Dale Smith
Platinum Member
\Bull-fucking shit, ....about to grab some shut-eye but I will be shoving the facts down your throats here after some rest.
..it's gonna be a classic ass-whipping so don't run away and hide, little fella......
My SIL is a Dr of Internal Medicine. You know, the kind of doctor that the TV series House is based on. Yeah, that's her. I asked her once about vaccines and autism. She just looked at me, shook her head and said "___ there's nothing I can do about it. Totally unrelated. However, people believe what they want to believe. I just wonder if the people who spout these false analogies are game enough to go up to the parents of kids who refused to immunise their kids based on these lies, then contract these awful diseases and die, and then say, "I'm sorry, I was wrong." I doubt they will."
I agree with the science. Before you get back to me, remember this: The person who first spouted this BS, Andrew Wakefield, has been proven wrong.
Andrew Jeremy Wakefield (born c. 3 September 1956) is a British former gastroenterologist and medical researcher, known for his fraudulent 1998 research paper in support of the now-discredited claim that there was a link between the administration of the measles, mumps and rubella (MMR) vaccine, and the appearance of autism and bowel disease.[1][2][3][4][5]
So you are using Wikipedia as your source? You do know that anyone can go in and edit anything on there, right???
How about William Thompson? Got any big pharma sponsored trash to throw at him as well????
More Evidence from CDC Whistle Blower on Autism and Vaccines Revealed to Public in New Documentary
Absolutely I trust Wikipedia. That aside, I trust my SIL more.
Former science chief: 'MMR fears coming true' | Daily Mail Online