Monday, July 22, 2013

Vaccine, Autism and Jenny McCarthy

It appears as though many vaccine "activists" are very upset that Jenny M. has been set to replace another host on, "The View."  I don't get much of a chance to watch that particular show, so I have no opinion about that particular choice by either ABC or Barbara Walters.  I do know something about Jenny and her views as to a possible connection between vaccinations and autism.

Since "science" insists on irrefutable evidence to confirm or deny any particular links associated with autism, I truly doubt that a link between vaccine and autism will ever be accepted.  I know that Jenny's son was diagnosed with autism soon after the MMR vaccine was given to him, but I don't believe that necessarily shows definitive connection between the two.  Mercury used to be used as a preservative in all vaccines and that has now changed.  Perhaps, in part, because of the light that Jenny and others shined into a dark corner.  How the medical profession could ever have thought that adding a heavy metal to a vaccine was a good and safe idea, I will never know.

I don't believe that there is only one reason for this horrendous upsurge in autistic diagnoses over the past two decades.  Adding heavy metals to a vaccine is never a good idea and may certainly have been a contributing factor, but if that were the only factor, we should be seeing a decline in autism and we are not.  Could the live attenuated viruses that are being given in the exact same dosages to 6 week old babies as for 4 and 5 year old children be a contributing factor?  Could this massive influx of virus be too much for a baby's immune system?  I think it reasonable to at least consider those as viable possibilities.  I know that there are some veterinarians that believe vaccinations of animals can be too much for their immune systems and don't agree with the necessity for the administration of vaccines that are widely done each day.  Aren't our children as important to us as our pets?  One would think more, but I don't want to get into that discussion.  I also believe that the widespread existence of electromagentic radiation can be a cause for autism and other significant neurological deficits.  Please refer back to my blog called, "And the children shall lead us," if you need to refresh your memory about those effects.  I have also written a series concerning the problems caused by exposure to emfr's and will publish some of that, again, in the future.

No matter which side of the argument about vaccinations and their possible causal relationship to autism and other neurological imbalances one is on, I just cannot understand why there isn't a calm, mature dialogue going on in the scientific world about this topic.  This subject appears to engender a good deal of anger, fear and resentment among those conducting the discussions.  Look at the reaction of the "pro-vaccination," representatives about Jenny McCarthy. Frequently, money is at the root of heated disagreements and posturing and I have to wonder if this isn't the case, here. 

I do believe that certain vaccinations have helped save the lives of countless children and adults, over the years.  That doesn't mean that we cannot listen to each other, both scientists and laymen.
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