UK Guardian Newspaper Caught Falsifying the Historical Record of Vaccine-Caused-Autism
Posted Aug 01 2011 12:00am
A new post on Child Health Safety documents how the Guardian newspaper removed from the record evidence that vaccines are connected with autism.
ChildHealthSafety posted the information compiled from US government sources and linked to reputable websites in response to an article which had casually dismissed the vaccine/autism link. CHS’s posts contravened none of the rules for engagement in a Guardian blog: were both factual and polite. Other posts which patently contravened the Guardian guidelines on abuse were left up. All in all three posts were removed, the last left out the URLs but pointed out Guardian’s connections with British Medical Journal, which was recently forced to admit its own business associations with MMR manufacturers Merck and GSK in its attack on Andrew Wakefield.
".. if you're predisposed with the mitochondrial disorder, it can certainly set off some damage. Some of the symptoms can be symptoms that have characteristics of autism.”
“We have compensated cases in which children exhibited an encephalopathy, or general brain disease. Encephalopathy may be accompanied by a medical progression of an array of symptoms including autistic behaviour, autism, or seizures.”
“…… Bailey’s ADEM was both caused-in-fact and proximately caused by his vaccination. …… Furthermore, Bailey’s ADEM was severe enough to cause lasting, residual damage, and retarded his developmental progress, which fits under the generalized heading of Pervasive Developmental Delay, or PDD. The Court found that Bailey would not have suffered this delay but for the administration of the MMR vaccine, and that this chain of causation was a proximate sequence of cause and effect leading inexorably from vaccination to Pervasive Developmental Delay.”
The Guardian has a problem with the truth. We are left wondering whether its attack on the Murdoch empire had less to do with journalistic integrity and more to do with rival commercial interest.
AoA readers can write to Guardian readers’ editor Nigel Willmott ( nigel.willmott@guardian.co.uk ) expressing their views.
ChildHealthSafety posted the information compiled from US government sources and linked to reputable websites in response to an article which had casually dismissed the vaccine/autism link. CHS’s posts contravened none of the rules for engagement in a Guardian blog: were both factual and polite. Other posts which patently contravened the Guardian guidelines on abuse were left up. All in all three posts were removed, the last left out the URLs but pointed out Guardian’s connections with British Medical Journal, which was recently forced to admit its own business associations with MMR manufacturers Merck and GSK in its attack on Andrew Wakefield.
Among other things CHS documented a statement by former CDC director Julie Gerberding to CNN :
".. if you're predisposed with the mitochondrial disorder, it can certainly set off some damage. Some of the symptoms can be symptoms that have characteristics of autism.”
A statement by the HRSA to Sharyl Attkisson of CBS :
“We have compensated cases in which children exhibited an encephalopathy, or general brain disease. Encephalopathy may be accompanied by a medical progression of an array of symptoms including autistic behaviour, autism, or seizures.”
The decision in the Bailey Banks case
“…… Bailey’s ADEM was both caused-in-fact and proximately caused by his vaccination. …… Furthermore, Bailey’s ADEM was severe enough to cause lasting, residual damage, and retarded his developmental progress, which fits under the generalized heading of Pervasive Developmental Delay, or PDD. The Court found that Bailey would not have suffered this delay but for the administration of the MMR vaccine, and that this chain of causation was a proximate sequence of cause and effect leading inexorably from vaccination to Pervasive Developmental Delay.”
The Guardian has a problem with the truth. We are left wondering whether its attack on the Murdoch empire had less to do with journalistic integrity and more to do with rival commercial interest.
AoA readers can write to Guardian readers’ editor Nigel Willmott ( nigel.willmott@guardian.co.uk ) expressing their views.
Read the full Child Health Safety article HERE. .
Posted by Age of Autism at August 10, 2011 at 12:01 AM in Dr. Andrew Wakefield , Vaccine Safety Permalink