I can’t imagine that there is a parent out there that hasn’t had the discussion about whether or not they believed in the link between autism and certain vaccines administered to children. I know I certainly have. I chose to vaccinate my daughter, as I never really found there to be hard evidence that linked the two. Well, apparently — there isn’t. Some douche of a doctor — Dr. Andrew Wakefield [1] to be exact — decided to go ahead and falsify his findings [2]. Of course he’s denying it, but the evidence against him seems overwhelmingly strong. What could possibly possess a human being to do such a thing? And how will the country now react to those who so strongly supported this doctor’s theory?
Hey, Jenny McCarthy [3] — all eyes are on you.
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Jaclyn Roth [6]
Latest posts by Jaclyn Roth (Posts [7])
- The Jessie Books & National Coming Out Day [8] - October 11, 2011
- Parents, prepare to go parental: Doctor faked data linking autism to vaccines [9] - January 6, 2011
- Going parental: iPad — Magic Slate in disguise? [10] - September 29, 2010
- Going parental: Dad boards school bus and screams at bullies — terribly wrong or terribly right? [11] - September 22, 2010
- Going Parental: First day of school! [12] - September 8, 2010