autism

Out of context: Reply #13

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  • kona0

    " I know that there's been a rise and there's a debate that it is somehow linked to inoculations in children and the mercury used as a preservative in the inoculations, but it just strikes me as odd that suddenly it - meaning the discussion - is everywhere." - flashbender

    To your point. I have a very good friend who has a 6 month old healthy baby boy. When they took him in for a checkup the doctor brought up the idea of inoculations and shots, he said he highly recommends them but 1 in 4 babies who get inoculated develop a type of autism. Wtf. And you can't get a child into public schools unless they've had their shots. They told the doctor to go fuck himself and they are not giving their son any shots. When it comes time for school I guess the workaround for them is to say it's against their religion to give their son shots. 1 in 4 who gets inoculated gets some form of autism. There is something very wrong with those shots then. Scares the shit out of me because the wife and I are planning a family. : /

    • ... Uhm that is crazier than a shithouse rat.flavorful
    • 1 in 4? Seriously?mg33
    • it's not proven... the doc doesn't know what he's talking about. tell them to get the child innoculized7point34
    • Forget that, just get the Spiritualized.mg33
    • flavor. what... the 1 in 4 thing or the fact that i might have kids. :) haha.kona
    • I have heard that the number of new parent that are not vaccinating their new baby is rising fast.flashbender
    • oh, and "innoculized?"flashbender
    • mg... yeah, they said 1 in 4. and it wasn't just that one doctor. their best friend's doctor said the same thing about their child.kona
    • child. sorry. that ran long.kona
    • "innoculized?" what can i say. i went to a public school.kona
    • BOTH! :Dflavorful
    • haha!kona
    • Immunizations save lives. That much is proven.blaw
    • home school and avoid innoculation.robotron3k

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