Same applies to the thimerosal believers. When it was pointed out to them that there was no science that backed their claim that thimerosal (removed in 2001) caused autism, they switched the goalposts to saying vaccines also contained formaldehyde - which was true, it did - and OMG, thats also used on dead bodies!!! Then it was pointed out that formaldehyde occurs naturally in a vast range of things, including the human body and that if you were to ingest one thin slice of a banana you’d have more formaldehyde in you than any vaccine ever contained so then they said it was the aluminium, then switched again to ‘the amount of needles overwhelms a teeny-tiny babies poor body’ which is again, absolute bollocks and unsupported by any legitimate science but its what led to Jim Carrey and Jenny McCarthy’s ridiculous ‘green our vaccines’ shitshow.
Kennedy’s been involved since 2005 when he published an article called ‘deadly immunity’ in Salon and Rolling Stone, both of which had to publish non-stop corrections to it until they both retracted the article in 2011, Salon called it their ‘worst mistake’.
Same applies to the thimerosal believers. When it was pointed out to them that there was no science that backed their claim that thimerosal (removed in 2001) caused autism, they switched the goalposts to saying vaccines also contained formaldehyde - which was true, it did - and OMG, thats also used on dead bodies!!! Then it was pointed out that formaldehyde occurs naturally in a vast range of things, including the human body and that if you were to ingest one thin slice of a banana you’d have more formaldehyde in you than any vaccine ever contained so then they said it was the aluminium, then switched again to ‘the amount of needles overwhelms a teeny-tiny babies poor body’ which is again, absolute bollocks and unsupported by any legitimate science but its what led to Jim Carrey and Jenny McCarthy’s ridiculous ‘green our vaccines’ shitshow.
Kennedy’s been involved since 2005 when he published an article called ‘deadly immunity’ in Salon and Rolling Stone, both of which had to publish non-stop corrections to it until they both retracted the article in 2011, Salon called it their ‘worst mistake’.