How about no?
So do you anti-vaccine fear mongers admit that you lost the battle over Autism and now you’re claiming Alzheimer’s?
I’m usually not one to laud celebrities but Amanda Peet was right. You people are parasites.
How about no?
So do you anti-vaccine fear mongers admit that you lost the battle over Autism and now you’re claiming Alzheimer’s?
I’m usually not one to laud celebrities but Amanda Peet was right. You people are parasites.
Debra Barnes has a thriving chiropractic practice in the Jackson metro area, a nice home and family members who love living in the South.
But she said she would leave Mississippi in a heartbeat if state health officials tried to force her home-schooled children to be immunized.
Barnes is part of a growing network of parents whose decision to home school their children rests on their belief that mandated vaccinations for public and private school children are a dangerous overreach by state governments.
While the mainstream scientific community maintains childhood vaccines are safe, Barnes relies on the work of apostate scientists who argue immunizations can bring on autism or weaken the natural immunities of children.
Barnes leads a group of about 200 parents around the state who have problems with Mississippi’s mandated vaccination schedule.
Emphasis mine.
What? You expected a fake doctor to believe real doctors and scientists?
Parents refusing to have their children vaccinated against measles have helped drive cases of the illness to their worst levels in a dozen years in the United States, health officials reported on Thursday.
Only 13 percent of the cases were imported, the CDC said, naming Italy, Switzerland, Belgium, India, Israel, China, Germany, Pakistan, the Philippines, and Russia. “This is the lowest percentage of imported measles cases since 1996,” the CDC report reads.
“Of the 95 patients eligible for vaccination, 63 were unvaccinated because of their or their parents’ philosophical or religious beliefs,” the CDC said.
Some religious groups refuse vaccination but many parents have fears that vaccines are unsafe or may cause conditions such as autism — fears the CDC says are unfounded.
Stop being asshats. This is the 21st century, not the dark ages. Vaccines do not cause autism and God would prefer it if your kids didn’t die from measles.