Courts Quietly Confirm MMR Vaccine Causes Autism

autism-detection-voice[1]By: Truther, PAKALERT PRESS
After decades of passionate debate, parents probably missed the repeated admissions by drug companies and governments alike that vaccines do in fact cause autism.

Whiteout Press

For concerned parents seeking the truth, it’s worth remembering that the exact same people who own the world’s drug companies also own America’s news outlets. Finding propaganda-free information has been difficult, until now.

Courts Quietly Confirm MMR Vaccine Causes Autism

*(Update: 8/6/13) Scroll down for a post-article, reader-submitted rebuttal of the claims and findings made by the individuals and organizations quoted within this article. Passionate reader comments have been pouring in over the past week, both in support of and oppossition to the sentiments expressed below. In the interest of bringing our readers all sides of every story, scroll down to view the reader-submitted comment that seemed to echo and sum up the comments of dozens of other readers. For the record, reader emails were 3 to 1 in support of the article. But Whiteout Press isn’t here to support or oppose vaccines. We’re here to bring readers the news that’s blacked-out, covered-up and censored. We’re passionate and sincere in that effort, something our subscribers are appreciative of. In the spirit of that goal, we hope the inclusion of the reader comment at the end of this article proves to be a small token of evidence that our motives are in fact sincere. – Whiteout Press.

Dr. Andrew Wakefield

At the center of the fifteen-year controversy is Dr. Andrew Wakefield of Austin, Texas. It was Dr. Wakefield that first publicized the link between stomach disorders and autism, and taking the findings one step further, the link between stomach disorders, autism and the Measles Mumps Rubella (MMR) vaccine.

For that discovery way back in 1996, and a subsequent research paper published by the doctor in 1998, Andrew Wakefield has found himself the victim of a world-wide smear campaign by drug corporations, governments and media companies. And while Dr. Wakefield has been persecuted and prosecuted to the extent of being unable to legally practice medicine because of his discovery, he has instead become a best-selling author, the founder of the Strategic Autism Initiative, and the Director of the Autism Media Channel.

But in recent months, courts, governments and vaccine manufacturers have quietly conceded the fact that the Measles Mumps Rubella (MMR) vaccine most likely does cause autism and stomach diseases. Pharmaceutical companies have even gone so far as to pay out massive monetary awards, totaling in the millions, to the victims in an attempt to compensate them for damages and to buy their silence.

Grassroots outcry

It was a regular reader named Kathleen that brought this ongoing story to our attention here at Whiteout Press. When asked what her connection to the vaccine-autism battle was, the young reader replied, “I just researched it for a school project a while back and then I stayed on top of it, until I couldn’t stand it anymore. I’m not a parent, nor do I belong to any organization – a mere outside observer.”

This reader isn’t alone. The news that vaccines cause autism has spread across the US despite a coordinated media black-out. She takes her concerns one step further explaining, “All I want is to see this information where the public can access it. I’ve looked everywhere, and no one gives this dire Wakefield situation even ONE small mention.” She goes on to give us another motivation for her activism, “In Washington State, where I’m from, vaccines have become mandatory for school children, which is very frightening!”

Landmark rulings

In December 2012, two landmark decisions were announced that confirmed Dr. Wakefield’s original concern that there is a link between the MMR vaccine, autism and stomach disorders. The news went mostly unreported, but independent outlets like The Liberty Beacon finally began publishing the groundbreaking news.

The website wrote last month, ‘In a recently published December 13, 2012 vaccine court ruling, hundreds of thousands of dollars were awarded to Ryan Mojabi, whose parents described how “MMR vaccinations” caused a “severe and debilitating injury to his brain, diagnosed as Autism Spectrum Disorder (‘ASD’).”’

