A bombshell lawsuit against the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has revealed that the federal agency does not have any evidence to support its claims that “vaccines don’t cause autism.”
The discovery was made during a lawsuit filed by the Informed Consent Action Network (ICAN).
The case, which has been ongoing for several years, requested that the CDC provide evidence to support the federal government’s own claims disputing links between autism and “vaccines.”
However, according to ICAN founder Del Bigtree, the lawsuit forced the CDC to admit that it has “ZERO” evidence to support the claims.
During a new interview on the Changing Life Destiny podcast, Bigtree sat down with Dr. Chris Motley to discuss the lawsuit.
Bigtree explained that ICAN sued the CDC for the actual tests they were using to say vaccines don’t cause autism.
Alarmingly, the CDC could not produce a single study in court.
“We said your website says all vaccines don’t cause autism,” Bigtree told Motley.
“So let’s just challenge this.
“So we said to the CDC, ‘How did you determine they don’t cause autism?’
“We fought them for a year.
“They wouldn’t answer,” he noted.
“We finally sue. We sue them.
“What trials did you do to show that they don’t cause autism?
“Where’s that mountain? ZERO.
“In the end, ZERO,” Bigtree added..
“Not a single study could they provide that was about DTAP vaccine, polio, HIB, Hepatitis B, Prevnar 13, ZERO.”
WATCH:
In late 2019, ICAN sued the CDC in federal court.
The suit focused on the CDC’s claim that “Vaccines Do Not Cause Autism” on the basis that the CDC had not specifically listed the precise studies that it asserts support that claim.
This lawsuit also quoted from the deposition of Dr. Stanley Plotkin, the godfather of vaccinology.
Plotkin admitted under oath that he was “okay with telling the parent that DTaP/Tdap does not cause autism even though the science isn’t there yet to support that claim.”
After a lot of wrangling between ICAN’s counsel Aaron Siri, and the Department of Justice, which was representing the CDC, the CDC finally capitulated and signed a stipulation that was entered as an order of the court on March 2, 2020 in which the CDC identified 20 studies as the universe of support it relies upon to claim that DTaP, HepB, Hib, PCV13, and IPV do not cause autism.
Here is a summary of the vaccines these studies cover:
- 1 relating to MMR (not a vaccine ICAN asked about);
- 13 relating to thimerosal (not an ingredient in any vaccine ICAN asked about);
- 4 relating to both MMR and thimerosal;
- 1 relating to antigen (not a vaccine) exposure; and
- 1 relating to MMR, thimerosal
Incredibly, the one study relating to DTaP on the CDC’s list was a recent review by the Institute of Medicine (IOM), paid for by the CDC, which conducted a comprehensive review looking specifically for studies relating to whether DTaP does or does not cause autism.
The IOM concluded that it could not identify a single study to support that DTaP does not cause autism.
Instead, the only relevant study the IOM could identify found an association between DTaP and autism.
In other words, the only study the CDC listed that actually looked at any of the vaccines given to babies during the first six months of life concluded that there are no studies to support that DTaP does not cause autism.
Yet, the CDC chose that study as one of the few that support its claim that “Vaccines Do Not Cause Autism.”
When it comes to autism, vaccines are the one suspected culprit that the CDC claims to have exhaustively investigated.
However, the CDC could not provide a single study to support its conclusion that the vaccines given during the first six months of life do not cause autism.
The CDC regularly complains that those raising concerns about vaccine safety are unscientific and misinformed.
It is, therefore, truly stunning that the March 2, 2020, stipulation and order made it abundantly clear that it was the CDC’s own claim that “Vaccines Do Not Cause Autism” that was unscientific.
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