had risen to 1 in 31 children (up from 1 in 36 in 2020). He attributed the rise to environmental toxins and described autism in extreme terms:

> "These are kids who will never pay taxes, they'll never hold a job, they'll never play baseball, they'll never write a poem, they'll never go out on a date. Many of them will never use a toilet unassisted."

ABC News shared the full address on YouTube, where it pulled in over 17,000 likes within a day. The clip spread rapidly across X, with the account @RT_com posting the relevant segment and collecting over 1,000 likes in hours. Kennedy's framing drew immediate backlash. He was describing only the most severe end of the autism spectrum as though it represented the whole, while pushing his long-running theory that vaccines cause autism, a claim debunked by decades of peer-reviewed research.

How It Spread

The baseball community on X moved fast. Within hours of the press conference, fans were posting counterexamples that ranged from sincere to absurd.

On April 16, X user @LiamFennessy_ shared a video of Seattle Mariners pitcher Luis Castillo meticulously planting sunflower seeds in the dirt near the dugout, captioning it "Need I say more?" The post hit over 30,000 likes in a day. Also that day, @BaseballHSTRN posted news clips of Los Angeles Angels outfielder Mike Trout, a self-described "weather geek" who regularly visits his local weather station to help with forecasts. That post pulled 13,000+ likes.

The jokes leaned heavily on pitchers. User @Dandy_Roddick wrote: "Autistic people will never play baseball, the sport where 90% of players have an insanely-complicated, completely unique pre-game routine that cannot be altered or interrupted in any way". @YankeeWRLD asked if Kennedy had "ever seen a left-handed relief pitcher". @BWDBWDBWD declared: "I know of what I speak: MLB players are the most autistic group in pro team sports".

Fans also pointed to historical players. One user brought up Rube Waddell, an early 1900s pitcher who "ran off the field mid-game to chase fire trucks" and could be distracted by opposing fans waving "puppies and shiny objects". Though Waddell pitched decades before the term "autism" existed, his behaviors align with what would now be recognized as hyperfocus and sensory-seeking.

On Reddit, user /u/justletmeregisteryou posted to r/GenZ writing "The fuck does this dude think Autism is?" and collected over 3,000 upvotes in a day.

The most direct rebuttal came from X user Helena (@HelenaKnowsBall), who wrote: "I hold a job, play baseball, and write music well enough to be signed to a record label." Her profile showed her as a Mets fan who is openly autistic.

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

Kennedy's comments drew formal pushback from Autism Speaks, which called them "Extremely disappointing and damaging". The organization specifically rejected his framing that autism is caused by environmental toxins, stating it "contributes to decades-old misinformation and distracts from the real needs of autistic people and their families".

The backlash also spotlighted real inclusion efforts in baseball. Tarik El-Abour made history in 2018 as the first known professional baseball player diagnosed with autism when he signed with the Kansas City Royals. Diagnosed at age three, he started playing at 10 and won back-to-back Rookie of the Year awards in independent baseball before getting his MLB contract. His mother credited his autistic hyperfocus for his dedication: "Being autistic, this was completely normal to Tarik. His briefcase was his baseball bag".

At the youth level, Little League's Challenger Division already provides structured baseball environments for children with disabilities, directly contradicting Kennedy's blanket claim.

Scientists and autism researchers also weighed in. The Skeptical Science blog published a detailed breakdown of how Kennedy misrepresented the word "regression" from autism research. In context, regression refers to autistic children finding it harder to engage socially as demands increase with age. It does not mean a healthy child suddenly develops autism. Dr. Daniel Geschwind, director of UCLA's Center for Autism Research and Treatment, noted that autism's rising diagnosis numbers reflect better detection, not an actual increase in prevalence.

The meme fed into a broader pattern of Kennedy facing ridicule for his health claims. As one fan put it, "he knows even less about autism" than he does about baseball.

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