The Liberty Beacon went on to describe the second court ruling that month, as well as similar previous verdicts writing, ‘Later the same month, the government suffered a second major defeat when young Emily Moller from Houston won compensation following vaccine-related brain injury that, once again, involved MMR and resulted in autism. The cases follow similar successful petitions in the Italian and US courts (including Hannah Poling, Bailey Banks, Misty Hyatt, Kienan Freeman, Valentino Bocca, and Julia Grimes) in which the governments conceded or the court ruled that vaccines had caused brain injury. In turn, this injury led to an ASD diagnosis. MMR vaccine was the common denominator in these cases.’

The report echoes the exact same sentiment that our reader conveyed – Dr. Wakefield has had his career and reputation destroyed over the past 15 years, but has just been vindicated. The account reports, ‘While repeated studies from around the world confirmed Wakefield’s bowel disease in autistic children and his position that safety studies of the MMR are inadequate, Dr. Wakefield ’s career has been destroyed by false allegations.  Despite this he continues to work tirelessly to help solve the autism catastrophe.’

The article from The Liberty Beacon closes with a direct quote from Dr. Wakefield himself to the independent grassroots outlet, “There can be very little doubt that vaccines can and do cause autism. In these children, the evidence for an adverse reaction involving brain injury following the MMR that progresses to an autism diagnosis is compelling. It’s now a question of the body count. The parents’ story was right all along. Governments must stop playing with words while children continue to be damaged. My hope is that recognition of the intestinal disease in these children will lead to the relief of their suffering. This is long, long overdue.”

Wakefield attacked again

Since the world has slowly become aware of the dangers of the MMR vaccine, parents around the globe have refused to get their children vaccinated. Earlier this year, the UK government singled out Dr. Wakefield and blamed him for the rising number of measles outbreaks in the country. In an April 2013 interview, he responded publicly.

The website TheRefusers.com published both the video, as well as the written transcript, of Dr. Wakefield’s public response. Below are some excerpts of the doctor’s remarks:

“The important thing to say is that back in 1996-1997 I was made aware of children developing autism, regressive autism, following exposure in many cases to the measles mumps rubella vaccine. Such was my concern about the safety of that vaccine that I went back and reviewed every safety study, every pre-licensing study of the MMR vaccine and other measles-containing vaccines before they were put into children and after. And I was appalled with the quality of that science. It really was totally below par and that has been reiterated by other authoritative sources since.

All I could do as a parent was to say, ‘what would I do for my child?’ That was the only honest answer I could give. My position on that has not changed. So, what happened subsequently? At that time the single measles vaccines were available freely on the National Health Service. Otherwise, I would not have suggested that option.  So parents, if they were legitimately concerned about the safety of MMR could go and get the single vaccines. Six months later, the  British government unilaterally withdrew the importation license for the single vaccines, therefore depriving parents of having these on the NHS; depriving parents who had legitimate concerns  about the safety of MMR from a choice; denying them the opportunity to protect their children in the way that they saw fit.

And I was astonished by this and I said to Dr Elizabeth Miller of the Health Protection Agency, ‘why would you do this, if your principal concern is to protect children from serious infectious disease? Why would you remove an option from parents who are legitimately concerned about the safety of MMR?’ And her answer was extraordinary. She said to me, ‘if we allow parents the option of single vaccines, it would destroy our MMR program.’ In other words, her principal concern seemed to be full protection of the MMR program and not protection of children.”

Dr. Wakefield himself reiterates the final conclusion of the courts in various countries, but censored by the world’s media outlets saying:

“Now this question has been answered not by me, but by the courts, by the vaccine courts in Italy and in the United States of America where it appears that many children over the last thirty years have been awarded millions of dollars for the fact that they have been brain-damaged by MMR vaccine and other vaccines and that brain damage has led to autism. That is a fact.”

Special thanks to Whiteout Press reader Kathleen and the two above-linked websites.

*(Update 8/6/13) Below is a reader-submitted comment, summing up many comments emailed to us over the past week. As always, thank you for your feedback.

