This claim is untrue. The linked article is a Substack post done by a man (Steve Kirsch) who doesn’t have the necessary education or experience in the topic of vaccines. The study that he references, done by Thomas Verstraeten in 1999, is an outdated study which has since been retracted for methodology issues. The Immunization Safety Review Committee examined the Verstraeten study in 2004 in the National Library of Medicine and came to the conclusions of rejecting a causal relationship between the MMR vaccine and autism and rejecting a causal relationship between thimerosal-containing vaccines and autism. They explain that “potential biological mechanisms for vaccine-induced autism that have been generated to date are theoretical only.” (National Library of Medicine).
Steve Kirsch does not remotely have enough credibility to be making this claim and has been proven to have spread anti-vaccine misinformation at an FDA meeting. False information about a relationship between vaccines and autism has been widely spread since COVID 19 began, but even the CDC has a clear statement saying that “there is no link between receiving vaccines and developing autism spectrum disorder” (CDC). The Mayo Clinic also has a page on autism which includes the fact that there is no link between autism and vaccines, but instead that several genes and genetic mutations could be involved. (Mayo Clinic).