A Queensland High School was tricked into showing an idiotic anti-vaccination movie, and Premier Annastacia Palaszczuk is not happy about it.

"We are incredibly strong about the need for people to be vaccinated, especially children," said Ms. Palaszczuk.  "My initial advice is that there has been misrepresentation from that organization to the school in question, where they conveyed to the principal that it was to be conveying information about organic produce.  I don't think they were very clear in their purpose and I don't think they should have been allowed to present in such a manner."

The film wasn't shown to students, but rather to a paying audience of people apparently wanting very bad medical advice.

The so-called "Australian Vaccination-sceptics Network" is responsible for skullduggery around the showing of the film "Vaxxed", which purports to be a documentary about a nonexistent conspiracy to cover-up harmful effects of the measles-mumps-rubella vaccine.  In fact, the film is tripe, directed by a British quack former doctor who got his ticket pulled by faking his "research", and doesn't point out in the film that his research has been thoroughly debunked.  As Australian Medical Association president Dr. Michael Gannon puts it, "You would learn more accurate science by watching the new Spiderman film (than by watching Vaxxed)."

The group responsible for showing the film at Miami State High School is believed to be on a recruitment drive.

Anti-vaxxers are blamed for the 2015 measles outbreak at Disneyland in Los Angeles, which spread to seven states because some morons listened to Jenny McCarthy for medical advice instead of listening to a freaking doctor.  Vaccine opponents organized talks featuring the discredited maker of Vaxxed for Minnesota's Somali-American community, which soon saw an outbreak of Measles as parents took the bad advice and later regretted it.