The article reports on the fact that there has been a measles “outbreak” in Minnesota in the Hennepin, Ramsey and Crow Wing counties. As of May 9, 48 people had been affected, 41 of them Somali-American, with 45 not having been vaccinated.
The problem, according to the article, is that there is widespread skepticism about vaccines in the Somali community. The reason for this, it should be noted, is that in 2008, parents in this community started noticing that a “disproportionate” number of their children were being diagnosed with autism.
The article goes on to proudly proclaim that between 2000 and 2008, the Somali community had some of the highest vaccination rates of any population in the state, and then bemoans the fact that this new fear of autism caused those rates to drop off dramatically after that year. And that’s the first example of the 1 and 1 being 5: How can the writer not put together the fact that before 2008 this population had some of the highest vaccination rates, with the fact that in 2008 they started noticing some of the highest autism rates? Those dots never get joined in the article, though in reading it, I was immediately struck by the glaring “coincidence.”
Our friendly mainstream journalist then goes on to say that this poor community has fallen victim to anti-vaxxers like the “discredited” Dr. Andrew Wakefield, who was one of the first to publish literature regarding the link between the MMR vaccine and autism. Though the scientific community basically threw him and his work under the proverbial bus, claiming that his work was flawed, Health Impact News reports that his work has subsequently been replicated in at least 28 other studies! And it’s important to note that no court of law has ever won a case against Dr. Wakefield.
And even if you want to leave the now controversial Dr. Wakefield out of the equation, what about the eminent scientist who was granted official whistleblower status by President Obama, and who still maintains his position as a senior epidemiologist at the CDC, Dr. William Thompson? Dr. Thompson co-authored a study on the MMR vaccine back in 2004. In that same year, he sent a letter to then-CDC director Julie Gerberding expressing his concern that a link between the MMR vaccine and a staggering 340 percent increase in autism risk for African American boys receiving the vaccine under the age of 3 was being concealed by the agency. Again, this dovetails perfectly with the fact that so many presumably African-American Somali children were being diagnosed with autism until they stopped vaccinating.
Interestingly, Julie Gerberding is now president of Merck’s vaccine division, and the CDC purchases $4 billion in vaccines from vaccine companies, including Merck, each year. Anyone else struck by the glaring conflict of interest here?
Another really annoying statement in the CNN article is this one by Kristen Ehresmann, director of the Infectious Disease Epidemiology, Prevention and Control Division at the Minnesota Department of Health:
"We shouldn't be spending hundreds of thousands of public health dollars to battle an outbreak that doesn't need to be. We collectively can prevent these things from happening by vaccinating.” [Emphasis added]
So, the public is being fleeced of hundreds of thousands of dollars by these vaccine skeptics who refuse to vaccinate their kids? Well, what about the millions of dollars awarded to parents of vaccine-damaged children by the government’s Vaccine Injury Compensation Program (VICP)? Where did that money come from, if not from taxes? And why does such a program even exist, if the government and its agencies are truly convinced that vaccines are the salvation of man and don't cause any harm?
The clear, unbiased facts are these:
The mainstream media can vilify people like Dr. Thompson and Dr. Wakefield all they want, but the fact is, vaccines really are linked to an increase in autism, and the American people are starting to finally wake up to this fact, despite the incessant media lies.
Sources: