Sharyl Attkisson On The DOJ’s Vaccine-Autism Coverup

by
Steve MacDonald

This isn’t a new topic of debate, but it has been known to rile folks up—evidence of vaccine-induced autism. Sharyl Attkisson is a long-time reporter and Journalist (with loads of awards for her work) who had the honor of being spied on by the Federal Government during the Obama administration. To be fair, Barry was spying on almost everyone, a habit his administration carried over to members of Congress, other members of the press, and Republican presidential candidates.

Attkisson never stopped doing her thing and claims that there has long been proof that vaccines cause autism in some kids and that the government knew this and hid it.

Dr. Zimmerman was the government’s top expert witness and had testified that vaccines didn’t cause autism. The debate was declared over.

But now Dr. Zimmerman has provided remarkable new information. He claims that during the vaccine hearings all those years ago, he privately told government lawyers that vaccines can, and did cause autism in some children. That turnabout from the government’s own chief medical expert stood to change everything about the vaccine-autism debate. If the public were to find out.

Dr. Zimmerman declined our interview request and referred us to his sworn affidavit. It says: On June 15, 2007, he took aside the Department of Justice—or DOJ lawyers he worked for defending vaccines in vaccine court. He told them that he’d discovered “exceptions in which vaccinations could cause autism.” “I explained that in a subset of children, vaccine induced fever and immune stimulation did cause regressive brain disease with features of autism spectrum disorder.”

Here is Attkisson’s reporting

Read more on her substack.

Author

  • Steve MacDonald

    Steve is a long-time New Hampshire resident, blogger, and a member of the Board of directors of The 603 Alliance. He is the owner of Grok Media LLC and the Managing Editor of GraniteGrok.com, a former board member of the Republican Liberty Caucus of New Hampshire, and a past contributor to the Franklin Center for Public Policy.

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