Steve Kirsch reports he has received over 300 pages of documents from someone inside the CDC.
Recently, I received a treasure trove of documents from a source inside the CDC showing they’ve known for over 20 years that Wakefield was right: vaccines cause autism.
A summary suggest that vaccines can and do cause autism and the CDC has known this for decades.
I recently received a treasure trove of electronic documents from deep inside the CDC. These documents have never been made publicly available.
The documents include voice-recordings, emails, hand-written notes, diagrams, and data.
The often repeated claim that “vaccines don’t cause autism” is quite simply inconsistent with this evidence which can be authenticated.
Kirsch has secured copies with friends in case something happens to him and has shared them with a very select few for authentication purposes, so we’ll be waiting on the follow-up. If true, the vaccine choice crowd (there are few, if any, true anti-vaxxers) will want to take a look.
Kirsch does provide some anecdotal evidence .
Pediatrician “L” (she didn’t want her named used until after she goes through her records EMR records manually to confirm her estimates) estimates around 180 kids in her practice had rapid onset autism. Of those, she believes the majority happened within 2 week after a vaccination visit. She never thought about looking at the actual data so it could be close to 100% of the cases. EMR systems don’t track this, so you have to manually look at each case individually. She told me would do that.
There is no way to explain these numbers if vaccines don’t trigger autism.
When she confronted the CDC and asked them “So how do you explain why autism cases are so likely to happen just after vaccination if vaccines don’t cause autism?” they just switch topics and point to what the peer-reviewed studies showed and avoid answering the question. Real scientists never switch topics when asked to explain data. Science is about the search for truth, not dismissing data you don’t like.
He also shares a boatload of links to existing research for the fence-posters and nay-sayers if interested.
Thoughts?