Guest guest Posted November 18, 2005 Report Share Posted November 18, 2005 Dear Dr. , Either the Chicago Tribune has misquoted you or you are making erroneous statements. A recent article states: " There's no evidence that thimerosal in vaccines is dangerous " (1). That statement is false and, if accurately reported, may be fraudulent. The CDC's 1999 study found strong, statistically significant associations between thimerosal injections and a range of neurologic sequelae including but not limited to ADHD, sleep disorders, tics, language problems, and autism. FOIA documents now entered into court proceedings delineate (a) the CDC's Simpsonwood conference to discuss these findings, and ( a paper-trail of emails documenting various CDC staff persons' efforts to make those findings " go away " . The AAP entered into collusion with the CDC's altered data by publishing Verstraeten et al 2003. Evidence for my statements herein can be obtained from Safeminds (http://www.safeminds.org) and from related court documents. Distrust in vaccinations will persist and increase so long as the CDC's deliberately *altered* data and the CDC-purchased IOM-decree mandating no further thimerosal research (2004) remain, albeit fraudulently, a basis for public policy and statements such as the Chicago Tribune quote you are alleged to have stated. Sincerely, Binstock Researcher in Developmental & Behavioral Neuroanatomy P.O. Box 1788 Estes Park CO 80517 1, A contradiction taints flu shots among infants BY JULIE DEARDORFF Chicago Tribune http://www.fortwayne.com/mld/newssentinel/13200883.htm Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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