Last week, the LA Times reported that The High Priest of Public Health, Senator Richard Pan, voted to stop penalizing those who knowingly expose others to HIV though unprotected sex. Under the bill, failing to disclose one has HIV or AIDS before engaging in unprotected sex will no longer be a felony. The bill would... Continue Reading →
Much Ado About Nothing: 15 Things Way More Deadly In The U.S. Than Measles
Last week, a journalist for the Boston Herald Called for the lynching of vaccine safety activists ostensibly responsible for uptick of measles cases in Minnesota. Much like the measles outbreak at Disneyland, hysteria over the situation has grown by the day. Measles can kill and that isn't something I take lightly but can we just take one... Continue Reading →
Quit Using Immunocompromised People to Promote Your Vaccine Agenda
CDC, I’m talking to you. Media, I’m talking to you. Pediatricians, I’m talking to you. Parents who shame other parents, I’m talking to you. Using immunocompromised people as pawns in a vaccine-pushing agenda that twists scientific data to manipulate emotions is abhorrent. As the mother of a child with an immunodeficiency, I can say with... Continue Reading →
I’m a Mom Who Is Listening To What The CDC Says About Vaccines.
Today, I’m going to pretend we can trust the data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) website to make decisions on whether or not to vaccinate. I’m going to ignore the fact that a CDC scientist revealed that he and his colleagues committed scientific fraud by omitting and destroying statistically significant data showing... Continue Reading →
My Son’s Autism Was Caused by Autoimmune Encephalitis and No, I Won’t “Accept” It.
Something highly unusual in the world of autism happened to my son last week. He received a diagnosis of autoimmune encephalitis from a prominent and highly respected mainstream pediatric neurologist. Moreover, she stated this to be the cause of his autistic behaviors. Seven years after his devastating regression into autism, we finally have answers as... Continue Reading →
So You’d Rather Have a Child With Autism Than A Dead One?
Tuesday, the American Journal of Public Health published a study showing children with autism are 40 times more likely to die from injury than their typically developing peers. The average life expectancy for those with autism is just 36 years, a shocking contrast to the typical life expectancy of 72 years for the general public... Continue Reading →