Rep. Posey to Facebook: "blatantly false information" on vaccine safety
Rep. Posey to Facebook: "blatantly false information" on vaccine safety Read More »
The following is a news analysis This post updates a popular article I published at CBSNews.com in 2007: “Vaccines and autism: Why the debate rages.” Note: This article doesn’t attempt to settle the vaccine-autism debate. It will be a resource
Above image: Dr. Andrew Zimmerman On Full Measure, I reported on the pro-vaccine scientist who says he informed government lawyers he worked for back in 2007 that vaccines can cause autism in exceptional cases. Dr. Andrew Zimmerman says the government
CDC’s immunization safety director says it’s a “possibility” that vaccines rarely trigger autism but “it’s hard to predict who those children might be.” (They’re not even trying.) [This article was first published on Sept. 2, 2014] A CDC senior epidemiologist stepped
CDC: “Possibility” that vaccines rarely trigger autism (AUDIO) Read More »
Above: Yates Hazlehurst (right) with personal aide Lane Hodges[hr] The following is an update of a story first published Oct. 19, 2016[hr] The father of an autistic child has filed a federal lawsuit against the Centers for Disease Control (CDC)
Parent of autistic teen sues CDC to allow vaccine whistleblower testimony Read More »
“Vaxxed” is a new documentary that recounts a story the news media will not tell and Congress will not hold hearings on. A current CDC senior scientist, Dr. William Thompson, has confessed to taking part in a longterm effort to
Sharyl Attkisson: “Viewer question: What’s your position on freedom of choice regarding various vaccines that could be dangerous for some children and why is the mere discussion of making vaccines safe censored?” Donald Trump: “It’s the most unbelievable discussion I’ve
Trump on Vaccines and Autism: Pro-Vaccine but Cautious Read More »
A recent Slate.com article took on Google’s decision to develop new search engine algorithms to filter out what it views as “inaccurate” websites. The authors are David Weinberger, a senior researcher at Harvard’s Berkman Center, and Dan Gillmor of Arizona State University and author of