Well, this is awkward! Right as Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. is going through his contentious confirmation hearings to become America’s new Health and Human Services Secretary, a new large-scale, peer-reviewed study has been released that proves that vaccines cause autism.
Would any of the Senators like to retract their screechy, hyperventilating accusations that Kennedy wants to murder children now?
Almost no one in America had heard of autism before that Tom Cruise/Dustin Hoffman movie came out in the 1980s. That was around the time that the CDC massively ramped up the childhood vaccine schedule in America. Today, the CDC recommends that kids get 72 shots. Many of those vaccines are for tropical diseases that no American will ever encounter in their lifetime. Others are downright absurd.
For example, Sen. Rand Paul (R-KY) pointed out during RFK’s confirmation hearing that the CDC recommends that hospitals give babies the hepatitis B vaccine when they are one day old. You can only catch hepatitis B from sexual contact and dirty heroin needles. Why does the medical community insist on giving that shot to babies when they’re a day old?
Ever since the shot schedule ramped up in the 1980s, we’ve seen an explosion in children developing rapid-onset autism in this country. The problem has only gotten worse as the number of shots has continued to increase. Millions of parents have offered anecdotal evidence that vaccines may have caused their child’s autism.
RFK’s whole point about vaccines and autism is that we don’t have enough good science to tell us one way or another. Unfortunately, many people screech and pull their hair out when you suggest that we need more good science to answer this question. Some people have a weird emotional attachment to vaccines that’s been drummed into their heads since childhood by the public schools.
Here’s a serious question.
What would be the harm in conducting new studies to answer the question once and for all: Can vaccines cause autism in children?
Both Republican and Democrat Senators turned into demons on national television this week when RFK asked that question.
It seems obvious to most people who don’t have a weird religious attachment to vaccines that they are a contributing cause of three major health problems in America that have massively increased since the shot schedule increase in the 1980s. Those would be sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS), autism, and homosexuality.
The thing that truly—
What? Why is everyone screaming all of a sudden?
Oh. It’s the gay thing, right?
If you’re in Generation X or older, think carefully about that issue after you get done breathing into a paper bag. Gay people were virtually non-existent in America in the 1970s and early 1980s. Outside of degenerate Hollywood movies, most Americans never encountered gay people in the US before the mass vaccination pogrom began in the ‘80s. Many of us thought that the Village People just really liked Halloween a lot.
What would be the harm in conducting good scientific studies to explore these questions?
Anyway, just days before RFK’s hearings began, doctors from the Chalfont Research Institute in Jackson, MS, released a peer-reviewed study titled, “Vaccination and Neurodevelopmental Disorders: A Study of Nine-Year-Old Children Enrolled in Medicaid.” The study was published in the January issue of Science, Public Health Policy, and the Law.
They studied nearly 50,000 children enrolled in the Florida State Medicaid program between birth and age 9. The results found that a child who receives one vaccination before age 9 is 1.7 times more likely to develop autism than a child who receives no vaccines. A child who receives eleven vaccines before age 9 is 4.4 times more likely to develop autism than a child who receives no vaccines.
In other words, the more vaccinations that you pump into a developing child’s body, the more likely it is that they will develop autism. The results also found that vaccinated children were much more likely to develop hyperkinetic syndrome, epilepsy, learning disabilities, encephalopathy, and tic disorders than their unvaccinated peers.
This is what the science shows. Even one vaccine increases the likelihood of a child developing autism. We sincerely hope that public health agencies will conduct more research like this in the near future. They will if RFK is confirmed as America’s new HHS Secretary.