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An unvaccinated student infected 21 others with measles at a yeshiva in Brooklyn.

Don’t know, haven’t read it. Post the peer reviewed papers.
Prepare for the flood of trash studies. And even when you discredit 2-3 of the dozen or so that get posted, you get, "Yeah...but what about all those others?!?!?!"

It's MMR! Umm...no. It's thimerosal! Ummmm...no. It's aluminum! Ummm...no. It's the sheer VOLUME of vaccines!!!! Ummm...no.

They can't even point to a credible pathway and when one theory is debunked, they just toss up another. These are the same folks who still revere Wakefield even though he's an admitted liar who falsified data and neglected to reveal that he was financed by lawyers who were suing vaccine makers or that HE had a financial stake in the outcome of his own study.

It is impossible to have anything resembling an intelligent conversation with them on this issue - and it's nbh's ONLY issue - because they don't understand science or facts or basic truth.
 
Well here is one group's list:
https://childrenshealthdefense.org/research_category/vaccines/

Another group has put this together. It's a blog, but it's loaded with links to peer reviewed studies that explains exactly why and how they believe it's possible that vaccines can cause autism:
https://jbhandleyblog.com/home/2018/4/1/international2018

We already debunked a bunch of nonsense at jbhandleyblog last year, and the year before. They just LOVE to misrepresent info from actual journals, and when you go to the source material, the claims made in the blogs just aren't there. Much like the other blog page, where they intentionally convoluted Great Britain data with US data to claim "measles was already on the decline before vaccines" - because GB started vaccinating a couple years prior to the US.

These sites rely on idiots like yourself not actually reading any of the source material, and being too uneducated or naive to understand the false claims being made.

It isn't any surprise that none of these anti-vaxxer sites can ever cite the AMA, Pediatrics societies, nursing societies or anywhere else to support their points. And, yes, those healthcare professionals DO vaccinate their own kids.

 
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