There is far more evidence that vaccines cause autism than there is that cigarette smoking causes lung cancer, or that cows farting in a field somewhere are causing global warming. This has to change.
In California, 4.5% of all 4-year-old children have been diagnosed with autism in 2024. Even if you’re a person who “trusts the science,” you have to know in your heart that something is very wrong here. The numbers just keep climbing every year.
Fortunately, incoming HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is finally going to conduct studies to see if there are any links between vaccines and autism.
The rate of autism among kids was 1 in 150 in the year 2000. It was 1 in 34 just a few years ago. Now it’s 1 in 22 in California, and probably in other states.
Most of us in Generation X or older had never even heard of autism when we were growing up. Today, every child has at least one autistic classmate. If you’re reading this, I would bet dollars to donuts that you either have an autistic child or grandchild, or you know at least one family that has one. It’s everywhere.
This is a public health catastrophe. You’d think that health officials would be scrambling to try to find the answer to this problem and leaving no stone unturned. They blame everything but the obvious. They call it a “debunked conspiracy theory” if you even try to bring up the obvious correlation between the exploding autism rates and the CDC’s accelerated childhood vaccine schedule.
If you were a kid in the 1970s, you were only administered a handful of vaccines for things like polio. In the 1980s, the schedule was bumped up to 27 shots by the time a child was 18 months old. By the 1990s, autism was becoming much more prevalent in the US. Today, kids are expected to receive 72 shots by their 18th birthday, with more than half of them by the age of 15 months.
The Amish don’t vaccinate their kids and they have zero cases of autism in their communities. Don’t you think there’s at least a slight possibility that the medical-industrial complex might be missing something?
When autism frequency was on the rise in the 1990s, people started to suspect that vaccines might be causing it. Many parents believed this because their child developed “rapid onset autism” after being vaxed. For decades, the medical community claimed that autism was caused by bad mothering. Imagine your pediatrician telling you that your child has autism because you’re a bad mom!
Today the “consensus” is the ridiculous claim that 9 out of 10 autism cases are genetic. (It’s still the mom’s fault!) There’s no possible way that could be true. If autism is genetic, then why wasn’t it as prevalent when we were kids? Most Americans never heard of autism before the movie “Rain Man” came out in 1988.
But when you ask the medical establishment why there was so much less autism in the past, you get another excuse. They’ll tell you that we have better screening now. There were always tons of autistic people in the past, but we just didn’t realize it because they were not diagnosed.
Again—that argument makes no effing sense!
Kennedy has promised as HHS Secretary that he’s going to revamp the National Institute of Health. Instead of funding gain-of-function research into bat coronaviruses at bioweapons labs in China, he’s going to focus scientific research into learning more about the causes of autism, autoimmune diseases, and neurodevelopment diseases.
The CDC and vaccine fanatics always claim that there have been volumes of studies done that disprove any link between vaccines and autism. Ask them to cite those studies. They can’t, because those safety studies never took place.
Even if you’re a huge fan of vaccines, can we just admit that it’s not going to do any harm to check? Seriously, what would be the harm in conducting studies to find out if we’ve been wrong and that there is a correlation between vaccines and autism? If new information changes things and we can prevent more cases of autism, wouldn’t that be a good thing?
Kennedy’s confirmation hearings will begin in the Senate Finance Committee next month. The hearings will probably be very nasty. Big Pharma is going to throw everything at him through their bought-and-paid-for Senators. The conclusion that I’ve come to after watching him for the past year is that Kennedy—like President Trump—is on a mission from God. Things are about to change in big, positive ways in America.