LeftRightRepeat
Well-Known Member
I read a few articles rebutting the OP.
The snopes site summary is the easiest for the non-scientific reader to understand, and it has a few links to relevant articles.
I'm not debating this with anyone because i know that people believe what they believe based on their own experiences, research etc.
I cant copy/paste the page properly so you will have to go to the link
____________________________________________
http://www.snopes.com/medical/disease/cdcwhistleblower.asp
Example:[Collected via e-mail, August 2014]
Is the following true: Fraud at the CDC uncovered, 340% increased risk of autism hidden from public.
Origins: On 24 August 2014 a CNN iReport claiming intentional suppression of data relating to 340% increased risk of autism among specific populations of African-American boys following MMR vaccinations went viral. The story seemed to disappear mysteriously, further fueling the notion that an intentional coverup was underway.
The idea that vaccines lead to autism is not a new conspiracy theory, nor is it a particularly uncommon one. A now heavily discredited study published in the medical
The snopes site summary is the easiest for the non-scientific reader to understand, and it has a few links to relevant articles.
I'm not debating this with anyone because i know that people believe what they believe based on their own experiences, research etc.
I cant copy/paste the page properly so you will have to go to the link
____________________________________________
http://www.snopes.com/medical/disease/cdcwhistleblower.asp
Example:[Collected via e-mail, August 2014]
Is the following true: Fraud at the CDC uncovered, 340% increased risk of autism hidden from public.
Origins: On 24 August 2014 a CNN iReport claiming intentional suppression of data relating to 340% increased risk of autism among specific populations of African-American boys following MMR vaccinations went viral. The story seemed to disappear mysteriously, further fueling the notion that an intentional coverup was underway.
The idea that vaccines lead to autism is not a new conspiracy theory, nor is it a particularly uncommon one. A now heavily discredited study published in the medical