From Whiteout Press reader Chrys:

1. Both cases were unpublished which means that no-one has full access to what the court decided.

2. In the case of Ryan Mojabi, the court ruled that (on the preponderance of evidence – ie more than 50 per cent likely) the vaccine caused Ryan’s encephalopathy – not autism. As David Kirby reports in the Huffington post, “Whether … Ryan’s … vaccine-induced brain disease led to ASD [Autism Spectrum Disorder] is unknown. The concession document is under seal.

3. In the case of Emily Moller, according to David Kirby, “HHS [The US Department of Health and Human Services] did not admit that vaccination caused encephalopathy or autism, but merely decided not to dedicate more resources to defending the case.”

4. Although it is true that the HHS underwrites autism treatments for children in its vaccine-injury programme, it has “never concluded in any case that autism was caused by vaccination.”

For clarification. The jury is out on whether encephalopathy ’causes’ autism. Most children with autism have never had encephalopathy according to the CDC.

The overwhelming weight of scientific evidence on the considerable amount of research into a purported link between vaccines and autism shows no such link exists. The preponderance of evidence required to make such a finding in a scientific study is considerably more than the 51%:50% preponderance required in the ‘vaccine court’.

Notably, a study by the Danish Medical Research Council in 2002 followed more than 500,000 children over 7 years and found no association between MMR and autism. The study was reported in the reputable New England Journal of Medicine. The only study, published in a credible, peer-reviewed, medical journal which has purported to have found a link between MMR and autism is Dr Andrew Wakefield’s. Wakefield’s findings could not be replicated by other researchers – a prime requirement to establish ‘proof’ in science.

An investigation showed Wakefield had an undisclosed financial interest in proving a link between MMR and autism. Two of his co-authors withdrew their support for his study’s interpretations. Wakefield was found to have undertaken his research on children without ethical approval. An investigation by the British Medical Council into Wakefield’s autism research found: “three dozen charges proved, including four counts of dishonesty and 12 counts involving the abuse of developmentally challenged children.” (Wikipedia).

The Lancet fully retracted Wakefield’s 1998 paper. Wakefield was struck off the Medical Register in May 2010, having been found guilty of dishonestly falsifying his research in the interests of financial gain.

No-one argues that vaccination does not pose *some* risk. However, considering the millions of vaccines administered each year, serious adverse reactions are extremely rare (less than 1 out of a million doses). Conversely, there is a high risk of children suffering encephalopathy from high temperatures if they contract the diseases the MMR vaccine prevents. According to the CDC, one child in every 1000 with measles will develop encephalopathy – consider this against less than 1 in a million for MMR.

 

TLB Note: We at The Liberty Beacon project appreciate being … appreciated.

TLB recommends you visit www.pakalertpress.com for more great/pertinent articles.

See Original here: http://www.pakalertpress.com/2013/08/12/courts-quietly-confirm-mmr-vaccine-causes-autism/

4 Comments on Courts Quietly Confirm MMR Vaccine Causes Autism

  1. DocR You state you know the cause and cure for Autism and must to be paid $625,000,000 to reveal this explanation and treatment (cure). Meanwhile millions continue to suffer from this affliction and new cases are diagnosed daily … yet we get nothing until you are paid … Hmmm, Somehow I don’t feel you are in line for any humanitarian awards my friend, I don’t care how much time and effort you have invested! So much for the Hippocratic Oath! I will not say you are running a scam or cant in fact do what you say you can, but what I will say is this is all VERY distasteful to the extreme and TLB finds this and your website very disturbing indeed !!!

  2. Strongly suggest reading NO EVIDENCE OF HARM, another informative piece of factual information regarding the link between MMR vaccine and Autism!

  3. “Chrys” did not document any of her statements, including her quotes from David Kirby in Points 2 and 3 or her quote in Point #4, so we can’t check her accuracy.

    I have never heard of “HHS underwriting” treatments for autism. The US Vaccine Injury Compensation Court settles or tries cases and has been quietly settling cases for vaccine-induced autism since 1991, including the Hannah Poling case, the 2002 Misty Hiatt case ($5.1 million), the Bailey Banks case. Andrew J. Wakefield, “Callous Disregard, Autism and Vaccines – the Truth Behind a Tragedy” (Skyhorse Publishing: NY 2010), Postscript, pp. 268, 270, fns. 5-7.

    Certain viruses are “encephalitogenic (causing brain inflammation): measles, mumps, rubella, chicken pox, and herpes. Agreed, not all cases of autism have the same cause. Many cases of autism may not be caused by vaccines. However, it is plausible that vaccine immunization with live viruses known to cause encepathology or autism (rubella) could cause the same harm as the natural viral infections themselves. Wakefield, “Callous Disregard, Ch. 9, “The Devil is in the Details,” pp. 133-142, 139.

    The studies finding “no link” between vaccines and autism have not been unassailable. The late Dr. Bernadine Healy, former director of the National Institutes of Health, in a 2008 interview with CBS’ Sharyl Atkinson, said there is a small subset of children most susceptible to vaccine damage that do not show up in epidemiological studies. Science has the tools now to find them and a responsibility to do so. http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=4088138n

    Contrary to “Chrys”‘s insinuation, It is very hard to win in the Vaccine Court, especially if you are claiming your child has autism. By “Dr. Wakefield’s study,” I presume she means the 1998 study published in the Lancet–for Dr. Wakefield has over 130 published scientific articles, book chapters, and invited scientific commentaries. Dr. Wakefield never claimed in that 1998 Lancet study a conclusive link between autism and MMR. The main finding of that study was a novel bowel disease in many children with autism.

    Since co-author Dr. John Walker-Smith won his appeal and was reinstated by the GMC, there is no reason not to reinstate the Lancet paper. If there had been fraud, Dr. Walker-Smith would not have won his appeal. Dr. Wakefield did not have funds to appeal, but he is suing journalist Brian Deer, the British Medical Journal and its editor, Dr. Fiona Godlee in Texas for slander and defamation in the BMJ in Jan. 2011. The case was heard May 22, 2013 and is awaiting a court decision on jurisdiction.

    Dr. Wakefield’s main findings HAVE been replicated in five different countries now. See http://www.callousdisregard.com for studies, also the book “Callous Disregard,” Ch. One, “That Paper,”, pp. 18, 22 (fn. 25 lists studies).

    The paragraph on the ethical findings of the GMC is all garbled and wrong. The GMC was a “show trial.” As Attorney James Moody writes, “….Dr. Wakefield has been attacked in an orchestrated campaign to “discredit” him and his research, an attack which included the longest running “show trial” in the history of the UK’s licensing body, the General Medical Council (GMC).

    “Sadly, this kangaroo court was an orgy of prosecutorial misconduct, false testimony, and mischaracterization of appropriate clinical dare of desperately sick children spun as “unethical research….” (James Moody, Postscript, “Callous Disregard,” pp. 268-269). Wikipedia is a irreparably biased source slanted against Dr. Wakefield.

    Wilipedia is a wholly unreliable reference work as far as Dr. Wakefield is concerned. The people in charge of the Wakefield article are engaged in blatant defamation against him. The GMC did not find that Dr. Wakefield falsified research. None of the three (of 13) physician authors of the 1998 Lancet paper were ever charged with fraud, despite a 5 year GMC investigation. That was journalist Brian Deer’s allegation. Dr. Horton stood by the science in the paper, saying it was “sound.” He retracted the paper, as editor of the Lancet, because of the GMC decision. See “Callous Disregard,” Ch. 7, “Horton and The Lancet.”

    I don’t know where “Chrys” is getting her numbers from in the last paragraph, but I do know that when they added chicken pox to the MMR, it added one seizure per 1000 children. That was considered acceptable. If you were the parent of that one child, you might not think so. Liberty Beacon might want to check the accuracy of comments it posts in the future, so as not to mislead the public.

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